Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, to be fair- "unlivable" actually means something.
People are living in all of the places you mentioned.
Hence- those places are not unlivable.
So the cost of living in DC is growing and the quality of living as well but for some reason you think the city is becoming 'unlivable'? What does unlivable mean to you? Because unaffordable and unlivable are two different things.
The quality is growing?
Really?
MPD officer shortage.
Slow EMS responses?
Teenagers beating up random people on the street for no reason?
Anonymous wrote:What 24 yr old wants to be married with kids anyway?! Your 20's is for building your career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, to be fair- "unlivable" actually means something.
People are living in all of the places you mentioned.
Hence- those places are not unlivable.
So the cost of living in DC is growing and the quality of living as well but for some reason you think the city is becoming 'unlivable'? What does unlivable mean to you? Because unaffordable and unlivable are two different things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, I think you're right. And DC has some of the highest rents in the country- much higher than, say, Los Angeles, which is a much more world-class city.
If you are going to pay that much in rent, I wouldnt pick someplace as boring and soulless as DC. There are better options.
I currently live in DC, but I was born and raised in LA. I love LA, but if you think it's more of a world class city than DC...you must be joking. You must think the movie industry makes a city "world class." More like klassy--Lol!
Huh. You really think a city which is roughly 8 times as large as DC is really less "world class"? Whatever you want to tell yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought 600k starter home
So did we, but not at 23 and pregnant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, pretty much.
I graduated in 2010. Moved to DC at 21 and got 3 successive unpaid/stipend internships. Found a job for $30,000 a year. I was miserable at the place but I had no idea how poor I was. I was lucky that I found a place in Columbia Heights with a room for $500/mo and then I found a new job at $35K and decided I wanted to live in my own place in Silver Spring. Even then it was insanely tight.
After 3 years and the age of 24 I left DC and moved abroad to get work experience. I'm moving back in 2017 as a 29-year-old homeowner in Logan Circle. However that's only becaue I worked my ass off for four years to make my way into a six-figure income. I don't think that can be done from within DC unless you start off strong, say in banking. Or if you want to wait 15 years until you finally make it up the ladder.
In either case, not common.
15 years from now can you imagine how insane the cost of living will have become?
It will be unlivable.
Then the prices will decrease.
Like New York, San Francisco and Boston have? Get real.
These cities are unlivable.
Plenty of people live there though and love it. You just have to be wealthy. Unlivable is a really non-specific term. Just say unaffordable so we know what you're talking about. Because those 'unlivable' cities are seeing unprecedented growth and prosperity. Not saying its right, just the way it is. Same with DC though out of the four listed I think its technically the cheapest but I'm not sure about it versus Boston.
Actually, there have been lots of talk of major change in San Francisco and Silicon Valley. NYT just had a big piece on it. It seems many people indeed find the housing crunch to be "unlivable"- as in, you cannot live there- because there are simply homes available at any kind of accessible price range.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, I think you're right. And DC has some of the highest rents in the country- much higher than, say, Los Angeles, which is a much more world-class city.
If you are going to pay that much in rent, I wouldnt pick someplace as boring and soulless as DC. There are better options.
I currently live in DC, but I was born and raised in LA. I love LA, but if you think it's more of a world class city than DC...you must be joking. You must think the movie industry makes a city "world class." More like klassy--Lol!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, pretty much.
I graduated in 2010. Moved to DC at 21 and got 3 successive unpaid/stipend internships. Found a job for $30,000 a year. I was miserable at the place but I had no idea how poor I was. I was lucky that I found a place in Columbia Heights with a room for $500/mo and then I found a new job at $35K and decided I wanted to live in my own place in Silver Spring. Even then it was insanely tight.
After 3 years and the age of 24 I left DC and moved abroad to get work experience. I'm moving back in 2017 as a 29-year-old homeowner in Logan Circle. However that's only becaue I worked my ass off for four years to make my way into a six-figure income. I don't think that can be done from within DC unless you start off strong, say in banking. Or if you want to wait 15 years until you finally make it up the ladder.
In either case, not common.
15 years from now can you imagine how insane the cost of living will have become?
It will be unlivable.
Then the prices will decrease.
Like New York, San Francisco and Boston have? Get real.
Anonymous wrote:Nope, I think you're right. And DC has some of the highest rents in the country- much higher than, say, Los Angeles, which is a much more world-class city.
If you are going to pay that much in rent, I wouldnt pick someplace as boring and soulless as DC. There are better options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, pretty much.
I graduated in 2010. Moved to DC at 21 and got 3 successive unpaid/stipend internships. Found a job for $30,000 a year. I was miserable at the place but I had no idea how poor I was. I was lucky that I found a place in Columbia Heights with a room for $500/mo and then I found a new job at $35K and decided I wanted to live in my own place in Silver Spring. Even then it was insanely tight.
After 3 years and the age of 24 I left DC and moved abroad to get work experience. I'm moving back in 2017 as a 29-year-old homeowner in Logan Circle. However that's only becaue I worked my ass off for four years to make my way into a six-figure income. I don't think that can be done from within DC unless you start off strong, say in banking. Or if you want to wait 15 years until you finally make it up the ladder.
In either case, not common.
15 years from now can you imagine how insane the cost of living will have become?
It will be unlivable.
Then the prices will decrease.
Like New York, San Francisco and Boston have? Get real.
These cities are unlivable.
Plenty of people live there though and love it. You just have to be wealthy. Unlivable is a really non-specific term. Just say unaffordable so we know what you're talking about. Because those 'unlivable' cities are seeing unprecedented growth and prosperity. Not saying its right, just the way it is. Same with DC though out of the four listed I think its technically the cheapest but I'm not sure about it versus Boston.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, pretty much.
I graduated in 2010. Moved to DC at 21 and got 3 successive unpaid/stipend internships. Found a job for $30,000 a year. I was miserable at the place but I had no idea how poor I was. I was lucky that I found a place in Columbia Heights with a room for $500/mo and then I found a new job at $35K and decided I wanted to live in my own place in Silver Spring. Even then it was insanely tight.
After 3 years and the age of 24 I left DC and moved abroad to get work experience. I'm moving back in 2017 as a 29-year-old homeowner in Logan Circle. However that's only becaue I worked my ass off for four years to make my way into a six-figure income. I don't think that can be done from within DC unless you start off strong, say in banking. Or if you want to wait 15 years until you finally make it up the ladder.
In either case, not common.
15 years from now can you imagine how insane the cost of living will have become?
It will be unlivable.
Then the prices will decrease.
Like New York, San Francisco and Boston have? Get real.
These cities are unlivable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, to be fair- "unlivable" actually means something.
People are living in all of the places you mentioned.
Hence- those places are not unlivable.
So the cost of living in DC is growing and the quality of living as well but for some reason you think the city is becoming 'unlivable'? What does unlivable mean to you? Because unaffordable and unlivable are two different things.