Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not everyone in Potomac is rich and it is not reasonable to assume living in Potomac means your are rich.
I don't know the families involved in the accident, but I know many people who live in Potomac and while some are extremely wealthy, the majority are not rich. Many are still struggling from layoffs from 2008 recession, many live in very moderate homes in very moderate neighborhoods, some are single parents struggling to pay bills, some kids work to pay their cell phone, car and insurance bills, some live in subsidized housing, and some are house poor.
Point is -- your perception of Potomac is quite wrong.
5% of students at Wootton HS are on FARMS. 1 student in 20.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04234.pdf
Not everybody in Potomac is rich, but very few people are poor.
The driver DOESN'T LIVE IN POTOMAC! This whole conversation is ridiculous. He is not even from Potomac.
Gaithersburg and Potomac are basically the same now. He is not poor. Why do you want to insist he is poor?
Ah well thanks for clearing that up now!! Got to run put a call in to my realtor and let him know Gaithersburg and Potomac are basically the same now.
Clearly you don't know anything about this particular area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not everyone in Potomac is rich and it is not reasonable to assume living in Potomac means your are rich.
I don't know the families involved in the accident, but I know many people who live in Potomac and while some are extremely wealthy, the majority are not rich. Many are still struggling from layoffs from 2008 recession, many live in very moderate homes in very moderate neighborhoods, some are single parents struggling to pay bills, some kids work to pay their cell phone, car and insurance bills, some live in subsidized housing, and some are house poor.
Point is -- your perception of Potomac is quite wrong.
5% of students at Wootton HS are on FARMS. 1 student in 20.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04234.pdf
Not everybody in Potomac is rich, but very few people are poor.
The driver DOESN'T LIVE IN POTOMAC! This whole conversation is ridiculous. He is not even from Potomac.
Gaithersburg and Potomac are basically the same now. He is not poor. Why do you want to insist he is poor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not everyone in Potomac is rich and it is not reasonable to assume living in Potomac means your are rich.
I don't know the families involved in the accident, but I know many people who live in Potomac and while some are extremely wealthy, the majority are not rich. Many are still struggling from layoffs from 2008 recession, many live in very moderate homes in very moderate neighborhoods, some are single parents struggling to pay bills, some kids work to pay their cell phone, car and insurance bills, some live in subsidized housing, and some are house poor.
Point is -- your perception of Potomac is quite wrong.
5% of students at Wootton HS are on FARMS. 1 student in 20.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04234.pdf
Not everybody in Potomac is rich, but very few people are poor.
The driver DOESN'T LIVE IN POTOMAC! This whole conversation is ridiculous. He is not even from Potomac.
Gaithersburg and Potomac are basically the same now. He is not poor. Why do you want to insist he is poor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Outrageous how big money can buy innocence.
No one's going to jail.
Why do people keep posting making the assumption that the people involved have "big money" or are "rich"?
Presumably because they live in Potomac. It's a reasonable assumption. There are not many poor people living in Potomac.
Not everyone in Potomac is rich and it is not reasonable to assume living in Potomac means your are rich.
I don't know the families involved in the accident, but I know many people who live in Potomac and while some are extremely wealthy, the majority are not rich. Many are still struggling from layoffs from 2008 recession, many live in very moderate homes in very moderate neighborhoods, some are single parents struggling to pay bills, some kids work to pay their cell phone, car and insurance bills, some live in subsidized housing, and some are house poor.
Point is -- your perception of Potomac is quite wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not everyone in Potomac is rich and it is not reasonable to assume living in Potomac means your are rich.
I don't know the families involved in the accident, but I know many people who live in Potomac and while some are extremely wealthy, the majority are not rich. Many are still struggling from layoffs from 2008 recession, many live in very moderate homes in very moderate neighborhoods, some are single parents struggling to pay bills, some kids work to pay their cell phone, car and insurance bills, some live in subsidized housing, and some are house poor.
Point is -- your perception of Potomac is quite wrong.
5% of students at Wootton HS are on FARMS. 1 student in 20.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04234.pdf
Not everybody in Potomac is rich, but very few people are poor.
The driver DOESN'T LIVE IN POTOMAC! This whole conversation is ridiculous. He is not even from Potomac.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not everyone in Potomac is rich and it is not reasonable to assume living in Potomac means your are rich.
I don't know the families involved in the accident, but I know many people who live in Potomac and while some are extremely wealthy, the majority are not rich. Many are still struggling from layoffs from 2008 recession, many live in very moderate homes in very moderate neighborhoods, some are single parents struggling to pay bills, some kids work to pay their cell phone, car and insurance bills, some live in subsidized housing, and some are house poor.
Point is -- your perception of Potomac is quite wrong.
5% of students at Wootton HS are on FARMS. 1 student in 20.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04234.pdf
Not everybody in Potomac is rich, but very few people are poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
5% of students at Wootton HS are on FARMS. 1 student in 20.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04234.pdf
Not everybody in Potomac is rich, but very few people are poor.
So Wooton is 95% rich and 5% poor, no middle class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not everyone in Potomac is rich and it is not reasonable to assume living in Potomac means your are rich.
I don't know the families involved in the accident, but I know many people who live in Potomac and while some are extremely wealthy, the majority are not rich. Many are still struggling from layoffs from 2008 recession, many live in very moderate homes in very moderate neighborhoods, some are single parents struggling to pay bills, some kids work to pay their cell phone, car and insurance bills, some live in subsidized housing, and some are house poor.
Point is -- your perception of Potomac is quite wrong.
5% of students at Wootton HS are on FARMS. 1 student in 20.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04234.pdf
Not everybody in Potomac is rich, but very few people are poor.
Anonymous wrote:
Not everyone in Potomac is rich and it is not reasonable to assume living in Potomac means your are rich.
I don't know the families involved in the accident, but I know many people who live in Potomac and while some are extremely wealthy, the majority are not rich. Many are still struggling from layoffs from 2008 recession, many live in very moderate homes in very moderate neighborhoods, some are single parents struggling to pay bills, some kids work to pay their cell phone, car and insurance bills, some live in subsidized housing, and some are house poor.
Point is -- your perception of Potomac is quite wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Outrageous how big money can buy innocence.
No one's going to jail.
Why do people keep posting making the assumption that the people involved have "big money" or are "rich"?
Presumably because they live in Potomac. It's a reasonable assumption. There are not many poor people living in Potomac.
Anonymous wrote:No average income family would ever have the financial resources to keep their kid out of jail, in these circumstances.
Everyone knows the obvious.
Anonymous wrote:From what I've seen, the most thoughtful and responsible parents will drive their child to and from these parties, IF they're allowed to go. Why not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The driver was from North Potomac/Gaithersburg. Not that wealthy of an area by DCUM standards.
By DCUM standards? By DCUM standards, I'm a poor, and my household income puts me in the top 10% in the US.
My point was its not a wealthy area implied by the poster saying he was from Potomac. It's not a "wealthy" area. It is also not a poor area, but somewhere in between.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The driver was from North Potomac/Gaithersburg. Not that wealthy of an area by DCUM standards.
By DCUM standards? By DCUM standards, I'm a poor, and my household income puts me in the top 10% in the US.