TrickyRicky
Senior Member
Although I think Eug, that the behaviour is universal. That is, people who formerly live in the city centre and move out to the suburbs tend to make similar argument to rationalize the decisions they make. This is also true of people who move away from Toronto or to Toronto for that matter.
What I am advocating for, and this is something I could teach myself everyday, is that it is better to be what you are for than against what you aren't.
For the record I think that in the rhetoric of suburban / downtown dichotomy, all the city centre which encompasses most of the old city of Toronto would be considered downtown. People who live in Forest Hill, The Beach, High Park, etc. are all downtown elitists such as myself. Infact, it would be a perfect example of the very ignorance being discussed for a person living on St. Clair or the Danforth to not consider themselves a downtown elitist in this discussion.
What I am advocating for, and this is something I could teach myself everyday, is that it is better to be what you are for than against what you aren't.
For the record I think that in the rhetoric of suburban / downtown dichotomy, all the city centre which encompasses most of the old city of Toronto would be considered downtown. People who live in Forest Hill, The Beach, High Park, etc. are all downtown elitists such as myself. Infact, it would be a perfect example of the very ignorance being discussed for a person living on St. Clair or the Danforth to not consider themselves a downtown elitist in this discussion.