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To: 3Fingas

Fair enough. Like most people in the city, I came and stayed for a job. If I had greater freedom of choice, i’d probably opt for a much smaller city myself. But I’m tied to a major metro area and I prefer not to commute.

Silver Spring went through a serious down cycle but it has perked back up in recent years. Do you get back at all?


90 posted on 06/14/2013 1:52:02 PM PDT by sphinx
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To: sphinx

I occasionally come to the DC metro area on business trips. It is very clear to me that Washington D.C. has gorged itself on revenues from the periphery. During the 2008 recession Washington area malls were just brimming with well-paid federal employees while other areas around the country were nearly left destitute. I don’t blame people for living in the DC area. There is certainly a lot of good opportunities there. People move to the centers of power and wealth.

I drove by our old house in Silver Spring a few years ago. The neighborhood looked the same to me. I did notice that there seemed to be a lot more Asians living there than when I was kid.

Since you are a freeper living in DC, I would be curious to know if your friends are receptive to the conservative viewpoint. Can you talk politics at all with them? I used to have a lot of liberal friends. Some were good conversationalists and some were very open to contrasting opinions. But, for the most part, my liberal friends were very doctrinaire and every bit as inflexible as any crazed cult member. So, most of the time, I avoided discussing politics with them.


91 posted on 06/14/2013 2:11:13 PM PDT by 3Fingas (Sons and Daughters of Freedom, Committee of Correspondence)
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