Housing prices have gone insane

Anonymous
Moco resident here. NAEP scores for VA 4th in the Nation. MD scores on NAEP in the 30’s. Where are you getting that MoCo standards are somehow hirer? Oh Derek Turner? (MCPS PR rep) More than half of MCPS 4th graders can’t read at grade level. (Show me 4th grades scores and I’ll show you the number of future college graduates) Just because Maryland and MCPS outspends the country on education doesn’t mean a great education. So tired of MCPS spin in particular.
Anonymous
*for the grammar police, yes it’s higher. Typing on a phone.
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Anonymous wrote:This is McLean. Even if not zoned for Langley HS, this school pyramid is good enough to justify a premium. 1M seems about right.


Lmao no it doesn’t. Absolutely no public school justifies that price for that house, get real. McLean High is only a 7/10 anyways


It’s regularly rated the #3 or #2 high school in Virginia.

https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/virginia/rankings

And of course the prices reflect the location as well as the schools.


Whatever. Nothing will justify living in this $1M shitshack in a 7/10 school district, living a miserable and depressed lifestyle. Private schools are a thing, and anyone able to afford a million dollar house can certainly afford a private education that is significantly better than a 7/10 school district. This oversaturated real estate market is not going to last very long, especially with COVID permanently changing the nature of jobs. It’s so expensive right now because the inventory is low, but eventually these shitshacks will depreciate to what they’re actually worth...shit.


Wow, you're just a miserable b*tch.


I’m not the one becoming a slave to the real estate market, choosing to live in a $1M shitshack for some PUBLIC schools, and especially not for schools that are rated a 7/10 and not even remotely worth it, so no....Nobody with that kind of money in their right mind would buy that house for $1M. I wouldn’t even pay $1M for a house like that if it put me in a W school in MoCo either. I chose to buy an expensive house that actually looks like one, is on the water, and a decent commuting distance from my job. My kids go to a private school that is much better than McLean or any other public school will ever aspire to be, and my neighbors and I laugh at real estate market assk***ers who pay $1M for shitshack for some crummy PUBLIC schools, absolutely pathetic. Those are the people who are truly miserable.


You sound extremely happy with your choices ranting and raving at 1:52AM on a Sunday morning.

Maybe you need to talk to your doctor about switching up your meds.


And you must be a loser if the first thing you do on your Sunday morning is check DCUM searching for validation in your decision to buy a shitshack.

My point isn’t that this neighborhood doesn’t have certain amenities, just that they’re not worth that price tag. My point is that someone making a $1M+ decision doesn’t care about the public schools, they have options for private school. There are plenty of rich people living in school clusters that perform badly (i.e. Annapolis HS), and it’s because there’s no shortage of private schools in the DMV, and they’re way better than the poo-blic schools in McLean anyways. People are willing to commute to work for up to an hour, especially if they only have to go to DC a few times a week (and a lot of jobs are permanently changing to hybrid or even fully virtual because of COVID). It’s dangerous and financially irresponsible for someone to pay $1.5M for a house like that, because there’s a good chance that the new nature of jobs will significantly impact property values in the near future, once the market/inventory evens out again. There’s a reason people in MoCo and DC are moving up to Frederick at high rates. There’s a reason that San Francisco is seeing one of the highest rates of people moving out of the city. It’s because people are only willing to put up with ridiculous real estate prices for so long before they begin to question why living in said area is even worth it in the first place, and after they make the realization that it’s not worth it to live in a shitshack, they being leaving in large numbers. Turns out that if people have the choice, they prefer living near nature and in a nice house/neighborhood rather than living in a shitshack that was built for the middle-class and wasn’t even intended for their income-bracket. Weird huh? Besides, traffic congestion is such a huge problem in and around the beltway that living a bit out doesn’t add a significant amount of time to someone’s commute. You aren’t realizing that people making $1M decisions don’t care about your subjective assessments of how “nice the neighbors are” (lol), as if there’s no other neighborhoods in the DMV with “nice” neighbors. I know of a trailer park within good commuting distance from DC in a 7/10 school district. I’m sure they also think their neighbors are nice. I’ll go tell them they can sell their trailers for $850k now.

The DMV region has some of the most overpriced homes in the country as well. Even before inventory was low, Bethesda was considered the most over-priced city in the country. Houses there are being priced at nearly a quarter of a million dollars above their actual value, and I imagine it’s only gotten worse now. Not everyone is real estate market sheep/slaves, and they’re not willing to pay for houses that are so overpriced to the point that the amount in dollars the house is overpriced exceeds the average value of a home in the country. There will be a San Francisco effect happening in this region very shortly (and I’d argue that it has already started it’s premature phases).

