Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand the folks that don't like living here. Cost of living aside it's an amazing city.
Great downtown. Not too big, enough greenery. Nice neighborhoods close to downtown. Good food, diverse with large international population, I had Ghanaian food the other night. 2 international airports, great schools. Where do you people want to live ? Atlanta? Charlotte? Chicago? Bleh. DC is amazing.
I agree. I'm a native and do not desire to live anyplace else.
Anonymous wrote:
My favorite posters are the locals who have not resided (other than maybe military or college) in other states, but claim this area is somehow superior. Get over yourself, in more ways than one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Washington may be less beautiful than the rocky coast of Maine, but try making a living there. I think Washington is one of the most beautiful cities around. It's so green, and museums and parks are abundant. The Potomac is a wild and scenic river just a few miles from downtown. Having so many close-in, walkable family-friendly neigborhoods close to downtown is also exceptional. When I fly back to National Airport, it seems that the plane is descending into a large park. The light and open vistas are incredible. For that reason, I opposed the proposals of a minority to raise building height limits in DC and was glad that the DC Council overwhelmingly voted not to raise building heights.
Hundreds of thousands of people make a living there, including professionals. Doctors. Lawyers. The list goes on. People do have lives outside the Beltway.
I'm from there. And after you get out of Southern Maine (Portland), there are a lot of folks who barely make it though the winter. Multiple, low-paying jobs and food stamps are pretty common even among adults who have completed high school and some college. Well-paying jobs are hard to find.
Anonymous wrote:Washington may be less beautiful than the rocky coast of Maine, but try making a living there. I think Washington is one of the most beautiful cities around. It's so green, and museums and parks are abundant. The Potomac is a wild and scenic river just a few miles from downtown. Having so many close-in, walkable family-friendly neigborhoods close to downtown is also exceptional. When I fly back to National Airport, it seems that the plane is descending into a large park. The light and open vistas are incredible. For that reason, I opposed the proposals of a minority to raise building height limits in DC and was glad that the DC Council overwhelmingly voted not to raise building heights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Washington may be less beautiful than the rocky coast of Maine, but try making a living there. I think Washington is one of the most beautiful cities around. It's so green, and museums and parks are abundant. The Potomac is a wild and scenic river just a few miles from downtown. Having so many close-in, walkable family-friendly neigborhoods close to downtown is also exceptional. When I fly back to National Airport, it seems that the plane is descending into a large park. The light and open vistas are incredible. For that reason, I opposed the proposals of a minority to raise building height limits in DC and was glad that the DC Council overwhelmingly voted not to raise building heights.
Hundreds of thousands of people make a living there, including professionals. Doctors. Lawyers. The list goes on. People do have lives outside the Beltway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand the folks that don't like living here. Cost of living aside it's an amazing city.
Great downtown. Not too big, enough greenery. Nice neighborhoods close to downtown. Good food, diverse with large international population, I had Ghanaian food the other night. 2 international airports, great schools. Where do you people want to live ? Atlanta? Charlotte? Chicago? Bleh. DC is amazing.
La Jolla.
I don't blame you. La Jolla is heaven on earth!
Anonymous wrote:Washington may be less beautiful than the rocky coast of Maine, but try making a living there. I think Washington is one of the most beautiful cities around. It's so green, and museums and parks are abundant. The Potomac is a wild and scenic river just a few miles from downtown. Having so many close-in, walkable family-friendly neigborhoods close to downtown is also exceptional. When I fly back to National Airport, it seems that the plane is descending into a large park. The light and open vistas are incredible. For that reason, I opposed the proposals of a minority to raise building height limits in DC and was glad that the DC Council overwhelmingly voted not to raise building heights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My next door neighbors are a large family from Ethiopia, who invite my daughter to play with their kids all the time. We have a tenant who lives with us who makes a living as an artist, as well as her boyfriend who is a pretty well known artist in this area. I am an artist myself, but make my living in a slightly different way. My husband works at a non profit dealing with middle east peace issues. Across the street there is an old lady from Jamaica who is the epitome of the nosy neighbor and knows everyone's business, blares gospel music from her porch every Sunday morning. Next door to her is another white family, and next door to them is the football coach at a nearby high school. And yes, we live IN DC.
I really think it just depends on the neighborhood.
Where are the Asians, Middle Eastern and Hispanics?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Washington may be less beautiful than the rocky coast of Maine, but try making a living there. I think Washington is one of the most beautiful cities around. It's so green, and museums and parks are abundant. The Potomac is a wild and scenic river just a few miles from downtown. Having so many close-in, walkable family-friendly neigborhoods close to downtown is also exceptional. When I fly back to National Airport, it seems that the plane is descending into a large park. The light and open vistas are incredible. For that reason, I opposed the proposals of a minority to raise building height limits in DC and was glad that the DC Council overwhelmingly voted not to raise building heights.
