It's truly astounding what is acceptable today. What are these kids going to do when they grow up? |
Haven't seen any and I walk miles around the neighborhood. Sorry. |
Obviously, parents need to push back on this. It is ridiculous. |
That is what I noticed and do not understand. I read NY newspapers as an example, but I don’t comment on the stories, I don’t live in Brooklyn etc. I live in DC and there are lots of great aspects. The museums, parks, library system, recreation department are wonderful. There are also negative aspects, just like everywhere else. I have not heard of utopia yet. Not Hawaii, the Caribbean, not anywhere. |
Its DCUM but really DMVUM with tons of suburban posters who are paranoid and biased. |
Yeah, that's obviously a problem specific to DC. If the White House were in Des Moines, all the Presidents' kids would obviously have gone to Wes Bumf*ck Public High School. You can't really be that stupid, can you? |
This 100% - we live in DC but went to a picnic to visit friends who had moved out - everyone we met at their HOA event mentioned how they had "grown up" and moved out of DC and acted like we had come from Mars. It was really bizzare |
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This is a tough one. We live in the Logan/U Street area and love it but no longer have kids at home. We have a close relative in the neighborhood who does have kids, and as they approach middle school the parents don’t know what to do with them. Elementary school has by and large been good (although it’s hard to quantify), but what do you do next? The lottery is such a crapshoot and the middle and high school neighborhood schools are just, well, unacceptable. So, what do you do, move WOTP so your kids can go to Deal and Jackson-Reed? Not only are those neighborhoods super expensive, they’re basically the suburbs anyway. If you’re gonna make that kind of move, there are close-in suburbs (say, Takoma Park) that are more interesting and affordable and with schools with better diversity and equally strong academics.
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What CAN they do? With schools failing our kids, and parents also failing them, these kids have few option. Those with a work ethic could wash dishes, mow lawns; work on a garbage truck; maybe basic retail. The rest will probably end up in prison. |