Anonymous wrote:How exactly did you "accidentally" see her?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just saw a stat on that said there are 28 homeless children currently enrolled at LT.
I feel like an asshole for even having the thought (so, ergo I go voice it on DCUM like an even bigger asshole) but this feels high. Is there a shelter in-bounds for LT? Perhaps I'm a sheltered jerk for not realizing how prevalent homelessness can be, but that's 12% of the student enrollment! Is it possible MD residents are gaming the system this way?
where did you see that stat?
According to the below, it's more like 10%. But I think this stat is conservative. It got brought up on the Peabody Dump the Cluster DCUM discussion.
http://www.dc-aya.org/sites/default/files/content/...t%20Enrollment%20in%20DCPS.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just saw a stat on that said there are 28 homeless children currently enrolled at LT.
I feel like an asshole for even having the thought (so, ergo I go voice it on DCUM like an even bigger asshole) but this feels high. Is there a shelter in-bounds for LT? Perhaps I'm a sheltered jerk for not realizing how prevalent homelessness can be, but that's 12% of the student enrollment! Is it possible MD residents are gaming the system this way?
where did you see that stat?
Anonymous wrote:I just saw a stat on that said there are 28 homeless children currently enrolled at LT.
I feel like an asshole for even having the thought (so, ergo I go voice it on DCUM like an even bigger asshole) but this feels high. Is there a shelter in-bounds for LT? Perhaps I'm a sheltered jerk for not realizing how prevalent homelessness can be, but that's 12% of the student enrollment! Is it possible MD residents are gaming the system this way?
Anonymous wrote:Does the principal return emails?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It always amuses me when people who are bitter about being priced out of the hill come on DCUM to vent their frustration.
+1
I love living on the Hill. I had no idea there were people (although this has to be one person with a grudge) who felt that way. Perhaps, they were priced out of the Hill or had a bad experience in the area once.
I worked in Georgetown years ago and was mugged. I also mistakenly entered an illegal massage place that was for prostitution (I know, I was clueless but didn't stay learn more). I still have an ill feeling about the area when I visit.
Nothing has ever happened to me or anyone I know on the Hill. I guess it's all your experience....
I worry about my friends in California whenever I hear about a earthquake and can't imagine why they would choose to live there. They say the same about me living in DC. They're afraid of terrorist attacks and convinced that I should have escape routes planned and gas masks handy. It also reminds me of two students I met who were visiting the mid-west (where I used to live) from Japan and they were paranoid that they would be shot (and asked me a million questions about their safety). It's all about your past experience and perception.
The negative poster(s) commenting about the Hill obviously have a VERY different perspective than I do. I feel MOST comfortable on the Hill. Everyone looks out for each other on the Hill. I've never been part of any community so tight and caring.
Why do the posters feel a need to bad mouth a community where lots of families are moving in everyday and folks are genuinely happy?
Anyone's guess. What's yours?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe, people are warning you not to be too Pollyannish, 14;41, which is totally how you are presenting here.
Seriously? You think the Hill is the safest and most comfortable place in DC? You also, apparently, think it will be an unchangeable utopia somehow divorced from the rest of the city?
Interesting.
Also, it is sort of cute that you have no perspective whatsoever about any neighborhoods outside what you define as the Hill.
What you don't understand is this lack of perspective makes you look very very bad.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe, people are warning you not to be too Pollyannish, 14;41, which is totally how you are presenting here.
Seriously? You think the Hill is the safest and most comfortable place in DC? You also, apparently, think it will be an unchangeable utopia somehow divorced from the rest of the city?
Interesting.
Also, it is sort of cute that you have no perspective whatsoever about any neighborhoods outside what you define as the Hill.
What you don't understand is this lack of perspective makes you look very very bad.
Poor baby, did someone honk at you when you were on East Capitol Street because you were going to slow?