Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m from Capitol Hill. Throughout the country I’ve met people who say “oh, I’m from DC too” and I ask where and they say something like Fairfax.
It is incredibly annoying. They’re not the same.
They’re also not that different except that it’s easier for the Fairfax people to park in front of their home. Really, you DC people need to get over yourselves. DC is a tiny city with a million suburbs. People are going to say “dc” and mean it in the the broad sense because no one cares.
Where does it end? Centreville? Front Royal? Hagerstown?
Who cares if they’re geographically near: they’re not the same! It’s like being from Westchester and saying you’re from NYC. Uh, no you’re not.
You do, obviously.
I love it when these transplants wrap their whole identity on a zip code. I live in Arlington and am closer huge swaths of DC than are every single person in the Palisades.
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of people feel that way. I dont mind anyone who grew up in the close in suburbs (the suburbs where you can legitimately get to DC in less than 20 minutes and probably go in regularly to grab lunch, go shopping, run errands, etc- so Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Alexandria, Silver Spring, etc) but the fact is there are many transplants from God knows where who live out in Gaithersburg and want to slip into an "I'm from DC" deception because they think it makes them seem more glamorous. Come on, everyone sees through it, which is why people write articles making fun of it. It's wearing your insecurities on your sleeve for everyone to see
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in Bethesda but now live in CA. when asked where I'm from I say "DC", because no one outside of the immediate DC area has heard of Bethesda unless they're into all things NIH. Also I spent a great deal of my adult life actually living in DC and going to school there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m from Capitol Hill. Throughout the country I’ve met people who say “oh, I’m from DC too” and I ask where and they say something like Fairfax.
It is incredibly annoying. They’re not the same.
They’re also not that different except that it’s easier for the Fairfax people to park in front of their home. Really, you DC people need to get over yourselves. DC is a tiny city with a million suburbs. People are going to say “dc” and mean it in the the broad sense because no one cares.
Where does it end? Centreville? Front Royal? Hagerstown?
Who cares if they’re geographically near: they’re not the same! It’s like being from Westchester and saying you’re from NYC. Uh, no you’re not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m from Capitol Hill. Throughout the country I’ve met people who say “oh, I’m from DC too” and I ask where and they say something like Fairfax.
It is incredibly annoying. They’re not the same.
They’re also not that different except that it’s easier for the Fairfax people to park in front of their home. Really, you DC people need to get over yourselves. DC is a tiny city with a million suburbs. People are going to say “dc” and mean it in the the broad sense because no one cares.
Where does it end? Centreville? Front Royal? Hagerstown?
Who cares if they’re geographically near: they’re not the same! It’s like being from Westchester and saying you’re from NYC. Uh, no you’re not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m from Capitol Hill. Throughout the country I’ve met people who say “oh, I’m from DC too” and I ask where and they say something like Fairfax.
It is incredibly annoying. They’re not the same.
They’re also not that different except that it’s easier for the Fairfax people to park in front of their home. Really, you DC people need to get over yourselves. DC is a tiny city with a million suburbs. People are going to say “dc” and mean it in the the broad sense because no one cares.
Anonymous wrote:Alexandria was part of DC until 1846...
Anonymous wrote:This isn't something new. When people asked me where I was from I said Seattle because even with the Microsoft and Amazon boom no one knows Redmond and even then I technically wasn't in the city of Redmond.