Picking a Retirement Community Based on Political Views

October 9, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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Choosing neighbors you can get along with is important at any stage of life, but especially in retirement. While researching an article about places to retire that might appeal to Democrats and Republicans, I had an interesting conversation with Diana Mutz, a political science and communication professor at the University of Pennsylvania and author of Hearing the Other Side: Deliberative Versus Participatory Democracy.

Her research indicates that people who live in diverse communities have more political tolerance because they are exposed to multiple perspectives on issues. But being exposed to a range of political views actually decreases political participation, in part because publicly taking a stand that associates may oppose can be socially awkward. Political activism, on the other hand, often appears in social environments where like-minded people spur one another to action with their collective energy and enthusiasm but can also lead to extreme thinking. "People talking to no one but other like-minded people have no one questioning their views, so they become more and more extreme," says Mutz.

Tell us, would you prefer to retire in a community of people who share your political views or be exposed to a range of viewpoints?

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Why would I spend my life in my community with all the ties developed over my lifetime want to uproot and move to a strange new community just because I changed my occupation from active to retured?

If there are "communities" of uprooted people having to start all over again trying to establish relationships with other uprooted people all you can really share with them is how unhappy they are now.

Why leave friends and family for that?

Forget being isolated in "retirement communities" like they are leprosy colonies!

HillbillyBill of TN 7:06AM October 10, 2008

Why would I spend my life in my community with all the ties developed over my lifetime want to uproot and move to a strange new community just because I changed my occupation from active to retured?

If there are "communities" of uprooted people having to start all over again trying to establish relationships with other uprooted people all you can really share with them is how unhappy they are now.

Why leave friends and family for that?

Forget being isolated in "retirement communities" like they are leprosy colonies!

HillbillyBill of TN 7:06AM October 10, 2008

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