Anonymous wrote:
I don’t think you understand the concept of homeownership in the U.S. Mortgages are not “debt.” The Langley zone house will be worth double the Justice zone house when it comes time for the family to sell. And real estate is a great investment, because no bank would give you hundreds of thousands of dollars to invest in the stock market, but they’ll give you it to invest in real estate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Oh, come off it. Justice is a troubled school with — among other things — high student poverty rates, high teacher turnover rates, and low academic achievement. It’s at the bottom of the barrel along with the likes of Lewis and Annandale. Sure, some students go on to prestigious colleges and universities (Justice like all FCPS high schools is large) but don’t give off an impression that that’s typical. Those kids are in a very small minority.
The destinations are representative of the children whose parents frequent this forum.
Why are you so hostile? Does it bother you that you went deep into debt to buy a house in the Langley district only to find out the top kids at Justice go to top schools while your Langley kid barely got into JMU?
You call the person you’re responding to “hostile”, and then you go on to insult their child. I can’t believe there are people who are as unpleasant as you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Oh, come off it. Justice is a troubled school with — among other things — high student poverty rates, high teacher turnover rates, and low academic achievement. It’s at the bottom of the barrel along with the likes of Lewis and Annandale. Sure, some students go on to prestigious colleges and universities (Justice like all FCPS high schools is large) but don’t give off an impression that that’s typical. Those kids are in a very small minority.
The destinations are representative of the children whose parents frequent this forum.
Why are you so hostile? Does it bother you that you went deep into debt to buy a house in the Langley district only to find out the top kids at Justice go to top schools while your Langley kid barely got into JMU?
I don’t think you understand the concept of homeownership in the U.S. Mortgages are not “debt.” The Langley zone house will be worth double the Justice zone house when it comes time for the family to sell. And real estate is a great investment, because no bank would give you hundreds of thousands of dollars to invest in the stock market, but they’ll give you it to invest in real estate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Oh, come off it. Justice is a troubled school with — among other things — high student poverty rates, high teacher turnover rates, and low academic achievement. It’s at the bottom of the barrel along with the likes of Lewis and Annandale. Sure, some students go on to prestigious colleges and universities (Justice like all FCPS high schools is large) but don’t give off an impression that that’s typical. Those kids are in a very small minority.
The destinations are representative of the children whose parents frequent this forum.
Why are you so hostile? Does it bother you that you went deep into debt to buy a house in the Langley district only to find out the top kids at Justice go to top schools while your Langley kid barely got into JMU?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Good schools should be teaching students to put the punctuation inside the quotation marks.
Only American and Canadian English have those punctuation rules. They might be from overseas.
And in American English, there is the use/mention difference. When you use the quoted phrase as part of a sentence, the punctuation goes inside the quotes. When you talk about the phrase itself, you put them outside the quotation marks.
Use: PP is a "grammar Nazi."
Mention: PP called PP a "grammar Nazi".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Good schools should be teaching students to put the punctuation inside the quotation marks.
Only American and Canadian English have those punctuation rules. They might be from overseas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Oh, come off it. Justice is a troubled school with — among other things — high student poverty rates, high teacher turnover rates, and low academic achievement. It’s at the bottom of the barrel along with the likes of Lewis and Annandale. Sure, some students go on to prestigious colleges and universities (Justice like all FCPS high schools is large) but don’t give off an impression that that’s typical. Those kids are in a very small minority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There a lot of real estate buffs on this site. It is all kind of interesting: How a neighborhood can go from most desirable to just okay (or vice versa) in a few years.
I had no idea Lake Barcroft even existed until I went to some kids birthday party when I was a kid. It’s hidden away behind all the sprawl and garden apartments.
Isn’t it all muck and weeds?
Anonymous wrote:There a lot of real estate buffs on this site. It is all kind of interesting: How a neighborhood can go from most desirable to just okay (or vice versa) in a few years.
I had no idea Lake Barcroft even existed until I went to some kids birthday party when I was a kid. It’s hidden away behind all the sprawl and garden apartments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Good schools should be teaching students to put the punctuation inside the quotation marks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to live in that area but have since moved. Schools are terrible and I don't think the lake is reason enough to stay. My friends who remain in the area send kids to private schools.
Annandale has great places to eat, though. But I wouldn't buy a house just to get some good takeout.
Do tell what you mean by "schools are terrible"?
Were the Justice High students admitted this year or last year to Princeton, American, Notre Dame, Yale, Syracuse, Cal Tech, Ohio State, Michigan, Wesleyan, Penn State, UVA, William & Mary, UCLA, JMU, GW, Georgia, Smith, Clemson, Rutgers, USC, Virginia Tech, Middlebury, Georgetown, Maryland, Pitt, and W&L not served well?
Good schools should be teaching students to put the punctuation inside the quotation marks.