+1 on green
If you ever fly in and out of other metro areas, from the air DC is one of the greenest I have ever seen.
Anonymous wrote:Washington may be less beautiful than the rocky coast of Maine, but try making a living there. I think Washington is one of the most beautiful cities around. It's so green, and museums and parks are abundant. The Potomac is a wild and scenic river just a few miles from downtown. Having so many close-in, walkable family-friendly neigborhoods close to downtown is also exceptional. When I fly back to National Airport, it seems that the plane is descending into a large park. The light and open vistas are incredible. For that reason, I opposed the proposals of a minority to raise building height limits in DC and was glad that the DC Council overwhelmingly voted not to raise building heights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the people. I know -- lots of us are great. But we are all the same. In my upper-middle-class suburban hometown, there were lots of white-collar types, sure, doctors, lawyers, VPs at major corporations. But there was also...the guy who ran the soccer apparel store. The car dealership owner. The cafeteria aid. I went to school with all of their children. Around here, the people who fill these roles live in their own suburbs. At least in the nice DC neighborhoods, people aren't mixed together for a healthy sense of what life is.
I know that this is the case for a lot of major cities -- in high-density areas, people self-segregate. But DC also lacks the diversity typical of many cities. There aren't a lot of artists, for instance. Yeah...I know that instead we have people from all over the world, and rather than the car dealership owner's kids, my kids hang out with the kids of the guy with a prominent role at an important and unique NGO, or whatever. But that's fake diversity. When you get down to it, that guy is the same as a lawyer in terms of education, upbringing and life goals. A journalist is like a lobbyist (though they make a lot less.) Worldly, goal-oriented -- and at the end of the day, quite dull, when that's all there is.
Sorry, but you know I'm right.
My next door neighbors are a large family from Ethiopia, who invite my daughter to play with their kids all the time. We have a tenant who lives with us who makes a living as an artist, as well as her boyfriend who is a pretty well known artist in this area. I am an artist myself, but make my living in a slightly different way. My husband works at a non profit dealing with middle east peace issues. Across the street there is an old lady from Jamaica who is the epitome of the nosy neighbor and knows everyone's business, blares gospel music from her porch every Sunday morning. Next door to her is another white family, and next door to them is the football coach at a nearby high school. And yes, we live IN DC.
I really think it just depends on the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:It's the people. I know -- lots of us are great. But we are all the same. In my upper-middle-class suburban hometown, there were lots of white-collar types, sure, doctors, lawyers, VPs at major corporations. But there was also...the guy who ran the soccer apparel store. The car dealership owner. The cafeteria aid. I went to school with all of their children. Around here, the people who fill these roles live in their own suburbs. At least in the nice DC neighborhoods, people aren't mixed together for a healthy sense of what life is.
I know that this is the case for a lot of major cities -- in high-density areas, people self-segregate. But DC also lacks the diversity typical of many cities. There aren't a lot of artists, for instance. Yeah...I know that instead we have people from all over the world, and rather than the car dealership owner's kids, my kids hang out with the kids of the guy with a prominent role at an important and unique NGO, or whatever. But that's fake diversity. When you get down to it, that guy is the same as a lawyer in terms of education, upbringing and life goals. A journalist is like a lobbyist (though they make a lot less.) Worldly, goal-oriented -- and at the end of the day, quite dull, when that's all there is.
Sorry, but you know I'm right.
Anonymous wrote:Just jumping in to say, the things people love and hate about DC are not "situational to the person." The truth is DC is a VERY unique city and the unique aspects are what make people love or hate it. And they need to be generally true regardless of personal situation.
For example:
DC negatives:
- Uniquely expensive, especially for what it has to offer. Yes NYC is more expensive, but then you are living in NYC! In DC it is expensive even if you live in a suburb with a long commute. And this is no NYC in terms of excitement, culture, wow factor.
- Uniquely high traffic. Again see above.
- Unique in having a very small middle class. I've never seen anything like it. Where are the everyday joes? Which, then creates the crazy rich versus poor, black versus white divide.
- Unique government structure (no representation. Small city core with Federal Government overlay==terribly run city.)
- Unusually transit.
DC positives:
- Unique policy and government jobs. Booming economy. Interesting jobs. Highly educated workforce. All unique because of the government economy.
- Lots of free museums. Again, a quirk of being the capital city.
- Unique highly educated, highly international population.