|
I have lived in NOVA waaayy too long because my first reactions were -
Brambleton is not a place, it's just the name the developer slapped on the a group of homes to sell them Loudon Co. is not part of NOVA |
But you haven't lived there long enough to know it's Loudoun? Or that people there recognize Brambleton as a distinct part of Ashburn? You aren't really bright enough to have an opinion on the topic worth sharing. |
+1 |
+2, except I can't imagine anything in Loudoun County not being in a planned community. Except Leesburg? |
| Well, bye. |
| The best way to see Nova is in your rear view mirror. |
|
We live in Centreville and I like our HOA. We have a nice pool that's never crowded and lots of free community activitues.
Did you try to scofflaw on getting VA plates? You sound like the kind of person with a victim mentality, and a complainer. Good riddance. |
There is not bridge and tunnel crowd in DC - because unlike NYC, where getting into Manhattan can be a pain, crossing the Potomac (which I do routinely by bike) is no big deal. Easier to get to Georgetown from Rosslyn than from parts of upper NW. And its anachronistic in NYC as well, now that North Brooklyn is far hipper than Manhattan. |
VA has a yearly personal property tax on registered vehicles. It's expensive if you have a nice car. It is irritating to see the same out of state license plates in the car line every year at the public-school-supported-with-taxes. |
Hmm. Between NoVa and DC we have everything from Viet Namese to Salvadoran to Indian (lots of regional varieties) to Afghan to Yemeni to many regional varieties of Chinese, to Nepali, to Peruvian, to Ethiopian to West African. We have French, balkan, all kinds of Italian. Lots of tapas and small plates. Sounds like you just miss Texas. Thats okay. Lots of people miss where they grew up. This is not Texas. |
That is so sweet. Does it make you feel better about living in a bland quadrant of the former Confederacy? And did you just compare Arlington to Williamsburg or Greenpoint? LOL. |
Central and South American food is the not the same as they do not like spicey food, I have spent a lot of time there for work to know that. Not that it isn't good, I do like it. Having lived in Milano, Italy for 18 months, most Italian places in the US are just shadows of the real thing, Texas included. Thinking back, probably just the Brambleton area and their lack of food choices, its all the same, no new places in the last two years and going to the same places gets old, so I have started to venture out on the weekends beyond the 5 mile radius I live in. I miss Texas in respect to the no income taxes, no personal property taxes more bang for your buck and minimal layers of government and bureaucracy and high levels of technology. And I lived in Galleria area of Houston, so I did not live in BFE. Schools are just like here, some great, some good and some not so good. LCPS is not impressive to me. Texas is its own state and not a nanny state like VA. Coming from there to here, its easy to see, but if one has lived all their life in a nanny state, they can't see it the other way. Giveing VA a c-/c is better than giving them a D or F, which I can give to places like Indiana, where I went to do my undergrad, other than the college, Indiana is a dead place on I-80, its a not a place to live, its a place you pass on the way to somewhere better sorta thing. |
|
VIRGINIA is a NANNY state???????
OP would spontaneously combust if he ever stepped foot in Maryland. He has lived in danger all these years since Point of Rocks is so close. |
| OP, you are so right about #10. I expected most of the other issues, but I was shocked at how technologically backward this area is compared to NC. |
That is just stupid and irresponsible. |