Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Family room where the only place to put a TV is over the fireplace.
Hold on - THAT ^^^ is a deal breaker for you?
PP isn't the only one! I HATE TVs over the fireplace. And we watch enough TV that not having someplace else to put it would make this if not a dealbreaker, a real downside.
Lack of sidewalks and/or not walkable would be an actual dealbreaker for me. Walking is my main form of exercise and it's how I decompress, and not being able to step out my door and walk would make me miserable.
+1 hate it! You have to look up so high, it’s uncomfortable. And the TV has to be really small. Plus it looks so tacky.
Depends how big fireplace is and how big room is. I have it in Den and have a 55 inch tv and watch it from 20 feet back
Anonymous wrote:Loundon County, as the school board conspired to hide the series of rapes in the high school and junior high restrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Busy road (aka Connecticut Avenue)
Split levels
Low ceilings
No basement
Hardscrabble lot (where the ground looks very hard and the grass is spare and you can tell it's difficult to have landscaping)
Unkempt neighbors
Too many political/social justice signs
Front door right into the staircase
Only one bathroom
Cramped rooms
Why?
Virtue signaling. And it's a way of telling people with different views they aren't welcome.
I like neighborhoods with very few signs because it tells me people mind their own business and aren't judgmental and don't wear politics on their sleeves. I don't need to see/ know your politics every time I step out of my house.
Because you're so totally nonjudgmental yourself, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Busy road (aka Connecticut Avenue)
Split levels
Low ceilings
No basement
Hardscrabble lot (where the ground looks very hard and the grass is spare and you can tell it's difficult to have landscaping)
Unkempt neighbors
Too many political/social justice signs
Front door right into the staircase
Only one bathroom
Cramped rooms
Why?
Virtue signaling. And it's a way of telling people with different views they aren't welcome.
I like neighborhoods with very few signs because it tells me people mind their own business and aren't judgmental and don't wear politics on their sleeves. I don't need to see/ know your politics every time I step out of my house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Busy road (aka Connecticut Avenue)
Split levels
Low ceilings
No basement
Hardscrabble lot (where the ground looks very hard and the grass is spare and you can tell it's difficult to have landscaping)
Unkempt neighbors
Too many political/social justice signs
Front door right into the staircase
Only one bathroom
Cramped rooms
Why?
Anonymous wrote:Busy road (aka Connecticut Avenue)
Split levels
Low ceilings
No basement
Hardscrabble lot (where the ground looks very hard and the grass is spare and you can tell it's difficult to have landscaping)
Unkempt neighbors
Too many political/social justice signs
Front door right into the staircase
Only one bathroom
Cramped rooms
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Family room where the only place to put a TV is over the fireplace.
Hold on - THAT ^^^ is a deal breaker for you?
PP isn't the only one! I HATE TVs over the fireplace. And we watch enough TV that not having someplace else to put it would make this if not a dealbreaker, a real downside.
Lack of sidewalks and/or not walkable would be an actual dealbreaker for me. Walking is my main form of exercise and it's how I decompress, and not being able to step out my door and walk would make me miserable.
+1 hate it! You have to look up so high, it’s uncomfortable. And the TV has to be really small. Plus it looks so tacky.
Anonymous wrote:Loundon County, as the school board conspired to hide the series of rapes in the high school and junior high restrooms.