Lots of "Bad Topic Idea" and "This is Flamebait", but I've learned a lot about the views of people in other states.
This:
But it's more like "what state makes you most angry/would you say you hate as a joke to a friend" than "what state do you hate most" answer. I don't really hate any.
This is how I expect most people view this, and appears to be how most people have viewed it.
I personally live in colorado, and we generally hate Texas and California equally. We are pretty ambivalent about other states. We do feel that the Appalachians are a laughing stock of a range, and the comments from zchris13 were real interesting.
Although, SC isn't all bad. Have you ever been to the Blue Ridge Mountains (what we call our section of the Appalachians)? We call them this because they are blue, in the fog, which happens to be frequent there. Absolutely beautiful area of the world. I sincerely recommend visiting it. It isn't the most spectacular, it isn't breathtaking in scale or beauty, it just radiates a very deep, profound sense of peace. Almost as if it has seen everything. Seen the dinosaurs, seen the death, seen the destruction. Seen the cold. Seen the snow, seen the first strange creatures that were so profoundly different from their predecessors, which came with it (when we crossed the Bering Strait). Saw the centuries of peaceful creatures settle down, into a way of life. Seen the strange man, with his strange ways, arrive. Saw the natives driven from their own land, dieing by the thousands for no reason. Seen the white man expand across her broad faces. Seen the uprising, saw the fighting, saw the invaders fight off their own masters, and declare themselves free. Saw the same, now free people, declare themselves free, this time from their own people. Saw them fight. Saw the blood, as they fought themselves, saw the loss. Saw the defeat of the uprising. And it doesn't really give a shit. Because it's a mountain range, once mightier than the upstart range known as the Himalayas, now a low, old, range, enjoying it's slow erosion into plains.
And that is about where the events that would be noticeable to a mountain range end. At the civil war.
Just a very profound sense of history in that mountain range. You get this deeper feeling, than the normal, "oh shit that's huge" you get from such mountain ranges as the rockies, or canyons like the Grand Canyon.
Also, I added DC Outlying US territories, and "The Whole Thing" to give proper representation to the uncovered areas.
Colarado - because they steel all the mexicans water, bunch of crooks.
But you forget good sir, we also steal the mexicans too!
So really, all we are doing is redistributing where the mexicans pick up their water. Texas has managed to keep a few, but that just makes us hate Texas even more! (In seriousness, Colorado has the largest Immigrant population of Land-locked states that don't have a border with Mexico. Both legal and Illegal. Florida has us beat for Illegal, Arizona and Texas have us beat for Legal.)