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I'm sure you're right about the Midwestern cultural and economic ties. Where I'm from, there is much more cultural identification with the South. Or there was when I lived there 50 years ago and it seemed not to change at all over the years, though like I said I haven't been home in a while.

Interestingly, although I've lived in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan not too far from Flint for more than half a century now, I still occasionally get people asking me "Where are you from?" when I speak to them for the first time. When I first moved here, those were almost always the first words out of anyone's mouth the first time we met, and I got kind of tired of explaining where Lebanon was, since just saying "Kentucky" never seemed to satisfy them.

I speak a lot more Midwestern than Bluegrass now, but some things you never loose completely, I guess.

What made me think of that was you saying you're in Covington. My best friend's son moved down to Covington from here a few years ago for a job opportunity. Some time ago while catching up on things with my friend on the phone, I asked him how his boy was doing?

"Fine", he replied. "Except he's starting to sound more like you than you do."

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