Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve lived in a few differences cities and DC natives are an interesting case.
DC has changed and grown tremendously. Yet most of the natives haven’t been able to keep up. There is a stark difference from Manhattan natives with parents with powerful jobs and inter generational wealth. The Manhattan natives have what it takes.
The dc natives are very average and don’t have the money to live here. But they lack the motivation and drive to pick up and be successful somewhere else. They are left behind.
So they lament a time when it was inexpensive to live here and there was less traffic. They can’t keep up.
Although this is a trolly post (the REAL average people are the transplant conservatives flown in here to work for rightwing orgs)
I’ll give a serious answer:
A problem in DC, as in many American cities, is that it is far too expensive to live here.
That is because of bad zoning laws which have prevented building as many new housing units as the city needs.
NIMBYs are a big part of that problem.
The only answer is: eliminate the height limit and build new multi-family everywhere. Flood the market with new units.
That’s the only thing that will bring prices down.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is truly ridiculous.
Signed,
not a DC native, not a transplant
(Native of Moco)
Anonymous wrote:I’ve lived in a few differences cities and DC natives are an interesting case.
DC has changed and grown tremendously. Yet most of the natives haven’t been able to keep up. There is a stark difference from Manhattan natives with parents with powerful jobs and inter generational wealth. The Manhattan natives have what it takes.
The dc natives are very average and don’t have the money to live here. But they lack the motivation and drive to pick up and be successful somewhere else. They are left behind.
So they lament a time when it was inexpensive to live here and there was less traffic. They can’t keep up.
Anonymous wrote:![]()
The pussification of DC will continue.
Soon every single DC neighborhood will look the same.
Harris Teeter
Unleashed by Petco
Potbelly
Tynan Coffee & Tea
CVS
Starbucks
Its already happening.
Look around.
Soon the east of the river's pussification will start
Good luck trying to convince people who have been pushed out 30 miles from DC to commute back to "THE CITY" to pour your Starbucks coffee, stock your CVS shelves or groom your pets.
Good one, Jeff!jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Dancing Crab will close instead of renovating...
http://tenleytowndc.org/2015/08/31/dancing-crab-closed/
Sad. Another DC icon, lost to transplants.
If you think transplants are killing a restaurant in Tenleytown, native or not, you don't know DC.
Come on Jeff. You can't be that naive. Surely you're aware of rents being driven up.... ya know, gentrification- all that business?
You are talking about Tenleytown. Tenleytown was gentrified just after the Civil War when the blacks were driven out of Fort Reno.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Dancing Crab will close instead of renovating...
http://tenleytowndc.org/2015/08/31/dancing-crab-closed/
Sad. Another DC icon, lost to transplants.
If you think transplants are killing a restaurant in Tenleytown, native or not, you don't know DC.
Come on Jeff. You can't be that naive. Surely you're aware of rents being driven up.... ya know, gentrification- all that business?
You are talking about Tenleytown. Tenleytown was gentrified just after the Civil War when the blacks were driven out of Fort Reno.
And it's still in the process of gentrification. The social structure that existed there for years is being driven out as the rents go up. People who aren't from DC are moving in, making that part of the city unlivable/rentable for people who have lived there for decades.
I think after more than 100 years, you don't call it a "process of gentrification" anymore. Moreover, Tenleytown, along with Cleveland Park, is sort of NIMBY-central in DC. Nobody is being driven out by newcomers. Not to mention, an increasingly-wealthy clientele would help a seafood restaurant stay open. You will have to find someone other than transplants to blame for this one.