Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm French. Coming from Europe, where big cities generally have lots of food options with walking distance of main tourist attractions, the DC food desert near the monuments was a shock when my relatives and I first visited. Now if I'm in the area, I go to the American Indian museum restaurant, the food is half decent, plus I love the building.
So yes, I agree with your complaints, OP. DC in general is a very strange capital city. It has a provincial atmosphere - which is nice if you live in NW! But this is why a lot of people in the world still think NYC is the capital of the USA...![]()
So Americans aren’t the only people with ridiculous ignorance when it comes to geography…
Ha. It’s also funny for someone claiming to be French and saying something so silly when the Eiffel Tower and Parc du Champs de Mars are basically their National Mall equivalent and it’s a big, wide open space where there very little to eat over there either and lots of chintzy touristic souvenir crap with the closest food options are a Starbucks and a Burger King.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm French. Coming from Europe, where big cities generally have lots of food options with walking distance of main tourist attractions, the DC food desert near the monuments was a shock when my relatives and I first visited. Now if I'm in the area, I go to the American Indian museum restaurant, the food is half decent, plus I love the building.
So yes, I agree with your complaints, OP. DC in general is a very strange capital city. It has a provincial atmosphere - which is nice if you live in NW! But this is why a lot of people in the world still think NYC is the capital of the USA...![]()
So Americans aren’t the only people with ridiculous ignorance when it comes to geography…
Anonymous wrote:I'm French. Coming from Europe, where big cities generally have lots of food options with walking distance of main tourist attractions, the DC food desert near the monuments was a shock when my relatives and I first visited. Now if I'm in the area, I go to the American Indian museum restaurant, the food is half decent, plus I love the building.
So yes, I agree with your complaints, OP. DC in general is a very strange capital city. It has a provincial atmosphere - which is nice if you live in NW! But this is why a lot of people in the world still think NYC is the capital of the USA...![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$14 for an ice cream cone.
I kid you not.
If so, all that means is that people who are not you (or me) are willing to pay $14 for an ice cream cone. Do you think there should be price regulations on ice cream cones sold by vendors on the Mall?
Anonymous wrote:Agree, it’s a joke:
[youtube] https://youtu.be/CEhCBYPLdNs?si=-pO9_8XaEY8OWFS5[/youtube]
[img]https://wjla.com/resources/media2/original/full/1280/center/80/02d427a7-ee10-4ab3-93c8-d438617bc4ad-TH_MOTORBIKES_MEMORIALS_VIDS_1203_frame_1956.png
1:54 "I [ride my motorbike on the Mall] to get out the house and enjoy life. I don't think that's dangerous. These people running up to you, and kill somebody in the Metro; that's dangerous."
Perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The trucks have been there for many decades, although there are many more now. Probably dating as far back as the 1976 Bicentennial celebrations. They used to be mostly hot dog /egg roll / ice cream joints. But now they are expanding into other cuisines.
The problem is the city went too far the other way. It used to be just hotdog trucks and the eggroll trucks and they were very far in between. Now you walk down the mall and the food trucks are lined up, bumper-to-bumper with the same low quality, shty food. In addition to the terrible food, you have the smell of exhaust and the loud noises from the generator and the obnoxious music. They need to go back to a few trucks not so many.
Anonymous wrote:The trucks have been there for many decades, although there are many more now. Probably dating as far back as the 1976 Bicentennial celebrations. They used to be mostly hot dog /egg roll / ice cream joints. But now they are expanding into other cuisines.
Anonymous wrote:I see the Food Truck Operators filling their generator with diesel and then serving a gyro 5 minutes later. I'm thinking his hands weren't very clean when he assembled that gyro.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Smell is not from the food trucks, it is smell of weed from all the DC potheads.
Weed doesn't smell like rancid gyro meat cooked in diesel exhaust. Also, potheads don't congregate on the mall; that's a Chinatown thing.
Anonymous wrote:Smell is not from the food trucks, it is smell of weed from all the DC potheads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not use the mall as a temporary shelter for migrants and the unhoused?
Why not use Mexico as a permanent shelter for the migrants.