I have never left my country.
I have never left my country
Based, I would never left England too.
gtfo my state bitch
Virginia for Virginians
I've been to Canada twice but I don't feel like that counts. I've never been west of the Mississippi either.
Arlington was cool. NoVa is cucked
I've literally never been anywhere in the world other than Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina and Florida.
Should've put you in one of the graves yankee
grits is basically oatmeal, and sweet tea is basically iced tea
>imagine not being international
visiting family in mexico?
yes
>tfw never been abroad
feels good, traveling is unpatriotic anyways
I was gonna use this as a template but it's fucking jpg'd.
Good job California You made Texas look like a period stain when I filled it in with the homeland color
here's the template
nerd
So of those that you visited, which was the best and which was the worst? Also, which had the nicest people?
only been to Germoney once when I 10 to visit family. don't remember much beside my cousin being pretty hot.
New England was beautiful but the people are cunts.
South is good but at one point in Alabama at a gas station a black guy picked up one of those sketchy boner pills by the checkout, turned around and winked at me while giggling with his toothless smile.
Texas is my home so I'm biased
California was fun but eveyone seemed extremely fake
Utah is full of Utard Mormon morons
Las Vegas is full of corrupted human beings
Michigan is underrated.
Wisconsin had the most honest to God nice people I've ever met. They offer you drinks at bars when they figure out your not a local, invite you to dinner and will be genuinely disappointed if you decline.
2nd place is the south but being from there I know that a person might be just as nice to you like a Wisconsinite but when you leave you're liable to be shit talked behind your back
Going to Utah next.
Only Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida for me
TN fag? where you at, son?
CHI
I've got this beat. I have set foot in fewer states, have spent my entire life in a less relevant region (yours focuses on a central world-power corridor, the line from Boston through D.C.), and over 99 percent of my entire life has been spent inside the red circle. The Washington trip was lifetime plane rides numbers 2 and 3 (first was a joyride in the circle) for a cousin's wedding. At 35 I'm almost certainly older than you as well.
I got a passport a few years ago just to have one, but I have no plans of using it any time soon.