Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:American cities are in decline because city leaders are generally inept. Now as they collapse leaders in the suburbs want to repeat the same mistakes. Glad I am nearing retirement and will be able to escape the fall of the suburbs.
Where are you going? Have you paid attention to the collapse of rural areas…because nobody wants to live there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:American cities are in decline because city leaders are generally inept. Now as they collapse leaders in the suburbs want to repeat the same mistakes. Glad I am nearing retirement and will be able to escape the fall of the suburbs.
Where are you going? Have you paid attention to the collapse of rural areas…because nobody wants to live there.
Anonymous wrote:American cities are in decline because city leaders are generally inept. Now as they collapse leaders in the suburbs want to repeat the same mistakes. Glad I am nearing retirement and will be able to escape the fall of the suburbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The educated are long gone from DC. As well as anyone with any common sense.
So strange how Americans hate their cities. Since cities are really social hubs where people come together for work and culture, it really reflects how much Americans despise each other.
I loved living in cities when I was young and didn’t have kids. However, now I do, and I prefer the suburbs. We have a neighborhood and a school with a rich social components. The city offers my current life nothing that I don’t already have better where I am, in suburbia but close to the city.
Now, the truly irritating people are the ones that want to convert suburbia into the city. It’s hugely selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The educated are long gone from DC. As well as anyone with any common sense.
So strange how Americans hate their cities. Since cities are really social hubs where people come together for work and culture, it really reflects how much Americans despise each other.
This! Americans are hostile to or isolated from one another and our cities pay the price for it. Its part of why we're steadily losing global influence to more unified and urbanized nations like China.
lol…you mean to tell us that an ancient and conformist and nearly 100% homogenous society can live in closer quarters than a heterogenous society founded on independence?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The educated are long gone from DC. As well as anyone with any common sense.
So strange how Americans hate their cities. Since cities are really social hubs where people come together for work and culture, it really reflects how much Americans despise each other.
This! Americans are hostile to or isolated from one another and our cities pay the price for it. Its part of why we're steadily losing global influence to more unified and urbanized nations like China.
lol…you mean to tell us that an ancient and conformist and nearly 100% homogenous society can live in closer quarters than a heterogenous society founded on independence?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The educated are long gone from DC. As well as anyone with any common sense.
So strange how Americans hate their cities. Since cities are really social hubs where people come together for work and culture, it really reflects how much Americans despise each other.
This! Americans are hostile to or isolated from one another and our cities pay the price for it. Its part of why we're steadily losing global influence to more unified and urbanized nations like China.
Please. Americans simply have access to land and space. You think the average urban Chinese person really wants to live in a tiny apartment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The educated are long gone from DC. As well as anyone with any common sense.
So strange how Americans hate their cities. Since cities are really social hubs where people come together for work and culture, it really reflects how much Americans despise each other.
This! Americans are hostile to or isolated from one another and our cities pay the price for it. Its part of why we're steadily losing global influence to more unified and urbanized nations like China.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The educated are long gone from DC. As well as anyone with any common sense.
So strange how Americans hate their cities. Since cities are really social hubs where people come together for work and culture, it really reflects how much Americans despise each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The educated are long gone from DC. As well as anyone with any common sense.
So strange how Americans hate their cities. Since cities are really social hubs where people come together for work and culture, it really reflects how much Americans despise each other.
This! Americans are hostile to or isolated from one another and our cities pay the price for it. Its part of why we're steadily losing global influence to more unified and urbanized nations like China.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The educated are long gone from DC. As well as anyone with any common sense.
So strange how Americans hate their cities. Since cities are really social hubs where people come together for work and culture, it really reflects how much Americans despise each other.
Anonymous wrote:People who love their cities, get involved for their betterment, they aren't sitting in their boring suburbs complaining about cities they left.
Anonymous wrote:The truly smart ones left in the 80s. It has been a long slow exodus since then. If you haven’t left by now, you are misjudging your intelligence by a wide margin.