Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol @ quoting “Atlas Shrugged.”
Get a life, OP. Or at least reference better books!
Amen!
Have you read it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol @ quoting “Atlas Shrugged.”
Get a life, OP. Or at least reference better books!
Amen!
Have you read it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol @ quoting “Atlas Shrugged.”
Get a life, OP. Or at least reference better books!
Amen!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was funny for a few sentences, but then I remembered how baby boomers stole all the wealth for themselves and ruined the environment in the process
Screw all of you
No I did not rob you of wealth, get a job (or three as I had at one point) save your money, stay out of Starbucks and stop your whining. Your welcome.
Anonymous wrote:This was funny for a few sentences, but then I remembered how baby boomers stole all the wealth for themselves and ruined the environment in the process
Screw all of you
Anonymous wrote:Cool story, OP! Tell it again! I like the part where you pretend to be very old and wise and dispense sage advice but then tell us you're 35!
Anonymous wrote:The millennial “problem” seems to be restricted to the very expensive coastal cities.
DH’s job puts him in contact with plenty of young millenials in flyover who occupy junior level positions in his company and they are all buying houses and living comfortable lives. In places like Tampa, Atlanta, Charlotte, Phoenix, Denver and Columbus. Most of them came out of state universities. They’re doing just fine.
From what I can tell the issue is that some millenials who have flocked to places like DC or NYC or California have discovered they’re falling behind in those markets but refuse to move to a more affordable city are now complaining about unfair life is. Well, my response is to grow up. No one is owed an UMC life in DC or NYC. You want to stay in those places? Figure out what you need to do. If you can’t make it, move elsewhere if you want a better quality of life.
Anonymous wrote:The millennial “problem” seems to be restricted to the very expensive coastal cities.
DH’s job puts him in contact with plenty of young millenials in flyover who occupy junior level positions in his company and they are all buying houses and living comfortable lives. In places like Tampa, Atlanta, Charlotte, Phoenix, Denver and Columbus. Most of them came out of state universities. They’re doing just fine.
From what I can tell the issue is that some millenials who have flocked to places like DC or NYC or California have discovered they’re falling behind in those markets but refuse to move to a more affordable city are now complaining about unfair life is. Well, my response is to grow up. No one is owed an UMC life in DC or NYC. You want to stay in those places? Figure out what you need to do. If you can’t make it, move elsewhere if you want a better quality of life.