Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago. Obviously the weather is the worst part but you adapt. Great architecture, awesome food scene, very walkable/decent public transport, lots of neat neighborhoods, amazing cost of living for a city.
How long is the bad weather?
I’m thinking of moving there. I have lived in Vermont and Maine and the winters there were bad enough
Anonymous wrote:Chicago. Obviously the weather is the worst part but you adapt. Great architecture, awesome food scene, very walkable/decent public transport, lots of neat neighborhoods, amazing cost of living for a city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love DC and have lived in the city for 31 years (honestly though, I am from MD).
I left 2x.
-Atlanta - NOPE. Too pretentious and the people are dumb
-Charlotte - lovely, but it's a company town and full of stepford wives.
I love DC b/c people are smart here. They are not just into being skinny (Charlotte) and driving fancy cars (Atlanta).
People in this area are definitely educated, but I wouldn’t use the “s” word
DP. I think you must've never lived in a place where the people are dumb. My spouse and I lived in South Carolina and would occasionally go to bar trivia. The two of us would win against multiple teams of eight adults. I'm not saying that bar trivia is a perfect proxy for IQ, but it's telling when many groups of adults can't come up with basic knowledge things like the name of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. People in DC are smart. It's a stark contrast.
Informed and smart are not the same things. Sure, I think more people in states (usually southern) where they don't spend money on education are more ignorant of things and that's tragic, but IQ-wise, they are probably the same. Just more wasted intellect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love DC and have lived in the city for 31 years (honestly though, I am from MD).
I left 2x.
-Atlanta - NOPE. Too pretentious and the people are dumb
-Charlotte - lovely, but it's a company town and full of stepford wives.
I love DC b/c people are smart here. They are not just into being skinny (Charlotte) and driving fancy cars (Atlanta).
People in this area are definitely educated, but I wouldn’t use the “s” word
DP. I think you must've never lived in a place where the people are dumb. My spouse and I lived in South Carolina and would occasionally go to bar trivia. The two of us would win against multiple teams of eight adults. I'm not saying that bar trivia is a perfect proxy for IQ, but it's telling when many groups of adults can't come up with basic knowledge things like the name of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. People in DC are smart. It's a stark contrast.
Anonymous wrote:Cape Town for 2 years. Beautiful, obviously, and the diversity of the area makes for an exciting cultural scene.
Saginaw Michigan would be nice if I went back when I was retired with a modest pension and a cabin up in the woods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love DC and have lived in the city for 31 years (honestly though, I am from MD).
I left 2x.
-Atlanta - NOPE. Too pretentious and the people are dumb
-Charlotte - lovely, but it's a company town and full of stepford wives.
I love DC b/c people are smart here. They are not just into being skinny (Charlotte) and driving fancy cars (Atlanta).
People in this area are definitely educated, but I wouldn’t use the “s” word
Anonymous wrote:Faves: Brussels, Rome, Lake Tahoe
Mehs: Boston, DC, Syracuse, Frankfurt
Anonymous wrote:jsmith123 wrote:Grew up in Southern California. Great place to grow up, but would not want to live there now. Where I lived you couldn't really walk anywhere, and there seems to be more focus on keeping up with the Joneses.
I'll just admit to loving DC, whatever that means about me. I love the change of seasons. I love being a parent here and everything there is to do for kids. I love Rock Creek Park. I love all the little shops near me. I love the access that the airports provide. I even like most of the people that I meet.
Same. Was born in NJ but grew up in the LA area and never felt like the right place for me. Very happy in DC for 25 years now. When I first move to DC in my 20s, what was most noticeable was that people in DC cared about what was going on in the world while it seemed like people I met in LA were more image-focused and cared about the entertainment industry.
In CA, my favorite place is San Luis Obispo, where I went to college. Unfortunately, the job market is limited.
jsmith123 wrote:Grew up in Southern California. Great place to grow up, but would not want to live there now. Where I lived you couldn't really walk anywhere, and there seems to be more focus on keeping up with the Joneses.
I'll just admit to loving DC, whatever that means about me. I love the change of seasons. I love being a parent here and everything there is to do for kids. I love Rock Creek Park. I love all the little shops near me. I love the access that the airports provide. I even like most of the people that I meet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love DC and have lived in the city for 31 years (honestly though, I am from MD).
I left 2x.
-Atlanta - NOPE. Too pretentious and the people are dumb
-Charlotte - lovely, but it's a company town and full of stepford wives.
I love DC b/c people are smart here. They are not just into being skinny (Charlotte) and driving fancy cars (Atlanta).
People in this area are definitely educated, but I wouldn’t use the “s” word
Anonymous wrote:I've lived in he deep South (hated it) and Boston, NYC and CA. Loved all those. Hated DMV and the South.
Anonymous wrote:I love DC and have lived in the city for 31 years (honestly though, I am from MD).
I left 2x.
-Atlanta - NOPE. Too pretentious and the people are dumb
-Charlotte - lovely, but it's a company town and full of stepford wives.
I love DC b/c people are smart here. They are not just into being skinny (Charlotte) and driving fancy cars (Atlanta).
Anonymous wrote:Rural Wisconsin: There are some nice things about it. Though right now, you couldn't pay me to go to Wisconsin.
Berlin: LOVED.
Rural Italy: Beautiful, but dealing with the bureaucracy to do even the smallest task made me swear off ever living there again.
Charlotte: Vapid, soulless, hyper-segregated cesspool surrounded by open white supremacists.