Anonymous wrote:To PP who was LA native- what’s your opinion re schools? Please do tell all! We recently moved to LA and lur kids are still young but love nay insight.
Anonymous wrote:People obviously hate on it out of jealously. My only gripe is the traffic and overpopulation, but it’s nothing compared to New York.Anonymous wrote:No question- my life in LA is much better than the DMV. It doesn’t have to do with the weather, although year round nice weather is certainly a perk. It is the laid back vibe, the friendly people, the ability to go to the ocean, mountains, desert. I love LA - and I know people like to hate on it- but it’s a city that has so much to offer. And again, the people are so nice.
Anonymous wrote:People obviously hate on it out of jealously. My only gripe is the traffic and overpopulation, but it’s nothing compared to New York.Anonymous wrote:No question- my life in LA is much better than the DMV. It doesn’t have to do with the weather, although year round nice weather is certainly a perk. It is the laid back vibe, the friendly people, the ability to go to the ocean, mountains, desert. I love LA - and I know people like to hate on it- but it’s a city that has so much to offer. And again, the people are so nice.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a native Californian and have been living in LA since 1998. I'm on the Westside.
A couple of years ago, we lived in N. Arlington for a couple years--we knew it was temporary and that we were going back to LA, and now we are back.
So, I loved Arlington. Before and after our Virginia experience, I live/lived in a neighborhood that looks like Arlington, but here, to have that kind of neighborhood, you have to make a lot more money. So in Arlington, our neighbors ranged from working professionals to tree trimmers and some military etc. I loved my neighbors and the parents in our kids' Catholic elementary. The neighborhood was definitely nanny-light or nonexistent. In my neighborhood in LA, my neighbors are in finance or entertainment and there are a lot of nannies and housekeepers.
I had a very hard time with the weather in VA, but you are coming from the east and so probably used to functioning when it is too cold/too hot/too muggy, so get ready to be blown out by great weather and not sweating in your non-workout clothes.
I'm assuming your DC is in college out here. If your youngest will need to finish up school out here, lmk and I can discuss high schools which are different than Virginia
I loved that VA was purple so politicians actually care about outcomes and voters have a say. In contrast, California is a one-party state, and LA is also one-party, so no matter what elected officials do, they will not be held accountable. So that is a problem as they just proclaim things and decide things--some insane things! --and we really can't do anything to redirect them. The problem isn't Democrat control; it would be the same if it were Republicans. The problem is one-party total and complete dominance which leads to unaccountability.
Where would you like to live? What school is your DC in?
People obviously hate on it out of jealously. My only gripe is the traffic and overpopulation, but it’s nothing compared to New York.Anonymous wrote:No question- my life in LA is much better than the DMV. It doesn’t have to do with the weather, although year round nice weather is certainly a perk. It is the laid back vibe, the friendly people, the ability to go to the ocean, mountains, desert. I love LA - and I know people like to hate on it- but it’s a city that has so much to offer. And again, the people are so nice.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a native Californian and have been living in LA since 1998. I'm on the Westside.
A couple of years ago, we lived in N. Arlington for a couple years--we knew it was temporary and that we were going back to LA, and now we are back.
So, I loved Arlington. Before and after our Virginia experience, I live/lived in a neighborhood that looks like Arlington, but here, to have that kind of neighborhood, you have to make a lot more money. So in Arlington, our neighbors ranged from working professionals to tree trimmers and some military etc. I loved my neighbors and the parents in our kids' Catholic elementary. The neighborhood was definitely nanny-light or nonexistent. In my neighborhood in LA, my neighbors are in finance or entertainment and there are a lot of nannies and housekeepers.
I had a very hard time with the weather in VA, but you are coming from the east and so probably used to functioning when it is too cold/too hot/too muggy, so get ready to be blown out by great weather and not sweating in your non-workout clothes.
I'm assuming your DC is in college out here. If your youngest will need to finish up school out here, lmk and I can discuss high schools which are different than Virginia
I loved that VA was purple so politicians actually care about outcomes and voters have a say. In contrast, California is a one-party state, and LA is also one-party, so no matter what elected officials do, they will not be held accountable. So that is a problem as they just proclaim things and decide things--some insane things! --and we really can't do anything to redirect them. The problem isn't Democrat control; it would be the same if it were Republicans. The problem is one-party total and complete dominance which leads to unaccountability.
Where would you like to live? What school is your DC in?
D.C. is nice a state, but everything is so squished together. It’s like New York but without all of the entertainment, just government buildings.Anonymous wrote:I like DC proper better, but prefer LA if you are comparing it DC suburbs.
I love LA because of friendly people, non competitive aspect, great food, offbeat style, events and activities and offerings in music, arts etc.
DC wins for me because it's home. I miss fall and winter. I miss seeing the Capitol every day. I love DC architecture: row houses, the mall, the monuments. I love DC! The DC suburbs do not appeal to me.
What don’t you like about it?Anonymous wrote:Architecture? Nice? It is fake nice, we are just better at fake. It's such a dump.