I agree to a point.
When I was in Arkansas, I did what I could to be free and to build an appreciation for Liberty in others.
Now that I'm a Virginian, I will do what I can to be free and to build and appreciation for Liberty in others.
What we're talking about is people who move to some area that has some long standing traditions and a certain culture and then try to change it in some way or another, either through overt or covert methods. Case in point.
Within the past ten or twelve years, a small town about 60 miles southwest of Washington, DC was "discovered" by people who lived closer to DC as a desirable place to live. Real estate was significantly less as was traffic. And there was the romantic side of a small town in the Virginia Piedmont country.
Then around four years or so ago, issues arose and came to a head with town council meetings and demands by the new transplants to pass laws and do something. Seems the indigenous folks did what the did for generations and the newcomers were appalled. They shot guns on their property and the newcomers wanted that to stop. Now this sort of thing does not exactly endear newcomers to the town folk, especially those who can count their toots in three digit years. Needless to say, the locals were NOT open to any infringements on there traditions in this matter.
It's this sort of thing, along with a host of other demands and intrusions, that the local people find so disgusting and disingenuous from new arrivals. They came from places where this just did not happen and wanted the same thing in their new setting. This is what Marco and Peter and I speak of when we don't want people coming here and bringing their baggage with them. If they come, we expect them to embrace what it means to be a Virginian; to accept our culture, our heritage, and our traditions and become one of us. Not to expect we accommodate their whims and wishes with grounds from some other place.
That's really all there is to it.