I live in DC and don't desire suburban living of any variety, but I have heard this before, in bold, and I think it is weird. I know a lot of progressive people in NoVa. There are a lot of good reasons to live there, not just the schools, which are generally very good. Look at the Obama vote count, by county, for both of his elections. Arlington isn't even purple - it's blue. Of course PPs are correct to say Arlington is bound by Richmond's laws and I've spoken with gay people who refuse to live there for very practical reasons, like, a desire to receive survivor's pension ! But given how messed up DC can be on schools and other issues, and given the relatively poor commute from many parts of MoCo, I definitely understand why people would move to NoVa, and I don't think anything less of them. |
But you'll cone for employment haha |
But you'll come for employment haha |
Fcps schools are way less disfunctional. The lowest performing fcps elementary would likely be in high demand in dcps |
I'm just a Yankee at heart. |
I lived in Alexandria and it just seemed like everything was more of an effort. Driving on streets named after Confederate Generals just wigged me out even if the locals were solid blue. Everytime I have to go there not on a a Sunday morning at 7:00 am is just painful in terms of traffic. I have friends kids at well regarded FFX schools and they are trying to figure out how to move their kids into private if they don't get into TJ.
I know my NoVa friends have similar lists about DC, we can't all live in the same place, so it works well we like to live in different places. |
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Ahhh, that makes me a little sad. I live in Va in part because I can actually make a difference. My vote can actually change things. I guess all of the liberals in NoVa could just throw up our hands and move to DC or Md, but that would likely be very detrimental for everyone. So, I guess think less of me if you wish, but I am happy with my decision. |
After growing up in a blue city in a blue state, and living in DC for 7 years, I have to say I'm loving living in a blue part of a swing state where my vote actually counts. |
I can't drive in Virginia without getting lost, even with GPS. It doesn't happen anywhere else. I am so adverse to driving in Virginia that I will travel twice as far to some place in Maryland (if need be) than cross into the Commonwealth. |
I call B.S. on this. No educated person would ever espouse such a belief. It's no different than saying, "I actually think a bit less of people who are Muslim." Put another way, if you were interviewing for a job, would you really tell the interviewer that you judge the worth of people depending on which state they live in? If not, save us your faux tough talk. |
NP here. If you live in NoVa, then your vote has less impact than you think. Virginia has long been torn between the very liberal NoVa and the very conservative RoVa and unfortunately when it comes to state politics, RoVa has more sway than NoVa does. With a supermajority in both houses in Virginia, you'll continue to see rightward swaying legislation. Liberals need to move further out from DC and further South to have the type of impact that they want. As one half of a biracial couple, I frankly am uncomfortable in Virginia and have absolutely no faith that my rights, my wife's rights, the rights of my children and the rights of my same-gender friends are at all guaranteed and I do not wish to be a guinea pig for conservative doctrine. I applaud those liberals who live there and try to make a difference, but I won't be one of them. |
"With a supermajority in both houses in Virginia...."
Just to be accurate, the super-majority is in the House of Delegates and the Senate of Virginia is 40 seats evenly divided: 20 GOP and 20 Dem with the Dem Lieutenant Gov. casting tie votes, when necessary. |
Thanks. I sit corrected. |