Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo has better private schools and country clubs. I’m not sure NoVa is even livable.
Well I think the same about MoCo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh look. The provinces are having some kind of a competition. How quaint.
- The District
This would be cute if D.C. was the region’s dominant center of population and jobs.
It’s neither.
The big power, decision makers jobs are in DC.
Your IT sweatshops jobs are not.
Perhaps a couple of decades ago. No longer.
DP
Without DC you wouldn't have your IT sweatshop jobs.
NoVa is relevant (sort of) because of its proximity to DC
Anonymous wrote:MoCo has better private schools and country clubs. I’m not sure NoVa is even livable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh look. The provinces are having some kind of a competition. How quaint.
- The District
This would be cute if D.C. was the region’s dominant center of population and jobs.
It’s neither.
The big power, decision makers jobs are in DC.
Your IT sweatshops jobs are not.
Perhaps a couple of decades ago. No longer.
DP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top employers in MoCo:
https://commerce.maryland.gov/Documents/ResearchDocument/MajorEmployersInMontgomeryCounty.pdf
Top employers in Fairfax:
https://www.fairfaxcountyeda.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Major-Employers.pdf
So basically, MoCo relies entirely on govt jobs and some crappy low paying service sector jobs at places like Giant, Safeway, and Target. Meanwhile in NoVa, the top employers are major banks, super high end tech and software companies, top consulting firms, and other major professional services firms. I never knew MoCo was getting its lunch eaten this bad. NoVa has way, way better jobs and a far better diversity of jobs/firms. MoCo relies entirely on govt, clearly has a severe lack of innovative firms that pay high salaries when compared to NoVa, and a large portion of their residents working in very low quality service sector jobs that probably pay just over minimum wage. How is MoCo not doomed with this flimsy of a tax and employer base?
The fact that every third car coming down/back on Georgetown Pike has MD plates told me this a long time ago. That and the traffic from same cars on back roads near the beltway in McLean
+1
If the MD drivers would just learn to drive, it would (partially) make up for them clogging VA roads.
Except it’s the VA drivers who clog up the roads by driving slow in the left lane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting its lunch eaten? How old are you?
Many people would never live in a state as backwards as VA. Youngkin? Absolutely not.
![]()
And yet, MD drivers clog up VA roadways because they come here every day for their JOBS. Imagine that! And learn to drive, btw.
DP
Thankfully any can work from home now.
Well, you can't do service sector jobs from home -- Marylanders work in nursing homes, restaurants, day care centers, and other low skill low pay jobs. And the fact that they have to cross a bridge to make $15 an hour is sad
Is that why MD is the wealthiest state?
The "wealthiest state" moniker is misleading at best. It's the small percentage of uber wealthy MD residents that props up statewide data and masks the systemic poverty and underemployment plaguing the state's urban and rural regions alike. If course, this is not unique to MD; it's found in VA and other states like CA, CT and MA perceived to be "wealthy."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh look. The provinces are having some kind of a competition. How quaint.
- The District
This would be cute if D.C. was the region’s dominant center of population and jobs.
It’s neither.
The big power, decision makers jobs are in DC.
Your IT sweatshops jobs are not.
Speaking of power, DC doesn’t produce its own energy. It doesn’t produce food. It doesn’t manufacture anything of note.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh look. The provinces are having some kind of a competition. How quaint.
- The District
This would be cute if D.C. was the region’s dominant center of population and jobs.
It’s neither.
![]()
So true. I don't know anyone who commutes to DC for work these days. Everyone is in the Reston tech corridor, Rt. 28 corridor, or Tysons. Or at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting its lunch eaten? How old are you?
Many people would never live in a state as backwards as VA. Youngkin? Absolutely not.
![]()
And yet, MD drivers clog up VA roadways because they come here every day for their JOBS. Imagine that! And learn to drive, btw.
DP
Thankfully any can work from home now.
Well, you can't do service sector jobs from home -- Marylanders work in nursing homes, restaurants, day care centers, and other low skill low pay jobs. And the fact that they have to cross a bridge to make $15 an hour is sad
Is that why MD is the wealthiest state?
Anonymous wrote:MoCo has better private schools and country clubs. I’m not sure NoVa is even livable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top employers in MoCo:
https://commerce.maryland.gov/Documents/ResearchDocument/MajorEmployersInMontgomeryCounty.pdf
Top employers in Fairfax:
https://www.fairfaxcountyeda.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Major-Employers.pdf
So basically, MoCo relies entirely on govt jobs and some crappy low paying service sector jobs at places like Giant, Safeway, and Target. Meanwhile in NoVa, the top employers are major banks, super high end tech and software companies, top consulting firms, and other major professional services firms. I never knew MoCo was getting its lunch eaten this bad. NoVa has way, way better jobs and a far better diversity of jobs/firms. MoCo relies entirely on govt, clearly has a severe lack of innovative firms that pay high salaries when compared to NoVa, and a large portion of their residents working in very low quality service sector jobs that probably pay just over minimum wage. How is MoCo not doomed with this flimsy of a tax and employer base?
The fact that every third car coming down/back on Georgetown Pike has MD plates told me this a long time ago. That and the traffic from same cars on back roads near the beltway in McLean
+1
If the MD drivers would just learn to drive, it would (partially) make up for them clogging VA roads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh look. The provinces are having some kind of a competition. How quaint.
- The District
This would be cute if D.C. was the region’s dominant center of population and jobs.
It’s neither.
The big power, decision makers jobs are in DC.
Your IT sweatshops jobs are not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top employers in MoCo:
https://commerce.maryland.gov/Documents/ResearchDocument/MajorEmployersInMontgomeryCounty.pdf
Top employers in Fairfax:
https://www.fairfaxcountyeda.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Major-Employers.pdf
So basically, MoCo relies entirely on govt jobs and some crappy low paying service sector jobs at places like Giant, Safeway, and Target. Meanwhile in NoVa, the top employers are major banks, super high end tech and software companies, top consulting firms, and other major professional services firms. I never knew MoCo was getting its lunch eaten this bad. NoVa has way, way better jobs and a far better diversity of jobs/firms. MoCo relies entirely on govt, clearly has a severe lack of innovative firms that pay high salaries when compared to NoVa, and a large portion of their residents working in very low quality service sector jobs that probably pay just over minimum wage. How is MoCo not doomed with this flimsy of a tax and employer base?
The fact that every third car coming down/back on Georgetown Pike has MD plates told me this a long time ago. That and the traffic from same cars on back roads near the beltway in McLean
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh look. The provinces are having some kind of a competition. How quaint.
- The District
This would be cute if D.C. was the region’s dominant center of population and jobs.
It’s neither.