Is Maryland the Cockiest State?

King Poetic

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When I talk with nikkas from the DMV , they always claim DC and not parts of Maryland unless they from Bmore

I never came across arrogance among Maryland people

my nieces are from ft Washington and one from DC
 

Baka's Weird Case

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MD probably has the best flag in the US. I'd be proud of it too
i think their flag is too busy

i like the new mexico one. simple but striking
Flag_of_New_Mexico.svg
 

The Knee Grow

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Ive lived in Maryland for 26 years.

Blue crabs arent even good. Nobody I know cares about them. I only see cacs talking about this.
.

:childplease:

Black people dont eat crabs? Aint nothin better than to sit outside with fam / friends and eat crabs with a cold beer in the summer. If you go the wharf in the summer all you see is people buying crabs or if you drive around here (pg) you'll see random trucks on the side of the road selling crabs.
 

saturn7

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A lot of interesting history with the state flag, Lord Baltimore etc

1024px-Coat_of_Arms_of_Cecil_Calvert%2C_Baron_Baltimore.svg.png



Coat of arms of The 2nd Baron Baltimore



The Red and White portion of the MD Flag is a nod to the Confederates.

:mjpls:

Despite the antiquity of its design, the Maryland flag is of post-Civil War origin. Throughout the colonial period, only the yellow-and-black Calvert family colors are mentioned in descriptions of the Maryland flag. After independence, the use of the Calvert family colors was discontinued. Various banners were used to represent the state, although none was adopted officially as a state flag. By the Civil War, the most common Maryland flag design probably consisted of the great seal of the state on a blue background. These blue banners were flown at least until the late 1890s.

The Calvert family coat of arms was reintroduced in Maryland in an 1854 law that called for a new great seal based on the Calvert design. The seal created pursuant to this act contained several inaccuracies, and in 1876 the General Assembly provided for a new great seal that conformed closely to the Calvert original.

Reintroduction of the Calvert coat of arms on the great seal of the state was followed by a reappearance at public events of banners in the yellow-and-black Calvert family colors. Called the "Maryland colors" or "Baltimore colors," these yellow-and-black banners lacked official sanction of the General Assembly, but appear to have quickly become popular with the public as a unique and readily identifiable symbol of Maryland and its long history.

The red-and-white Crossland arms gained popularity in quite a different way. Probably because the yellow-and-black "Maryland colors" were popularly identified with a state which, reluctantly or not, remained in the Union, Marylanders who sympathized with the South adopted the red-and-white of the Crossland arms as their colors. Following Lincoln's election in 1861, red and white "secession colors" appeared on everything from yarn stockings and cravats to children's clothing. People displaying these red-and-white symbols of resistance to the Union and to Lincoln's policies were vigorously prosecuted by Federal authorities.

During the war, Maryland-born Confederate soldiers used both the red-and-white colors and the cross bottony design from the Crossland quadrants of the Calvert coat of arms as a unique way of identifying their place of birth. Pins in the cross bottony shape were worn on uniforms, and the headquarters flag of the Maryland-born Confederate general Bradley T. Johnson was a red cross bottony on a white field.

By the end of the Civil War, therefore, both the yellow-and-black Calvert arms and the red-and-white colors and bottony cross design of the Crossland arms were clearly identified with Maryland, although they represented opposing sides in the conflict. As officers and soldiers returned home after the war to resume their peacetime occupations, the greatest challenge facing the country was reconciliation. Nowhere was the problem more serious than in deeply divided Maryland, where veterans who had fought under the red-and-white secession colors" had to be reintegrated into a state that had remained true to the Union.

As the slow process of reconciliation took place in post-Civil War Maryland, a new symbol emerged. A flag incorporating alternating quadrants of the Calvert and Crossland colors began appearing at public events. While the design derived directly from the seventeenth-century Calvert family coat of arms, for Marylanders of the 1880s the new banner must have conveyed a powerful message. The passage of time had gradually diminished the passions of former Rebels and Yankees, permitting them to work together once again. Now the colors they had fought under had come together as well, symbolically representing through this new flag the reunion of all the state's citizens.\

Flag History

Flag of Maryland - Wikipedia
 

BmoreGorilla

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:childplease:

Black people dont eat crabs? Aint nothin better than to sit outside with fam / friends and eat crabs with a cold beer in the summer. If you go the wharf in the summer all you see is people buying crabs or if you drive around here (pg) you'll see random trucks on the side of the road selling crabs.
That’s what I’m saying. Breh we used to catch them in the harbor with chicken tied to a string and bring buckets full of them back to my grandmas house and she would steam them
 

Cowboyz89

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:childplease:

Black people dont eat crabs? Aint nothin better than to sit outside with fam / friends and eat crabs with a cold beer in the summer. If you go the wharf in the summer all you see is people buying crabs or if you drive around here (pg) you'll see random trucks on the side of the road selling crabs.
Not saying we dont.
Just saying I dont know anyone that goes obsesses over crabs.
and crab legs are better. Multiple different kinds of crab legs are better.
 
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Bay Area breh but lived in Maryland for hella years. People who make good money in the DC suburbs are cocky as fukk.:unimpressed: I'm talking about the mayo slathered ones born and raised in the suburbs. They think they are better than everyone because of where they went to college and what non-sexy government job that allows them to drive a Tesla and pretend they are rich as Jeff Bezos. They think they flex harder than anyone on the planet. They were wearing basic ass clothes and had no swag a few years ago and now they are super sayin level hypebeasts because they downloaded their style from the net.

But the catch is that these cocky upper middle class folks in Montgomery and PG County think they are DC folks and barely identify as Marylanders if at all. They will say "I'm from DC" when they've never lived in DC limits their entire lives. :what:PG County a little different because many folks from the old DC moved to PG after they got good jobs and moved on up to the eastside (of the beltway) to a deluxe apartment not far from dipper smoke in the sky. DC/PG folks come off as snobby calling everybody a bama. But hella DC/PG brehs cool if you manage to hack the matrix and find yourself in their social circle. DC/PG brehs act like that because they don't like outsiders. It's understandable because DC is one of the top three most gentrified cities in America, if not the most gentrified. Give outsiders an inch and they take a mile. DC brehs have experienced this worse than most.

Baltimore folks is the coolest black folk of any of the East Coast city in my opinion. Baltimore people know how to have basic conversations. Baltimore people also have manners, which is rare in DC or NYC.

If anything NYers are by the far the cockiest. NYers look down on everyone... Yet refuse to admit their culture has been blatantly inspired by other places. NYers call everyone country... Yet bang Cali and Chicago gangs and copy the rap style of down south and even London rappers. NYers under 40 years old want credit for creating a form of music... 50 years ago. :mjlol: And just me typing this will generate so much NY butthurtt. :unimpressed:
 

Sankofa Alwayz

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Here in the DC side of Maryland (PG, MoCo, and Charles) we naturally are, that’s just how it is :yeshrug: Hell the DMV in general is like NYC and ATL in how we carry ourselves like our shyt don’t stink lol :lolbron:

On some state pride shyt, Maryland overall is pretty cocky and rightfully so lol. Only states I can think who can touch us when it comes to state pride are Texas, Cali, Florida, VA, NC, Jersey, New York, and maybe Ohio.
 

Sankofa Alwayz

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Lived in NC for 20 years but grew up in Silver Spring. One thing I will say though is he is right about state flags. Growing up I thought it was normal to have your state flag flying everywhere but it was just a MD thing. Most unique state flag out of all fifty tho


164507986_10158328487348207_1589904083091346073_n.jpg

The only state flag that can even talk to Maryland’s is Cali’s.
 
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