If McLean High is really all that nice, then why is a school that is full of students of such a high income-bracket only a 7/10? That’s really embarrassing and that must mean that the school is actually garbage considering the demographics of that school. I imagine that the minority of disadvantaged kids going there probably do even worse, which is also worrisome. It tells me that that school is so low-quality that even the very privileged kids there aren’t performing at the same level kids of their demographics in other schools do. I wouldn’t send my kids to that garbage school even if I could get the house I have now over there for the same price. If I cared about public schools, I’d be living in Howard County, MD, where I could get a house that’s expensive and actually looks like it, while also being within reasonable commuting distance from work. I could also be in a school cluster that puts McLean to shame. A 30 minute drive to DC from Clarksville or Highland is fine if it means I wouldn’t live in a shitshack. A 50 minute commute to work is becoming increasingly tolerable to many people if it means that they won’t live in a shitshack.

This thread is full of arrogant, gentrification/suburban imperialism implants who are seriously trying to justify exorbitant prices for houses that were intended for a significantly lower income-bracket and are too sheltered to realize that most people would not pay that price tag for a house like that, and the number of people willing to do so is increasingly getting smaller. You all are so miserable and pathetic. You claim that there’s all these amenities and such a healthy lifestyle, yet you live in one of the most clinically depressed regions in the DMV region and country.


Wow. You seem way too invested in the DC area “shit shack” for someone who is so happy with their choice to move far out. Guess what, us close-in DC area residents certainly are not giving you or your private schools this much thought. But ummm okay, if you want to think we all live depressed and miserable lives, then cool. Whatever you need to do at 2 am on the weekend.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Moco resident here. NAEP scores for VA 4th in the Nation. MD scores on NAEP in the 30’s. Where are you getting that MoCo standards are somehow hirer? Oh Derek Turner? (MCPS PR rep) More than half of MCPS 4th graders can’t read at grade level. (Show me 4th grades scores and I’ll show you the number of future college graduates) Just because Maryland and MCPS outspends the country on education doesn’t mean a great education. So tired of MCPS spin in particular.


Their test scores are lower because their standardized exams are more rigorous and they keep changing. HSA, PARCC, MCAP, etc. it’s hard to compare VS schools with MD schools, because they’re being measured using different standardized exams, but it’s certainly not as hard to be the number 3 school in VS as much as it is to be the number 3 school in Maryland. Maryland has a significantly larger portion of higher performing high schools that compete with each other, VA doesn’t.
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VA*
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Anonymous wrote:This is McLean. Even if not zoned for Langley HS, this school pyramid is good enough to justify a premium. 1M seems about right.


Lmao no it doesn’t. Absolutely no public school justifies that price for that house, get real. McLean High is only a 7/10 anyways


It’s regularly rated the #3 or #2 high school in Virginia.

https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/virginia/rankings

And of course the prices reflect the location as well as the schools.


Whatever. Nothing will justify living in this $1M shitshack in a 7/10 school district, living a miserable and depressed lifestyle. Private schools are a thing, and anyone able to afford a million dollar house can certainly afford a private education that is significantly better than a 7/10 school district. This oversaturated real estate market is not going to last very long, especially with COVID permanently changing the nature of jobs. It’s so expensive right now because the inventory is low, but eventually these shitshacks will depreciate to what they’re actually worth...shit.


Wow, you're just a miserable b*tch.


I’m not the one becoming a slave to the real estate market, choosing to live in a $1M shitshack for some PUBLIC schools, and especially not for schools that are rated a 7/10 and not even remotely worth it, so no....Nobody with that kind of money in their right mind would buy that house for $1M. I wouldn’t even pay $1M for a house like that if it put me in a W school in MoCo either. I chose to buy an expensive house that actually looks like one, is on the water, and a decent commuting distance from my job. My kids go to a private school that is much better than McLean or any other public school will ever aspire to be, and my neighbors and I laugh at real estate market assk***ers who pay $1M for shitshack for some crummy PUBLIC schools, absolutely pathetic. Those are the people who are truly miserable.


You sound extremely happy with your choices ranting and raving at 1:52AM on a Sunday morning.

Maybe you need to talk to your doctor about switching up your meds.


