Yes The State of Washington and Washington DC have frequently performed these passive-aggressive jabs at each other It starts with the naming of the State of Washington in the first place, which was originally the "Columbia District"https://twitter.com/_dev_urandom_/status/1385455712508256256 …
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Replying to @arthur_affect
Luckily H.R. 51 seeks to change that. Hopefully, Douglas Commonwealth is easier to tell apart from Washington!
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Replying to @jamari_oneal @arthur_affect
The city itself would presumably still be just "Washington," so I imagine the confusion will still persist.
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Replying to @FieryDarkstar @arthur_affect
Nobody I know calls DC Washington. Only people who really say it are pundits using it as synecdoche "Congress" or "The Capital".
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Replying to @jamari_oneal @FieryDarkstar
For the record, the City of Washington and the District of Columbia were not originally identical - Washington used to only cover a small part of the District - but they've been geographically coterminous and had a single government since home rule was passed in 1973
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So in the modern day they are, for all legal and practical purposes, the same entity
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(You can still find old markings in Old Town Alexandria across the river from when this was not the case, when the two cities in DC were Washington and Alexandria, before the Virginia side was retroceded in 1846 "Alexandria, DC Fire Department", etc)
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Fun fact - the primary reason for the Virginia retrocession is that abolitionists in Congress were pushing for an end to the slave trade in the District, and Old Town Alexandria had one of the region's largest slave markets and didn't want to see business disrupted
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They were wise to do so - a House resolution condemning the slave trade passed two years later in 1848 and the trade was formally banned in DC in 1850 This is not something the tour guides in historic Old Town Alexandria like to talk about
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