Florida is worse than a third world country

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:People act like DC is some high end area, it's a fake ass place with random transplants passing through. I am born and raised in nova.


It's also ugly, hot, humid, buggy, expensive, competitive and not very friendly. But, winning I guess?
Anonymous
Cool, stay away!
Anonymous
I remember driving through parts of Baltimore and thinking it looked worse than Bosnia after the war there. Poverty is terrible in every state.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My daughter just graduated from college and got a job in Miami. She said it’s pretty bad there now. Nothing like she expected. Luckily her whole company is going to relocate to California so she only has another year there.

She’s in one of those high-rise apartment building like the one that collapsed due to failed inspections and I hate it! Nothing changed after all those people were killed.


Sure she’ll be able to afford a nice tent in Cali.


No one calls California “cali”, PP. The salary increases will cover the differences in rent - and for apartments that don’t fall down! Imagine that!


I’m not taking sides in a California vs. Florida debate. They both have their pros and cons and are large enough to have better and worse areas. However, I have to question the assertion that apartments don’t fall down in California, proving its superiority, when California is known to have earthquakes that can topple buildings, including apartments. I think in both states, the incident rates of toppling apartments are relatively rare, but subjectively, lacking hard data, I’d worry more about it in California.


Dude, that condo complex in Miami just fell apart. There was no earthquake, no hurricane, not even a blustery day. It simply collapsed from sub-standard material and exceptionally poor government oversight.


And a Canadian developer
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The snakes and alligators aren’t just in the statehouse!

Florida is the stinking foot of our country.


That would make Maryland the armpit?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The snakes and alligators aren’t just in the statehouse!

Florida is the stinking foot of our country.


That would make Maryland the armpit?


NP. That would be Virginia!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The snakes and alligators aren’t just in the statehouse!

Florida is the stinking foot of our country.


That would make Maryland the armpit?


NP. That would be Virginia!


I think you need to take a better look at the shape and location of Maryland. 😉
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My daughter just graduated from college and got a job in Miami. She said it’s pretty bad there now. Nothing like she expected. Luckily her whole company is going to relocate to California so she only has another year there.

She’s in one of those high-rise apartment building like the one that collapsed due to failed inspections and I hate it! Nothing changed after all those people were killed.


This is not a thing. Companies do not relocate to California. Post is BS.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/curran-hatlebergs-florida-past-and-future

Sullenly, weeds (aftermath for sure) engulf graveyards or littered lanes, though a single insect, a mantis, provides some bemusement as it clings to a woman’s hand. The atmosphere is weary, post-consumerish. No one seems to possess anything. The men and boys are often shirtless, the cars cannibalized. There is beer, and there are bees bearding the faces of men; there is a peeling painted sign offering honey, but there is no honey. There is a picnic, but only watermelon is being served. Carved on the wooden bench is the old, rude, familiar greeting. An ice chest harbors only ice. No one is eating anything or making anything or going anywhere.

The lack of a door is not much different than the doors elsewhere depicted—the busted and broken ones, their screens keeping nothing out and nothing in, the boarded-up ones.

It is forgotten without ever being quite remembered. Lives can be lived without practice, without involvement or necessity. This is what Hatleberg’s patient eye discloses. Our celebrations have become obscure, our works enervated, our habitations derelict. The plastic flowers adorning our graves have been found to be not so pretty and enduring after all.

…..

Wow. There are poor places in New England but at least there is a sense of the past or a return to nature or brooding time of prior economic activity.

Florida dereliction looks 100x worse.

Rust belt at least had bones that stayed up when everything else is crumbling. Detroit Is not this bad.



This is not different than the rural parts of every single state.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My daughter just graduated from college and got a job in Miami. She said it’s pretty bad there now. Nothing like she expected. Luckily her whole company is going to relocate to California so she only has another year there.

She’s in one of those high-rise apartment building like the one that collapsed due to failed inspections and I hate it! Nothing changed after all those people were killed.


This is not a thing. Companies do not relocate to California. Post is BS.


+1. Who voluntarily moves their company to CA, of all places? From Florida?

It's like "I want to move away from a sh$thole with low taxes to a sh$thole with high taxes and higher COLA." Why?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The snakes and alligators aren’t just in the statehouse!

Florida is the stinking foot of our country.


That would make Maryland the armpit?


NP. That would be Virginia!


Maryland would be the arm then... Virginia is right under it, hence pit area
Anonymous
Florida is a cesspool.
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