And you must be a loser if the first thing you do on your Sunday morning is check DCUM searching for validation in your decision to buy a shitshack.

My point isn’t that this neighborhood doesn’t have certain amenities, just that they’re not worth that price tag. My point is that someone making a $1M+ decision doesn’t care about the public schools, they have options for private school. There are plenty of rich people living in school clusters that perform badly (i.e. Annapolis HS), and it’s because there’s no shortage of private schools in the DMV, and they’re way better than the poo-blic schools in McLean anyways. People are willing to commute to work for up to an hour, especially if they only have to go to DC a few times a week (and a lot of jobs are permanently changing to hybrid or even fully virtual because of COVID). It’s dangerous and financially irresponsible for someone to pay $1.5M for a house like that, because there’s a good chance that the new nature of jobs will significantly impact property values in the near future, once the market/inventory evens out again. There’s a reason people in MoCo and DC are moving up to Frederick at high rates. There’s a reason that San Francisco is seeing one of the highest rates of people moving out of the city. It’s because people are only willing to put up with ridiculous real estate prices for so long before they begin to question why living in said area is even worth it in the first place, and after they make the realization that it’s not worth it to live in a shitshack, they being leaving in large numbers. Turns out that if people have the choice, they prefer living near nature and in a nice house/neighborhood rather than living in a shitshack that was built for the middle-class and wasn’t even intended for their income-bracket. Weird huh? Besides, traffic congestion is such a huge problem in and around the beltway that living a bit out doesn’t add a significant amount of time to someone’s commute. You aren’t realizing that people making $1M decisions don’t care about your subjective assessments of how “nice the neighbors are” (lol), as if there’s no other neighborhoods in the DMV with “nice” neighbors. I know of a trailer park within good commuting distance from DC in a 7/10 school district. I’m sure they also think their neighbors are nice. I’ll go tell them they can sell their trailers for $850k now.

The DMV region has some of the most overpriced homes in the country as well. Even before inventory was low, Bethesda was considered the most over-priced city in the country. Houses there are being priced at nearly a quarter of a million dollars above their actual value, and I imagine it’s only gotten worse now. Not everyone is real estate market sheep/slaves, and they’re not willing to pay for houses that are so overpriced to the point that the amount in dollars the house is overpriced exceeds the average value of a home in the country. There will be a San Francisco effect happening in this region very shortly (and I’d argue that it has already started it’s premature phases).

If McLean High is really all that nice, then why is a school that is full of students of such a high income-bracket only a 7/10? That’s really embarrassing and that must mean that the school is actually garbage considering the demographics of that school. I imagine that the minority of disadvantaged kids going there probably do even worse, which is also worrisome. It tells me that that school is so low-quality that even the very privileged kids there aren’t performing at the same level kids of their demographics in other schools do. I wouldn’t send my kids to that garbage school even if I could get the house I have now over there for the same price. If I cared about public schools, I’d be living in Howard County, MD, where I could get a house that’s expensive and actually looks like it, while also being within reasonable commuting distance from work. I could also be in a school cluster that puts McLean to shame. A 30 minute drive to DC from Clarksville or Highland is fine if it means I wouldn’t live in a shitshack. A 50 minute commute to work is becoming increasingly tolerable to many people if it means that they won’t live in a shitshack.

This thread is full of arrogant, gentrification/suburban imperialism implants who are seriously trying to justify exorbitant prices for houses that were intended for a significantly lower income-bracket and are too sheltered to realize that most people would not pay that price tag for a house like that, and the number of people willing to do so is increasingly getting smaller. You all are so miserable and pathetic. You claim that there’s all these amenities and such a healthy lifestyle, yet you live in one of the most clinically depressed regions in the DMV region and country.


Wow. You seem way too invested in the DC area “shit shack” for someone who is so happy with their choice to move far out. Guess what, us close-in DC area residents certainly are not giving you or your private schools this much thought. But ummm okay, if you want to think we all live depressed and miserable lives, then cool. Whatever you need to do at 2 am on the weekend.


I don’t give these ugly neighborhoods any thought, nor do I even care to know where they are. I’m just saying they’re not worth those prices at all. And no, the statistics show that you guys are significantly more depressed, and that you spread your disgusting expectations to your kids, making them also depressed. W schools are notorious for suicide issues.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Moco resident here. NAEP scores for VA 4th in the Nation. MD scores on NAEP in the 30’s. Where are you getting that MoCo standards are somehow hirer? Oh Derek Turner? (MCPS PR rep) More than half of MCPS 4th graders can’t read at grade level. (Show me 4th grades scores and I’ll show you the number of future college graduates) Just because Maryland and MCPS outspends the country on education doesn’t mean a great education. So tired of MCPS spin in particular.


