Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, that government you deride has a AAA bond rating and a $7B rainy day fund that is the envy if almost every governor in the union.
Yet, how many governors would envy a declining population, exorbitant cost of living, chronic homelessness, rising crime, and the clowns on the city council?
Casual racism is so 1980s.
And sugarcoating real and worsening problems is so 2020s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Should DC absorb suburbs when it becomes a state? Seems like the district is having trouble enforcing residency requirements for agency heads and since most of the city workforce aka commuters lives in the suburbs?
No, just give DC back to Maryland. Problem solved.
Anonymous wrote:DC is never going to be a State. Never.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, that government you deride has a AAA bond rating and a $7B rainy day fund that is the envy if almost every governor in the union.
Yet, how many governors would envy a declining population, exorbitant cost of living, chronic homelessness, rising crime, and the clowns on the city council?
Casual racism is so 1980s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, that government you deride has a AAA bond rating and a $7B rainy day fund that is the envy if almost every governor in the union.
Yet, how many governors would envy a declining population, exorbitant cost of living, chronic homelessness, rising crime, and the clowns on the city council?
Don't forget the public schools. They are ranked 49th in the country.
DC is a city. Apples to oranges comparison there, smoothbrain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, that government you deride has a AAA bond rating and a $7B rainy day fund that is the envy if almost every governor in the union.
Yet, how many governors would envy a declining population, exorbitant cost of living, chronic homelessness, rising crime, and the clowns on the city council?
Don't forget the public schools. They are ranked 49th in the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, that government you deride has a AAA bond rating and a $7B rainy day fund that is the envy if almost every governor in the union.
Only because DC taxes are so crazy high. Give the money back to taxpayers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, that government you deride has a AAA bond rating and a $7B rainy day fund that is the envy if almost every governor in the union.
Yet, how many governors would envy a declining population, exorbitant cost of living, chronic homelessness, rising crime, and the clowns on the city council?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Should DC absorb suburbs when it becomes a state? Seems like the district is having trouble enforcing residency requirements for agency heads and since most of the city workforce aka commuters lives in the suburbs?
No, just give DC back to Maryland. Problem solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, that government you deride has a AAA bond rating and a $7B rainy day fund that is the envy if almost every governor in the union.
Yet, how many governors would envy a declining population, exorbitant cost of living, chronic homelessness, rising crime, and the clowns on the city council?
Anonymous wrote:Should DC absorb suburbs when it becomes a state? Seems like the district is having trouble enforcing residency requirements for agency heads and since most of the city workforce aka commuters lives in the suburbs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just send DC back to Maryland.....
Maryland doesn’t want it.
Maryland should want it. Being able to control the entire B-W corridor provides huge opportunities for economic development.
Say what? The political reasons against retrocession are obvious.
There is also not a giant tax windfall to be had because DC can barely find their own services.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just send DC back to Maryland.....
Maryland doesn’t want it.
Maryland should want it. Being able to control the entire B-W corridor provides huge opportunities for economic development.