Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^this is just not true about "every single household on Cap Hill..."
If you're talking about the actual Hill, the historic district part, it really is true.
All the come-lately areas like Navy Yard, "hill east," H st and so on aren't really Capitol Hill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just want to point out that the Hill is a friendly and lovely place to live, regardless of what happens on DCUM.
+1000 Do not judge ANYTHING by what is said on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^this is just not true about "every single household on Cap Hill..."
If you're talking about the actual Hill, the historic district part, it really is true.
All the come-lately areas like Navy Yard, "hill east," H st and so on aren't really Capitol Hill.
Anonymous wrote:I just want to point out that the Hill is a friendly and lovely place to live, regardless of what happens on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:^^this is just not true about "every single household on Cap Hill..."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Add in the fact that the Hill is full of accomplished Do-ers who are used to making things happen by pulling the right levers, pushing the right buttons, making the right connections. People like that go a little apeshit when none of it works in their favor. Witness the vitriol in that epic Ludlow-Taylor thread. . .
This is the key difference.
Every single pofessional household in Capitol Hill contains an adult who either does now, or did until recently, work in politics/legislation. As opposed to biomedical research, maritime law, or teaching Russian Lit at Georgetown.
It's not that Hill parents are "do-ers" and the parents in AU Park, Georgetown or Palisades are "not do-ers." Because think about it: how did all of Ward 3 afford their $1million++ homes without being "do-ers"? Of course they are -- but not necessarily in politics/legislation/policy making.
Hmm, both my DH and I work in science-based fields... I guess we don't really live on the Hill? Maybe they should re-zone the historic district to exclude our house. And most of my neighbors as well (lawyers, doctors, etc.).![]()
Anonymous wrote:Add in the fact that the Hill is full of accomplished Do-ers who are used to making things happen by pulling the right levers, pushing the right buttons, making the right connections. People like that go a little apeshit when none of it works in their favor. Witness the vitriol in that epic Ludlow-Taylor thread. . .
This is the key difference.
Every single pofessional household in Capitol Hill contains an adult who either does now, or did until recently, work in politics/legislation. As opposed to biomedical research, maritime law, or teaching Russian Lit at Georgetown.
It's not that Hill parents are "do-ers" and the parents in AU Park, Georgetown or Palisades are "not do-ers." Because think about it: how did all of Ward 3 afford their $1million++ homes without being "do-ers"? Of course they are -- but not necessarily in politics/legislation/policy making.
Anonymous wrote:^^this is just not true about "every single household on Cap Hill..."
Add in the fact that the Hill is full of accomplished Do-ers who are used to making things happen by pulling the right levers, pushing the right buttons, making the right connections. People like that go a little apeshit when none of it works in their favor. Witness the vitriol in that epic Ludlow-Taylor thread. . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's gentrification - that's happenin everywhere. I think it's more complicated. It's gentirifcation among one of the most liberal, educated, ambitious, not-profit-working populations in the country. How do you say what you think without the PC police freaking the f--- out? How do you balance you Child's needs against your politics? When you have nothing but compassion for the kids in DC General but don't neccessarily want to send your 5 year old into a classroom wih kids from said shelter - a "grass roots movement" for Mandarin immersion takes on a lot of underlying BS
Observing this dynamic is one of my favorite parts of reading DCUM.