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Waving to your neighbors seems to be a sign that you are in a decent neighborhood, i.e. White Neighborhood.

Waving to your neighbors seems to be a sign that you are in a decent neighborhood, i.e. White Neighborhood.

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[–] 8 pts

I grew up in a private neighborhood that does this. Up until 1990 only Whites were allowed to live there. Recently some chinks and pajeets have been buying houses and moving in. They do not wave back, even when eye contact is established. Now I just mean mug them as I drive by.

[–] [deleted] 6 pts

Sorry to hear this. The Wave seems to be White Only thing, even among those living in an upscale neighborhood.

[–] 1 pt

Doesn't have to be upscale even

For sure. Where we are now is definitely on the "upscale" side of things, but we are looking to get farther out soon. I bought some property about a half hour farther out, and am going to build there soon, but even that is not where we want to retire. Probably one more jump after that to get far enough into the mountains to be safe and comfortable.

[–] 3 pts

don't give up your culture just because someone else doesn't reciprocate.

[–] [deleted] 2 pts

Same when walking down the sidewalk in my nice neighborhood. Whites and even the couple blacks will say hello. Indians completely ignore your entire existence. They can go to hell.

[+] [deleted] 1 pt
[–] 7 pts

Everybody waves at everybody where i live. And yes its an all white rural area. People are friendly.

[–] 6 pts

Whites are great at waving, but suck at mobilizing and defending ourselves

[–] 3 pts

white defense response is different from others because every white alive is descended from civilizations with military culture.

no commander has emerged yet. if/when one does, you can expect drowning pool back in heavy rotation on the radio

[–] 0 pt

Commander Rockwell tried, then the jews murdered him :(

[–] 4 pts

No , but my job brings me to several areas like that. I drive for a living . Big surprise , it's all White rural areas that are like that

[–] 4 pts

I think the wave happens when we feel we are in our "community" space. I wave to anyone coming up or down my country road, because it's abunch of cul de sacs and if anyone is round here they live here. I wave to walkers on two lanes. I'm not waving at a semi on the interstate. Or to the car next to me in traffic in the city.

[–] 4 pts

Yes, we wave at everyone, even on state highways.

[–] [deleted] 4 pts

Awesome. I grew up in an area like this. The waving where we live now ends a few miles away at the 4 lane.

[–] 4 pts

Yep, all the time and everytime.

[–] 3 pts

I live in central UT. The wave is a thing here. More men than women wave. Even kids jetting around on their little 50cc dirt bikes give a wave. People wave even if they waved going the other way a few minutes prior. The town is 100.1% white, lots of Mormons.

[–] 3 pts

I have a jeep and a bike so waving became a habbit

[–] 3 pts

Where I live each different wave has a different meaning. One finger wave is, "hey". Two fingers is, "hey, how ya doing". Three fingers is, "hello ol buddy". Four fingers is, "hey pal, come over sometime for a beer". All five fingers is, "how's your mom-n-them"? LOL!!

[–] [deleted] 2 pts

The one finger, the index finger, is the common wave here. They teach this to their kids as a way to keep both hands on the wheel in these hillbilly winding mountain roads. But back in Louisiana, as a kid we always had one arm out the open window and waved with it. Right hand stayed on the wheel.

[–] 3 pts

Yeah, we wave as cars drive past; people wave at us as we drive past in the car. We stop and talk if we meet on the street. Every now and then you get someone who doesn't wave or talk. Last summer, there was a woman in the park with her daughter. She parked right beside my car and I said "hello." She didn't even look at me, so I said "hello" a second time. She pretended not to hear or see me. That's how I knew she must be vacationing from New York or Los Angeles, where people are afraid to make eye contact.

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