Their test scores are lower because their standardized exams are more rigorous and they keep changing. HSA, PARCC, MCAP, etc. it’s hard to compare VS schools with MD schools, because they’re being measured using different standardized exams, but it’s certainly not as hard to be the number 3 school in VS as much as it is to be the number 3 school in Maryland. Maryland has a significantly larger portion of higher performing high schools that compete with each other, VA doesn’t.



This is really unconvincing.
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Anonymous wrote:Moco resident here. NAEP scores for VA 4th in the Nation. MD scores on NAEP in the 30’s. Where are you getting that MoCo standards are somehow hirer? Oh Derek Turner? (MCPS PR rep) More than half of MCPS 4th graders can’t read at grade level. (Show me 4th grades scores and I’ll show you the number of future college graduates) Just because Maryland and MCPS outspends the country on education doesn’t mean a great education. So tired of MCPS spin in particular.


Their test scores are lower because their standardized exams are more rigorous and they keep changing. HSA, PARCC, MCAP, etc. it’s hard to compare VS schools with MD schools, because they’re being measured using different standardized exams, but it’s certainly not as hard to be the number 3 school in VS as much as it is to be the number 3 school in Maryland. Maryland has a significantly larger portion of higher performing high schools that compete with each other, VA doesn’t.



This is really unconvincing.


MoCo has a high percentage of low SES and minority students. Look beyond the W schools and B-CC, the other schools are significantly worse because they have high concentrations of poverty and underserved minority students. That’s why Howard and Montgomery are trying to re-district their schools.
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Anonymous wrote:Moco resident here. NAEP scores for VA 4th in the Nation. MD scores on NAEP in the 30’s. Where are you getting that MoCo standards are somehow hirer? Oh Derek Turner? (MCPS PR rep) More than half of MCPS 4th graders can’t read at grade level. (Show me 4th grades scores and I’ll show you the number of future college graduates) Just because Maryland and MCPS outspends the country on education doesn’t mean a great education. So tired of MCPS spin in particular.


Their test scores are lower because their standardized exams are more rigorous and they keep changing. HSA, PARCC, MCAP, etc. it’s hard to compare VS schools with MD schools, because they’re being measured using different standardized exams, but it’s certainly not as hard to be the number 3 school in VS as much as it is to be the number 3 school in Maryland. Maryland has a significantly larger portion of higher performing high schools that compete with each other, VA doesn’t.



This is really unconvincing.


MoCo has a high percentage of low SES and minority students. Look beyond the W schools and B-CC, the other schools are significantly worse because they have high concentrations of poverty and underserved minority students. That’s why Howard and Montgomery are trying to re-district their schools.


...is this also an argument for why MoCo schools are better than NoVA schools? Because it's also not convincing.
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...is this also an argument for why MoCo schools are better than NoVA schools? Because it's also not convincing.


MoCo schools are overrated, I agree. Those are not the schools I’m comparing them to. I’m talking about HoCo and AACo schools. Looking at spending per student in AACo, some AACo schools still manage to be close in performance with some of the the raved MoCo schools despite way less spending per student, and Severna Park in particular is outpacing most MoCo schools and rivals Whitman/WJ/Churchill/River Hill. Seems like these students are doing more with less.

As far as the VA schools, there’s far more to VA than NoVa, and most of it is underwhelming, making the competition in state rankings not very hard.
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To the poster obsessed with arguing that Maryland public schools are vastly superior to Virginia, please explain how such 'crap' schools with 'crap' students result in far, far better public higher education options in Virginia than Maryland?
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Anonymous wrote:This is McLean. Even if not zoned for Langley HS, this school pyramid is good enough to justify a premium. 1M seems about right.


Lmao no it doesn’t. Absolutely no public school justifies that price for that house, get real. McLean High is only a 7/10 anyways


It’s regularly rated the #3 or #2 high school in Virginia.

https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/virginia/rankings

And of course the prices reflect the location as well as the schools.


