Anonymous wrote:Peop le are being too hard on OP. What he/she wanted was possible - 10 to 20 years ago ( adjusted for inflation). Prob people chiming in now got theirs and don’t realize how different things are now.
Anonymous wrote:Not troll!
We want to be able to afford a mortgage on one salary. We don't want to lose retirement $$ on a home that is too much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We refuse to be house poor. We want to keep monthly payment affordable. With property taxes, increased interest rates, upkeep, it is just a lot of $$. And we don't want to sink $$ into a home to lose it if there is an adjustment in the market.
"We refuse to be house poor, and we refuse to look elsewhere than NW DC, Bethesda and Chevy Chase! Waaah!"
Stomps foot and storms off to soothe feelings with yet another highly caloric Bubble Tea, because OP is trying to lose weight with liquid diet.
I hate DCUM for real
Anonymous wrote:Blame your fellow latte-sipping liberal woke white gentrifiers for prices skyrocketing. Back in the day before they kicked us black folk out, I never used to hear white people talk about “housing shortage” or prices at all.

Anonymous wrote:Atlanta, Birningham, Tuscaloosa—lovely places. Really.
Anonymous wrote:We are now $500k plus annual income, have had house in Bethesda over a decade and our lives are a living hell.
Anonymous wrote:We are now $500k plus annual income, have had house in Bethesda over a decade and our lives are a living hell.
Anonymous wrote:I understand. I come from NY area and make a good salary, nothing fancy, 500K a year which is solidly middle class where I’m from. We were able to afford a SFH, 2,800 square feet, within 30 min driving commute of Park and 46th.
Really interested to know where this was.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Erm, maybe you need to get a clue. Their top publics and privates have matriculation lists that would satisfy the most demanding DCUM.
If that's true it is only because coming from bumf*#$ is a hook. Top schools like to be able to say they draw from all 50 states so they need to find someone from Alabama even if that candidate could never compete with graduates from places with a higher popular level and standard of education on a level field. I think the score required for National Merit semifinalist is a reasonable guide. In better-educated places, you need a higher score. It's just easier to stand out where there's less competition.
NP, but all you are doing is proving the PP's point. So what if that's why those schools are sending kids to good colleges? They are doing it.