Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Target and Wal-Mart both have more employees than Amazon and have a larger physical presence than Amazon and they are headquartered in the south and in the Midwest.
Both of those have storefronts? And Walmart especially has been implicated in the complete destruction of small town groceries and businesses which can't compete against their pricing.
Leaving entire communities without local retail and necessitating driving dozens of miles to the closest exit with one. In effect, driving their own towns and communities to destruction simply by removing tax revenue from the base.
https://business.financialpost.com/news/retail-marketing/small-towns-devastated-after-wal-mart-stores-inc-decimates-mom-and-pop-shops-then-packs-up-and-leaves-they-ruined-our-lives
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/jul/09/what-happened-when-walmart-left
Anonymous wrote:Because few developers are even remotely interested in building mid- to lower-level housing anymore. It's all luxury upper-end nonsense, not only in DC but in every major urban region in the country.
The kind of middle-range ranch house my own parents bought (on one salary) in Mont. Co. in 1968 is simply not being built anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Target and Wal-Mart both have more employees than Amazon and have a larger physical presence than Amazon and they are headquartered in the south and in the Midwest.
Both of those have storefronts? And Walmart especially has been implicated in the complete destruction of small town groceries and businesses which can't compete against their pricing.
Leaving entire communities without local retail and necessitating driving dozens of miles to the closest exit with one. In effect, driving their own towns and communities to destruction simply by removing tax revenue from the base.
https://business.financialpost.com/news/retail-marketing/small-towns-devastated-after-wal-mart-stores-inc-decimates-mom-and-pop-shops-then-packs-up-and-leaves-they-ruined-our-lives
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/jul/09/what-happened-when-walmart-left
Anonymous wrote:Target and Wal-Mart both have more employees than Amazon and have a larger physical presence than Amazon and they are headquartered in the south and in the Midwest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Atlanta lost out on HQ2 for the same reason all the other cities lost out, because Jeff Bezos always intended it to be in DC and was milking the other cities for sensitive economic data for free and to also see if he could get freebies that he could use to force NOVA to give him something similar.
Is there any actual proof of this?
Come now, you're really questioning that Bezos was serious about any other city? It was bleedin' obvious he was gung ho on DC from day one, with possibly a second headquarter in NYC.
Anonymous wrote: Atlanta lost out on HQ2 for the same reason all the other cities lost out, because Jeff Bezos always intended it to be in DC and was milking the other cities for sensitive economic data for free and to also see if he could get freebies that he could use to force NOVA to give him something similar.
Is there any actual proof of this?
Anonymous wrote:Defense spending post 9/11. End of thread.
Anonymous wrote:It really wasn’t affordable in the end of the 80’s up to mid nineties either. There was a big build up of prices in the mid to late 80’s and incomes did not catch up for a decade or so.Anonymous wrote:This does not directly affect me. I am just asking a simple question.
What is so special about the post 2000s DC area that has caused our cost of living to skyrocket beyond belief?
Me personally, I think the pre 90s DC area COL should have been more expensive because this area was a hell of a lot more fun then as opposed to right now. Things should be cheaper now.
Anonymous wrote:Because white people want to live here now.
It really wasn’t affordable in the end of the 80’s up to mid nineties either. There was a big build up of prices in the mid to late 80’s and incomes did not catch up for a decade or so.Anonymous wrote:This does not directly affect me. I am just asking a simple question.
What is so special about the post 2000s DC area that has caused our cost of living to skyrocket beyond belief?
Me personally, I think the pre 90s DC area COL should have been more expensive because this area was a hell of a lot more fun then as opposed to right now. Things should be cheaper now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This does not directly affect me. I am just asking a simple question.
What is so special about the post 2000s DC area that has caused our cost of living to skyrocket beyond belief?
Me personally, I think the pre 90s DC area COL should have been more expensive because this area was a hell of a lot more fun then as opposed to right now. Things should be cheaper now.
People want to live here because there are good jobs here. And good schools.