Whatever. Nothing will justify living in this $1M shitshack in a 7/10 school district, living a miserable and depressed lifestyle. Private schools are a thing, and anyone able to afford a million dollar house can certainly afford a private education that is significantly better than a 7/10 school district. This oversaturated real estate market is not going to last very long, especially with COVID permanently changing the nature of jobs. It’s so expensive right now because the inventory is low, but eventually these shitshacks will depreciate to what they’re actually worth...shit.


Wow, you're just a miserable b*tch.


I’m not the one becoming a slave to the real estate market, choosing to live in a $1M shitshack for some PUBLIC schools, and especially not for schools that are rated a 7/10 and not even remotely worth it, so no....Nobody with that kind of money in their right mind would buy that house for $1M. I wouldn’t even pay $1M for a house like that if it put me in a W school in MoCo either. I chose to buy an expensive house that actually looks like one, is on the water, and a decent commuting distance from my job. My kids go to a private school that is much better than McLean or any other public school will ever aspire to be, and my neighbors and I laugh at real estate market assk***ers who pay $1M for shitshack for some crummy PUBLIC schools, absolutely pathetic. Those are the people who are truly miserable.


You sound extremely happy with your choices ranting and raving at 1:52AM on a Sunday morning.

Maybe you need to talk to your doctor about switching up your meds.


And you must be a loser if the first thing you do on your Sunday morning is check DCUM searching for validation in your decision to buy a shitshack.

My point isn’t that this neighborhood doesn’t have certain amenities, just that they’re not worth that price tag. My point is that someone making a $1M+ decision doesn’t care about the public schools, they have options for private school. There are plenty of rich people living in school clusters that perform badly (i.e. Annapolis HS), and it’s because there’s no shortage of private schools in the DMV, and they’re way better than the poo-blic schools in McLean anyways. People are willing to commute to work for up to an hour, especially if they only have to go to DC a few times a week (and a lot of jobs are permanently changing to hybrid or even fully virtual because of COVID). It’s dangerous and financially irresponsible for someone to pay $1.5M for a house like that, because there’s a good chance that the new nature of jobs will significantly impact property values in the near future, once the market/inventory evens out again. There’s a reason people in MoCo and DC are moving up to Frederick at high rates. There’s a reason that San Francisco is seeing one of the highest rates of people moving out of the city. It’s because people are only willing to put up with ridiculous real estate prices for so long before they begin to question why living in said area is even worth it in the first place, and after they make the realization that it’s not worth it to live in a shitshack, they being leaving in large numbers. Turns out that if people have the choice, they prefer living near nature and in a nice house/neighborhood rather than living in a shitshack that was built for the middle-class and wasn’t even intended for their income-bracket. Weird huh? Besides, traffic congestion is such a huge problem in and around the beltway that living a bit out doesn’t add a significant amount of time to someone’s commute. You aren’t realizing that people making $1M decisions don’t care about your subjective assessments of how “nice the neighbors are” (lol), as if there’s no other neighborhoods in the DMV with “nice” neighbors. I know of a trailer park within good commuting distance from DC in a 7/10 school district. I’m sure they also think their neighbors are nice. I’ll go tell them they can sell their trailers for $850k now.

The DMV region has some of the most overpriced homes in the country as well. Even before inventory was low, Bethesda was considered the most over-priced city in the country. Houses there are being priced at nearly a quarter of a million dollars above their actual value, and I imagine it’s only gotten worse now. Not everyone is real estate market sheep/slaves, and they’re not willing to pay for houses that are so overpriced to the point that the amount in dollars the house is overpriced exceeds the average value of a home in the country. There will be a San Francisco effect happening in this region very shortly (and I’d argue that it has already started it’s premature phases).

If McLean High is really all that nice, then why is a school that is full of students of such a high income-bracket only a 7/10? That’s really embarrassing and that must mean that the school is actually garbage considering the demographics of that school. I imagine that the minority of disadvantaged kids going there probably do even worse, which is also worrisome. It tells me that that school is so low-quality that even the very privileged kids there aren’t performing at the same level kids of their demographics in other schools do. I wouldn’t send my kids to that garbage school even if I could get the house I have now over there for the same price. If I cared about public schools, I’d be living in Howard County, MD, where I could get a house that’s expensive and actually looks like it, while also being within reasonable commuting distance from work. I could also be in a school cluster that puts McLean to shame. A 30 minute drive to DC from Clarksville or Highland is fine if it means I wouldn’t live in a shitshack. A 50 minute commute to work is becoming increasingly tolerable to many people if it means that they won’t live in a shitshack.

