Anonymous wrote:This area is not like the rest of the country. You have UMC families who can afford nice cars but instead drive reliable Subarus, Toyotas, or base model Lexuses into the ground. In this town, a car is to get from Point A to Point B. Also, lots of people with a modest "daily driver" and maybe a nicer car for the weekends.
If they lived in California, NYC suburbs, or the South, these same families would enjoy nice BMWs, Mercedes, Teslas, Cadillacs, etc. I grew up in Southern California and any family making over $150K usually has a leased luxury car. That's just the culture.
The DC region UMC has a very frugal, disciplined, and long-term oriented mindset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Growing up in the 1980s and 1990s, Volvos were the ultimate UMC car because only the UMCs bought them. The very rich didn't drive them, but neither did the car devotees from lower incomes yearn for Volvos. The private school carpool lane was dominated by Volvo station wagons. If you drove a Volvo in the 1980s and 1990s it was probably the car that most accurately told people you were definitely upper middle class rather rather than an aspirational person with a lease. The other contender would be the Saabs.
Today people have different relationships with cars so it's not what it was like in the past.
This is so spot-on! The Saab statement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This area is not like the rest of the country. You have UMC families who can afford nice cars but instead drive reliable Subarus, Toyotas, or base model Lexuses into the ground. In this town, a car is to get from Point A to Point B. Also, lots of people with a modest "daily driver" and maybe a nicer car for the weekends.
If they lived in California, NYC suburbs, or the South, these same families would enjoy nice BMWs, Mercedes, Teslas, Cadillacs, etc. I grew up in Southern California and any family making over $150K usually has a leased luxury car. That's just the culture.
The DC region UMC has a very frugal, disciplined, and long-term oriented mindset.
Disagree, at least for close-in Montgomery County. All I see are BMW, Tesla, Lexus, Audi, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Growing up in the 1980s and 1990s, Volvos were the ultimate UMC car because only the UMCs bought them. The very rich didn't drive them, but neither did the car devotees from lower incomes yearn for Volvos. The private school carpool lane was dominated by Volvo station wagons. If you drove a Volvo in the 1980s and 1990s it was probably the car that most accurately told people you were definitely upper middle class rather rather than an aspirational person with a lease. The other contender would be the Saabs.
Today people have different relationships with cars so it's not what it was like in the past.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This area is not like the rest of the country. You have UMC families who can afford nice cars but instead drive reliable Subarus, Toyotas, or base model Lexuses into the ground. In this town, a car is to get from Point A to Point B. Also, lots of people with a modest "daily driver" and maybe a nicer car for the weekends.
If they lived in California, NYC suburbs, or the South, these same families would enjoy nice BMWs, Mercedes, Teslas, Cadillacs, etc. I grew up in Southern California and any family making over $150K usually has a leased luxury car. That's just the culture.
The DC region UMC has a very frugal, disciplined, and long-term oriented mindset.
Disagree, at least for close-in Montgomery County. All I see are BMW, Tesla, Lexus, Audi, etc.
Anonymous wrote:This area is not like the rest of the country. You have UMC families who can afford nice cars but instead drive reliable Subarus, Toyotas, or base model Lexuses into the ground. In this town, a car is to get from Point A to Point B. Also, lots of people with a modest "daily driver" and maybe a nicer car for the weekends.
If they lived in California, NYC suburbs, or the South, these same families would enjoy nice BMWs, Mercedes, Teslas, Cadillacs, etc. I grew up in Southern California and any family making over $150K usually has a leased luxury car. That's just the culture.
The DC region UMC has a very frugal, disciplined, and long-term oriented mindset.