Anonymous wrote:Why, yes. This is totally true. Everyone should move to ND and not to California. It is terrible here in California, just terrible. It's much better in ND and you should move there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:North Dakota is 1st. Have you ever lived in ND? I have. If that's what their methodology is coming up with as best in the country, it's hard to trust anything else they say.
For real. I am a Californian and I am in North Dakota right now. I would go back to California in a hot second. About the only thing ND has going for it is it's cheaper. The weather sucks. Fargo has some decent restaurants but nothing compared to any city in California. Produce selection is spotty at best. Shopping of any kind ... etc, etc. Even the mail service takes forever. There is nothing here. AND did they account for medical care? there are practically no specialists in most of the state. There are 6-10 month waiting lists for specialty care and you have to drive 4-6 hours for them. This is not "best quality of life."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:North Dakota is 1st. Have you ever lived in ND? I have. If that's what their methodology is coming up with as best in the country, it's hard to trust anything else they say.
There are (or were) a ton of jobs in ND. Helps increase income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:North Dakota is 1st. Have you ever lived in ND? I have. If that's what their methodology is coming up with as best in the country, it's hard to trust anything else they say.
For real. I am a Californian and I am in North Dakota right now. I would go back to California in a hot second. About the only thing ND has going for it is it's cheaper. The weather sucks. Fargo has some decent restaurants but nothing compared to any city in California. Produce selection is spotty at best. Shopping of any kind ... etc, etc. Even the mail service takes forever. There is nothing here. AND did they account for medical care? there are practically no specialists in most of the state. There are 6-10 month waiting lists for specialty care and you have to drive 4-6 hours for them. This is not "best quality of life."
Anonymous wrote:Here are reasons CA has a good quality of life:
1. Thriving economy and job opportunities for young people (as long as you can find somewhere to live and/or can have mom or dad help with the rent)
2. Renowned public universities that are reduced or no-cost for working-class families. (But K-12 generally stinks.)
3. Low property taxes (Yeah, which is one of the why the cost of housing is so sky-high. People are disincentivised to make transactions as their property taxes really only catch up with their house value when they are bought and sold.)
4. Strong environmental protections
5. Strong consumer protections
6. Enormous agriculture center and strong farming community: we grow what the world eats. (Why would this make my life better?)
7. Gorgeous, beautiful slow life (This is a myth for anyone in tech)
8. Fun, fast paced city life (Except the lack of public transport makes it no fun to get around)
9. Family friendly, kids-riding-bikes suburban life (Except the schools suck)
10. Warm weather, sunny blue skies (Wild fires, 100+ degree heat, drought)
11. Entrepreneurial, creative, optimistic people (Asshole, bro, sexist culture in tech)
12. Excellent hospitals and health care
13. Successful public health care programs including the exchange “Covered California”
14. Free or low-cost amenities throughout the entire state: camping, hiking trails, wildflowers, beaches , state parks, national parks, etc. (Everywhere has these. Though CA's landscape is great.)
15. Gorgeous, protected open space
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:North Dakota is 1st. Have you ever lived in ND? I have. If that's what their methodology is coming up with as best in the country, it's hard to trust anything else they say.
There are (or were) a ton of jobs in ND. Helps increase income.
Anonymous wrote:North Dakota is 1st. Have you ever lived in ND? I have. If that's what their methodology is coming up with as best in the country, it's hard to trust anything else they say.