This thread is full of arrogant, gentrification/suburban imperialism implants who are seriously trying to justify exorbitant prices for houses that were intended for a significantly lower income-bracket and are too sheltered to realize that most people would not pay that price tag for a house like that, and the number of people willing to do so is increasingly getting smaller. You all are so miserable and pathetic. You claim that there’s all these amenities and such a healthy lifestyle, yet you live in one of the most clinically depressed regions in the DMV region and country.


Wow. You seem way too invested in the DC area “shit shack” for someone who is so happy with their choice to move far out. Guess what, us close-in DC area residents certainly are not giving you or your private schools this much thought. But ummm okay, if you want to think we all live depressed and miserable lives, then cool. Whatever you need to do at 2 am on the weekend.


I don’t give these ugly neighborhoods any thought, nor do I even care to know where they are. I’m just saying they’re not worth those prices at all. And no, the statistics show that you guys are significantly more depressed, and that you spread your disgusting expectations to your kids, making them also depressed. W schools are notorious for suicide issues.


Hah, you just wrote a mini novella on a DC-based real estate thread about these neighborhoods. But I guess that is “not giving them any thought.” I can promise you that before your posts I had never even heard of Davidson, MD.
Anonymous
^^ bizarre rant boo
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Anonymous wrote:This is McLean. Even if not zoned for Langley HS, this school pyramid is good enough to justify a premium. 1M seems about right.


Lmao no it doesn’t. Absolutely no public school justifies that price for that house, get real. McLean High is only a 7/10 anyways


It’s regularly rated the #3 or #2 high school in Virginia.

https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/virginia/rankings

And of course the prices reflect the location as well as the schools.


Whatever. Nothing will justify living in this $1M shitshack in a 7/10 school district, living a miserable and depressed lifestyle. Private schools are a thing, and anyone able to afford a million dollar house can certainly afford a private education that is significantly better than a 7/10 school district. This oversaturated real estate market is not going to last very long, especially with COVID permanently changing the nature of jobs. It’s so expensive right now because the inventory is low, but eventually these shitshacks will depreciate to what they’re actually worth...shit.


Wow, you're just a miserable b*tch.


I’m not the one becoming a slave to the real estate market, choosing to live in a $1M shitshack for some PUBLIC schools, and especially not for schools that are rated a 7/10 and not even remotely worth it, so no....Nobody with that kind of money in their right mind would buy that house for $1M. I wouldn’t even pay $1M for a house like that if it put me in a W school in MoCo either. I chose to buy an expensive house that actually looks like one, is on the water, and a decent commuting distance from my job. My kids go to a private school that is much better than McLean or any other public school will ever aspire to be, and my neighbors and I laugh at real estate market assk***ers who pay $1M for shitshack for some crummy PUBLIC schools, absolutely pathetic. Those are the people who are truly miserable.


You sound extremely happy with your choices ranting and raving at 1:52AM on a Sunday morning.

Maybe you need to talk to your doctor about switching up your meds.


And you must be a loser if the first thing you do on your Sunday morning is check DCUM searching for validation in your decision to buy a shitshack.

My point isn’t that this neighborhood doesn’t have certain amenities, just that they’re not worth that price tag. My point is that someone making a $1M+ decision doesn’t care about the public schools, they have options for private school. There are plenty of rich people living in school clusters that perform badly (i.e. Annapolis HS), and it’s because there’s no shortage of private schools in the DMV, and they’re way better than the poo-blic schools in McLean anyways. People are willing to commute to work for up to an hour, especially if they only have to go to DC a few times a week (and a lot of jobs are permanently changing to hybrid or even fully virtual because of COVID). It’s dangerous and financially irresponsible for someone to pay $1.5M for a house like that, because there’s a good chance that the new nature of jobs will significantly impact property values in the near future, once the market/inventory evens out again. There’s a reason people in MoCo and DC are moving up to Frederick at high rates. There’s a reason that San Francisco is seeing one of the highest rates of people moving out of the city. It’s because people are only willing to put up with ridiculous real estate prices for so long before they begin to question why living in said area is even worth it in the first place, and after they make the realization that it’s not worth it to live in a shitshack, they being leaving in large numbers. Turns out that if people have the choice, they prefer living near nature and in a nice house/neighborhood rather than living in a shitshack that was built for the middle-class and wasn’t even intended for their income-bracket. Weird huh? Besides, traffic congestion is such a huge problem in and around the beltway that living a bit out doesn’t add a significant amount of time to someone’s commute. You aren’t realizing that people making $1M decisions don’t care about your subjective assessments of how “nice the neighbors are” (lol), as if there’s no other neighborhoods in the DMV with “nice” neighbors. I know of a trailer park within good commuting distance from DC in a 7/10 school district. I’m sure they also think their neighbors are nice. I’ll go tell them they can sell their trailers for $850k now.

