Anonymous wrote:One complaint is that not all urban dwellers have easy access to supermarkets and instead have to rely on nearby convenients.
That's where I'm annoyed and frustrated. Japan for example has amazing convenience stores like Lawson or their 7-11s which offer a whole range of pre-made food items that are good, cheap, and fresh-made for convenience.
Why can't we manage to do that here in the US? That's where I'd agree with the OP. A lot of American food is mass-produced, mass-market slop with low-quality ingredients, packed full of preservatives and made to ship across the country and sit on shelves for far too long, as if we're still living in the 1940s with ration cards.
I would absolutely love it for Japanese 7-11 to take over American convenience stores and put their model in place here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like these days it's too hard to live in the cities. The cost of living is just way too high for what you get. Then everywhere you go there are these lines of people. Then the food it's all like MREs, no fresh food. Like most families have left these areas.
I mean wouldn't be easier to pick strawberries than to live in the city.
Have you sat in suburban traffic trying to get to the supermarket recently? I prefer urban areas. And we have plenty of markets with fresh food.
This.
I have no idea what the OP is talking about. We can walk to almost daily farmers markets in any direction over the course of a week, don't have to pay for car insurance or maintenance except when we actually need a car, can walk to work, walk to restaurants, museums, concerts etc.
when I go out to the suburbs (not the older ones like Chevy Chase but the newer ones like Reston or Quince Orchard, all I see is autocentric gfenerica wasteland that is the same in every exurban region with the same strip mall restaurants etc. It is totally soulless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like these days it's too hard to live in the cities. The cost of living is just way too high for what you get. Then everywhere you go there are these lines of people. Then the food it's all like MREs, no fresh food. Like most families have left these areas.
I mean wouldn't be easier to pick strawberries than to live in the city.
Have you sat in suburban traffic trying to get to the supermarket recently? I prefer urban areas. And we have plenty of markets with fresh food.
Anonymous wrote:I see what you mean. The prices are literally insane and the number of people at anything worth attending is very off putting. You have to buy tickets or reservations so far in advance that it takes the joy out of many weekends. You are right about the lines but that’s everywhere these days.
I think this is the hidden cost of having 8.2 billion humans on the planet. I was amazed to learn that there were less than 1 million people on planet earth when the USA was founded.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like these days it's too hard to live in the cities. The cost of living is just way too high for what you get. Then everywhere you go there are these lines of people. Then the food it's all like MREs, no fresh food. Like most families have left these areas.
I mean wouldn't be easier to pick strawberries than to live in the city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like these days it's too hard to live in the cities. The cost of living is just way too high for what you get. Then everywhere you go there are these lines of people. Then the food it's all like MREs, no fresh food. Like most families have left these areas.
I mean wouldn't be easier to pick strawberries than to live in the city.
Have you sat in suburban traffic trying to get to the supermarket recently? I prefer urban areas. And we have plenty of markets with fresh food.
No but I've stood in line at many rural farmers markets. You don't know what fresh is. The DC area is known to have the least quality food, mostly canned food from overseas. Foreigners that come to this are look down on us because they think American food are frozen food microwave franchises like McDonalds and Starbucks.
They don't even wash dishes in DC, must be too hard. You have to eat out off of paper and drink out of plastic bottles.
Anonymous wrote:I see what you mean. The prices are literally insane and the number of people at anything worth attending is very off putting. You have to buy tickets or reservations so far in advance that it takes the joy out of many weekends. You are right about the lines but that’s everywhere these days.
I think this is the hidden cost of having 8.2 billion humans on the planet. I was amazed to learn that there were less than 1 million people on planet earth when the USA was founded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like these days it's too hard to live in the cities. The cost of living is just way too high for what you get. Then everywhere you go there are these lines of people. Then the food it's all like MREs, no fresh food. Like most families have left these areas.
I mean wouldn't be easier to pick strawberries than to live in the city.
Have you sat in suburban traffic trying to get to the supermarket recently? I prefer urban areas. And we have plenty of markets with fresh food.
No but I've stood in line at many rural farmers markets. You don't know what fresh is. The DC area is known to have the least quality food, mostly canned food from overseas. Foreigners that come to this are look down on us because they think American food are frozen food microwave franchises like McDonalds and Starbucks.
They don't even wash dishes in DC, must be too hard. You have to eat out off of paper and drink out of plastic bottles.
Anonymous wrote:I see what you mean. The prices are literally insane and the number of people at anything worth attending is very off putting. You have to buy tickets or reservations so far in advance that it takes the joy out of many weekends. You are right about the lines but that’s everywhere these days.
I think this is the hidden cost of having 8.2 billion humans on the planet. I was amazed to learn that there were less than 1 million people on planet earth when the USA was founded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like these days it's too hard to live in the cities. The cost of living is just way too high for what you get. Then everywhere you go there are these lines of people. Then the food it's all like MREs, no fresh food. Like most families have left these areas.
I mean wouldn't be easier to pick strawberries than to live in the city.
Have you sat in suburban traffic trying to get to the supermarket recently? I prefer urban areas. And we have plenty of markets with fresh food.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like these days it's too hard to live in the cities. The cost of living is just way too high for what you get. Then everywhere you go there are these lines of people. Then the food it's all like MREs, no fresh food. Like most families have left these areas.
I mean wouldn't be easier to pick strawberries than to live in the city.
What? The world population was around 800 million in the late 1700s.Anonymous wrote:I see what you mean. The prices are literally insane and the number of people at anything worth attending is very off putting. You have to buy tickets or reservations so far in advance that it takes the joy out of many weekends. You are right about the lines but that’s everywhere these days.
I think this is the hidden cost of having 8.2 billion humans on the planet. I was amazed to learn that there were less than 1 million people on planet earth when the USA was founded.