Anonymous wrote:Are the schools in Silver Spring really that bad? Is SS lower than middle class economically? Seems pretty middle to upper middle for the most part to me, and seems more "middle class" than CC/Bethesda to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the choice argument only works if these families could move to lower cost of living areas and still make that much. That usually isn't the case.
The vast majority of families living in expensive DC, Bethesda, Chevy Chase or Arlington neighborhoods and complaining about cost of living, could move to Silver Spring, or PG County, or Burke and continue to work at the same jobs, and have the same income.
The PP was right. Short commutes, high scoring public schools, "walkable communities", these are luxuries. There's nothing wrong with wanting to have them, but they're expensive luxuries. If you're paying for them, and not making major sacrifices elsewhere, you probably aren't middle class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many of us can't live anywhere because we are here with the government and that's not going anywhere.
You don't need to be able to live "anywhere". There are homes and communities right in the DC area where you could live a middle class lifestyle on a middle class salary (100K) or a very affluent lifestyle on the 200 - 300K we're talking about here.
Anonymous wrote:Many of us can't live anywhere because we are here with the government and that's not going anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Well, it's based on Cost of Living where YOU live. In the close in neighborhoods in DC, NOVA and MOCo, that income puts a family of 4 squarely in the middle class. Yes, it isn't middle class as compared to the middle of the country but locally it is. If you make $250,000 annually in this area you live a middle class existence based on what everything you spend your money in costs. It's all relative, PP.
Anonymous wrote:200k and can't afford a house I'd actually want to live in. I consider us solidly middle class.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the choice argument only works if these families could move to lower cost of living areas and still make that much. That usually isn't the case.
This.
I feel so sorry for those people who have no choice but to live in Chevy Chase or Great Falls. Must be tough.
It is. We bought a Chevy Chase home from family at a price what we would have paid in Damascus 15 years ago. They wanted the house to stay in the family and DH had just taken a job in a downtown nonprofit. That job is not transferrable to another place and we depend on Metro access to his work. We are the have-nots in the land of haves. Not all of us wanted to be exactly here, but life and jobs put us here.