The DMV region has some of the most overpriced homes in the country as well. Even before inventory was low, Bethesda was considered the most over-priced city in the country. Houses there are being priced at nearly a quarter of a million dollars above their actual value, and I imagine it’s only gotten worse now. Not everyone is real estate market sheep/slaves, and they’re not willing to pay for houses that are so overpriced to the point that the amount in dollars the house is overpriced exceeds the average value of a home in the country. There will be a San Francisco effect happening in this region very shortly (and I’d argue that it has already started it’s premature phases).

If McLean High is really all that nice, then why is a school that is full of students of such a high income-bracket only a 7/10? That’s really embarrassing and that must mean that the school is actually garbage considering the demographics of that school. I imagine that the minority of disadvantaged kids going there probably do even worse, which is also worrisome. It tells me that that school is so low-quality that even the very privileged kids there aren’t performing at the same level kids of their demographics in other schools do. I wouldn’t send my kids to that garbage school even if I could get the house I have now over there for the same price. If I cared about public schools, I’d be living in Howard County, MD, where I could get a house that’s expensive and actually looks like it, while also being within reasonable commuting distance from work. I could also be in a school cluster that puts McLean to shame. A 30 minute drive to DC from Clarksville or Highland is fine if it means I wouldn’t live in a shitshack. A 50 minute commute to work is becoming increasingly tolerable to many people if it means that they won’t live in a shitshack.

This thread is full of arrogant, gentrification/suburban imperialism implants who are seriously trying to justify exorbitant prices for houses that were intended for a significantly lower income-bracket and are too sheltered to realize that most people would not pay that price tag for a house like that, and the number of people willing to do so is increasingly getting smaller. You all are so miserable and pathetic. You claim that there’s all these amenities and such a healthy lifestyle, yet you live in one of the most clinically depressed regions in the DMV region and country.


Wow. You seem way too invested in the DC area “shit shack” for someone who is so happy with their choice to move far out. Guess what, us close-in DC area residents certainly are not giving you or your private schools this much thought. But ummm okay, if you want to think we all live depressed and miserable lives, then cool. Whatever you need to do at 2 am on the weekend.


I don’t give these ugly neighborhoods any thought, nor do I even care to know where they are. I’m just saying they’re not worth those prices at all. And no, the statistics show that you guys are significantly more depressed, and that you spread your disgusting expectations to your kids, making them also depressed. W schools are notorious for suicide issues.


Hah, you just wrote a mini novella on a DC-based real estate thread about these neighborhoods. But I guess that is “not giving them any thought.” I can promise you that before your posts I had never even heard of Davidson, MD.




This person just wants to feel better about themselves. They’d be happier if they focused less on cities they don’t live in and know nothing about.

PP, we’re glad you like your town. You don’t need to tear down the choices of others. Clearly, given the prices in the DC metro area, people disagree with to her assessment. I don’t know why this makes you so angry. We will leave you alone in your town, you leave us alone here.
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Anonymous wrote:This is McLean. Even if not zoned for Langley HS, this school pyramid is good enough to justify a premium. 1M seems about right.


Lmao no it doesn’t. Absolutely no public school justifies that price for that house, get real. McLean High is only a 7/10 anyways


It’s regularly rated the #3 or #2 high school in Virginia.

https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/virginia/rankings

And of course the prices reflect the location as well as the schools.


Whatever. Nothing will justify living in this $1M shitshack in a 7/10 school district, living a miserable and depressed lifestyle. Private schools are a thing, and anyone able to afford a million dollar house can certainly afford a private education that is significantly better than a 7/10 school district. This oversaturated real estate market is not going to last very long, especially with COVID permanently changing the nature of jobs. It’s so expensive right now because the inventory is low, but eventually these shitshacks will depreciate to what they’re actually worth...shit.


Wow, you're just a miserable b*tch.


