Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People in Mississippi really value football.
It's to distract them from the fact that their educational system is ranked 45th in the country.
That’s a feature, not a bug. The conservative segregationist elites don’t want to fund or have their kids rub shoulders with the Lesser Folks.
Anonymous wrote:People in Mississippi really value football.
It's to distract them from the fact that their educational system is ranked 45th in the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve said this before on this and the financial forum — the folks in DC who think they’re going to retire to an adorable cheap house in some charming, walkable small town in flyover country on the equity from their home in DC are in for a shock. The charming, walkable towns are out there, but nice houses in good locations are NOT cheap, no matter where they are.
We moved to a very small town in the South that most of you have probably never heard of & live in a walkable neighborhood just a couple of blocks to downtown. The 2,300 sq ft house across the street from us just on the first day it was listed for $1.4 million. It is a charming house, but it needed work, and the new owners ripped out the kitchen the first week they were there. There are $500,000 houses here, but they’re small, cheaply built & on tiny lots in cookie cutter developments on the outskirts of town. The well built houses on big lots on the outskirts of town are $800 to a million.
People are still moving here in droves. The population shift to the South is real.
Part of the appeal of the South is that you get to make up your own facts.
https://news.olemiss.edu/um-experts-warn-about-consequences-of-population-loss/
Well, at least we learn to read in the South.
From the article you posted:
The state’s small towns lost population, while larger, more populated areas, such as the Jackson metro area, the Gulf Coast and DeSoto County, saw growth in the latest census. Oxford and the surrounding area also have experienced steady population growth for the last few decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve said this before on this and the financial forum — the folks in DC who think they’re going to retire to an adorable cheap house in some charming, walkable small town in flyover country on the equity from their home in DC are in for a shock. The charming, walkable towns are out there, but nice houses in good locations are NOT cheap, no matter where they are.
We moved to a very small town in the South that most of you have probably never heard of & live in a walkable neighborhood just a couple of blocks to downtown. The 2,300 sq ft house across the street from us just on the first day it was listed for $1.4 million. It is a charming house, but it needed work, and the new owners ripped out the kitchen the first week they were there. There are $500,000 houses here, but they’re small, cheaply built & on tiny lots in cookie cutter developments on the outskirts of town. The well built houses on big lots on the outskirts of town are $800 to a million.
People are still moving here in droves. The population shift to the South is real.
Part of the appeal of the South is that you get to make up your own facts.
https://news.olemiss.edu/um-experts-warn-about-consequences-of-population-loss/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This one is $1.85M https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/916-Old-Taylor-Rd-Oxford-MS-38655/2076800437_zpid/
Shocking
Agree, but the quality of life in the South is much better than in most of the US. Those who criticize the South have probably never lived there.
BS I could not get out fast enough.
NC & Florida Hell no ever again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1306-S-Lamar-Blvd-Oxford-MS-38655/223977382_zpid/
I would think that’d get you a mansion there.
I would not pay 400K for that house on that crappy property ..in MISSISSIPPI. Folks must buy these dumps then rent for a fortune to college students then refurb and sell.
Anonymous wrote:Welp, I will just show myself back over to the Dallas thread.
$1.6 million to live next to Ole Miss? Yuck. No thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This one is $1.85M https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/916-Old-Taylor-Rd-Oxford-MS-38655/2076800437_zpid/
Shocking
Agree, but the quality of life in the South is much better than in most of the US. Those who criticize the South have probably never lived there.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1306-S-Lamar-Blvd-Oxford-MS-38655/223977382_zpid/
I would think that’d get you a mansion there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This one is $1.85M https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/916-Old-Taylor-Rd-Oxford-MS-38655/2076800437_zpid/
Shocking
Agree, but the quality of life in the South is much better than in most of the US. Those who criticize the South have probably never lived there.
Anonymous wrote:Why is the area so expensive? What is so special about it?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve said this before on this and the financial forum — the folks in DC who think they’re going to retire to an adorable cheap house in some charming, walkable small town in flyover country on the equity from their home in DC are in for a shock. The charming, walkable towns are out there, but nice houses in good locations are NOT cheap, no matter where they are.
We moved to a very small town in the South that most of you have probably never heard of & live in a walkable neighborhood just a couple of blocks to downtown. The 2,300 sq ft house across the street from us just on the first day it was listed for $1.4 million. It is a charming house, but it needed work, and the new owners ripped out the kitchen the first week they were there. There are $500,000 houses here, but they’re small, cheaply built & on tiny lots in cookie cutter developments on the outskirts of town. The well built houses on big lots on the outskirts of town are $800 to a million.
People are still moving here in droves. The population shift to the South is real.