I’m not the one becoming a slave to the real estate market, choosing to live in a $1M shitshack for some PUBLIC schools, and especially not for schools that are rated a 7/10 and not even remotely worth it, so no....Nobody with that kind of money in their right mind would buy that house for $1M. I wouldn’t even pay $1M for a house like that if it put me in a W school in MoCo either. I chose to buy an expensive house that actually looks like one, is on the water, and a decent commuting distance from my job. My kids go to a private school that is much better than McLean or any other public school will ever aspire to be, and my neighbors and I laugh at real estate market assk***ers who pay $1M for shitshack for some crummy PUBLIC schools, absolutely pathetic. Those are the people who are truly miserable.


You sound extremely happy with your choices ranting and raving at 1:52AM on a Sunday morning.

Maybe you need to talk to your doctor about switching up your meds.


And you must be a loser if the first thing you do on your Sunday morning is check DCUM searching for validation in your decision to buy a shitshack.

My point isn’t that this neighborhood doesn’t have certain amenities, just that they’re not worth that price tag. My point is that someone making a $1M+ decision doesn’t care about the public schools, they have options for private school. There are plenty of rich people living in school clusters that perform badly (i.e. Annapolis HS), and it’s because there’s no shortage of private schools in the DMV, and they’re way better than the poo-blic schools in McLean anyways. People are willing to commute to work for up to an hour, especially if they only have to go to DC a few times a week (and a lot of jobs are permanently changing to hybrid or even fully virtual because of COVID). It’s dangerous and financially irresponsible for someone to pay $1.5M for a house like that, because there’s a good chance that the new nature of jobs will significantly impact property values in the near future, once the market/inventory evens out again. There’s a reason people in MoCo and DC are moving up to Frederick at high rates. There’s a reason that San Francisco is seeing one of the highest rates of people moving out of the city. It’s because people are only willing to put up with ridiculous real estate prices for so long before they begin to question why living in said area is even worth it in the first place, and after they make the realization that it’s not worth it to live in a shitshack, they being leaving in large numbers. Turns out that if people have the choice, they prefer living near nature and in a nice house/neighborhood rather than living in a shitshack that was built for the middle-class and wasn’t even intended for their income-bracket. Weird huh? Besides, traffic congestion is such a huge problem in and around the beltway that living a bit out doesn’t add a significant amount of time to someone’s commute. You aren’t realizing that people making $1M decisions don’t care about your subjective assessments of how “nice the neighbors are” (lol), as if there’s no other neighborhoods in the DMV with “nice” neighbors. I know of a trailer park within good commuting distance from DC in a 7/10 school district. I’m sure they also think their neighbors are nice. I’ll go tell them they can sell their trailers for $850k now.

The DMV region has some of the most overpriced homes in the country as well. Even before inventory was low, Bethesda was considered the most over-priced city in the country. Houses there are being priced at nearly a quarter of a million dollars above their actual value, and I imagine it’s only gotten worse now. Not everyone is real estate market sheep/slaves, and they’re not willing to pay for houses that are so overpriced to the point that the amount in dollars the house is overpriced exceeds the average value of a home in the country. There will be a San Francisco effect happening in this region very shortly (and I’d argue that it has already started it’s premature phases).

If McLean High is really all that nice, then why is a school that is full of students of such a high income-bracket only a 7/10? That’s really embarrassing and that must mean that the school is actually garbage considering the demographics of that school. I imagine that the minority of disadvantaged kids going there probably do even worse, which is also worrisome. It tells me that that school is so low-quality that even the very privileged kids there aren’t performing at the same level kids of their demographics in other schools do. I wouldn’t send my kids to that garbage school even if I could get the house I have now over there for the same price. If I cared about public schools, I’d be living in Howard County, MD, where I could get a house that’s expensive and actually looks like it, while also being within reasonable commuting distance from work. I could also be in a school cluster that puts McLean to shame. A 30 minute drive to DC from Clarksville or Highland is fine if it means I wouldn’t live in a shitshack. A 50 minute commute to work is becoming increasingly tolerable to many people if it means that they won’t live in a shitshack.

This thread is full of arrogant, gentrification/suburban imperialism implants who are seriously trying to justify exorbitant prices for houses that were intended for a significantly lower income-bracket and are too sheltered to realize that most people would not pay that price tag for a house like that, and the number of people willing to do so is increasingly getting smaller. You all are so miserable and pathetic. You claim that there’s all these amenities and such a healthy lifestyle, yet you live in one of the most clinically depressed regions in the DMV region and country.


This poster is off base on several levels and also seems a little “edgy” as is in he seems like he’s going to crack.

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