Living On $80K A Year In Washington, DC

DC and NY have to be the national leaders in grown ass people living together like they're in college. It can be totally undignified.


21 Struggles You Face When You Share A Bathroom


7. Being able to hear everything they do in the bathroom.


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How about owning a business in the DMV that supports you without working.
 
Boston is right up there with them.
Shit is ridiculous but I guess one gotta do what one gotta do to survive economically.

I understand struggling with a meager or middle wage in certain places for specific reasons:

DC- Politics
NY- Wall Street
LA- Hollywood

What does Boston have for the average person that couldn't be easily obtained elsewhere?

I don't understand how or why someone works at Wal-Mart or teaches in a place like D.C. unless they have family they don't want to leave. Otherwise, what makes it better than the rest of the country? LA at least has great weather, beaches, women, etc. I'm not sure why regular people even live in a place like D.C.
 
I understand struggling with a meager or middle wage in certain places for specific reasons:

What does Boston have for the average person that couldn't be easily obtained elsewhere?

I don't understand how or why someone works at Wal-Mart or teaches in a place like D.C. unless they have family they don't want to leave. Otherwise, what makes it better than the rest of the country? LA at least has great weather, beaches, women, etc. I'm not sure why regular people even live in a place like D.C.


Boston is a hub for Bio-Tech, Nationally Ranked Universities, Championship Sports teams, Start-ups, Largest & most historic New England City, Education, Medical facilities, and much more. There's a huge demand and desire for intellectual capability that keeps that wages high for many industries. Making less than $70K per year in this city pretty much means you're struggling.

As far as night life is concerned it's no NYC, but it does have a robust and active theatre and clubbing scene. We have over 250K college kids within a small radius in Boston alone and that is one of the highest concentration of college students in the country. We have some of the most beautiful women come thru for 4-6 years but they leave to larger and warmer cities. We're very similar to San Fran and DC in many ways...
 
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Boston is a hub for Bio-Tech, Nationally Ranked Universities, Championship Sports teams, Start-ups, Largest & most historic New England City, Education, Medical facilities, and much more. As far as night life is concerned it's no NYC, but it does have a robust and active theatre and clubbing scene. We have over 250K college kids in Boston alone and that is one of the highest concentration of college students in the country. We also have some of the most beautiful women come thru for 4-6 years but they leave to larger and warmer cities. We're very similar to San Fran and DC in many ways...
Man Boston is a complete fucking shithole for progressive blacks. I know a 30 something i mentored who left DC for a gig in Boston and its lower living cost. She is busting her ass to get back ASAP.
I don't understand how or why someone works at Wal-Mart or teaches in a place like D.C.
Oddly enough, DC has the highest starting teacher salary in the nation. A bachelors degree will get you 55k out the gate. Not including annual performance bonuses.
 
What does Boston have for the average person that couldn't be easily obtained elsewhere?

I don't understand how or why someone works at Wal-Mart or teaches in a place like D.C. unless they have family they don't want to leave. Otherwise, what makes it better than the rest of the country? LA at least has great weather, beaches, women, etc. I'm not sure why regular people even live in a place like D.C.
Boston is a hub for Bio-Tech, Nationally Ranked Universities, Championship Sports teams, Start-ups, Largest & most historic New England City, Education, Medical facilities, and much more. There's a huge demand and desire for intellectual capability that keeps that wages high for many industries. Making less than $70K per year in this city pretty much means you're struggling.

As far as night life is concerned it's no NYC, but it does have a robust and active theatre and clubbing scene. We have over 250K college kids within a small radius in Boston alone and that is one of the highest concentration of college students in the country. We have some of the most beautiful women come thru for 4-6 years but they leave to larger and warmer cities. We're very similar to San Fran and DC in many ways...

If "Making less than $70K per year in this city pretty much means you're struggling," then the average Bostonian is struggling according to U.S. News & World Report. (That number did not strike me as believable.)

10. San Diego, California
Average annual salary: $56,410
Unemployment rate: 3.3%
9. Denver, Colorado
Average annual salary: $57,400
Unemployment rate: 3.0%
8. Anchorage, Alaska
Average annual salary: $58,980
Unemployment rate: 6.1%
7. Hartford, Connecticut
Average annual salary: $60,040
Unemployment rate: 4.2%
6. New York, New York
Average annual salary: $63,079
Unemployment rate: 4.0%
5. Seattle, Washington
Average annual salary: $63,120
Unemployment rate: 3.9%
4. Boston, Massachusetts
Average annual salary: $65,420
Unemployment rate: 3.1%
3. Washington, D.C.
Average annual salary: $69,210
Unemployment rate: 3.4%
2. San Francisco, California
Average annual salary: $69,700
Unemployment rate: 2.7%
1. San Jose, California
Average annual salary: $77,180
Unemployment rate: 2.6%



The most recent Wal-Mart pay info I could find for Massachusetts was 2015:

Massachusetts' minimum wage became $9 in January, and increases to $10 in January 2016. On Thursday, Walmart, the largest private employer in the U.S., announced that 1,030 workers in Massachusetts received pay raises as part of raises that went into effect this week across the country. The average full-time hourly wage for Walmart workers in the state is $13.88, according to the release.

Minimum wage in Massachusetts is now $11 an hour, there's no indication of if Wal-Mart raised wages there when they announced they were starting people at $11 nationally. But let's just say the average full-time hourly wage for Walmart workers in the state is now $16.00. That's $33,280, barely half the state average! Which is below what you defined as struggling! And that's working full-time year-round without missing a week (for a company famous for messing with people's schedules)!

Some people are working those jobs and trying to support families. I don't understand why, unless you had roots there, you wouldn't move to Phoenix or Vegas or some other reasonably affordable city in that case. (Even if you have roots there, I understand it but it's probably a questionable decision.)

I do understand that sometimes people are too poor to even move and it's not that easy. But the reality of the situation is mind-boggling to me.
 
I don't understand how or why someone works at Wal-Mart or teaches in a place like D.C. unless they have family they don't want to leave. Otherwise, what makes it better than the rest of the country? LA at least has great weather, beaches, women, etc. I'm not sure why regular people even live in a place like D.C.
I do understand that sometimes people are too poor to even move and it's not that easy. But the reality of the situation is mind-boggling to me.
Land of opportunity, my ass... :smh:
 
If "Making less than $70K per year in this city pretty much means you're struggling," then the average Bostonian is struggling according to U.S. News & World Report. (That number did not strike me as believable.)

4. Boston, Massachusetts
Average annual salary: $65,420
Unemployment rate: 3.1%


It could be viewed as relative but lets review the number. Most folks who are making below the $75K threshold are forced to live with roommates and they aren't able to buy home as the median household income is $80K+ here in Boston. Imagine making $60K per year but you owe $100K in student loan debt, an apartment that cost $2000+ per month, medical, insurance, bills, etc, etc. You're unable to save at the rate you'd like due to recurring expenditures.

A lot of folks I know in their 30s are living with roommates and can't afford to break away on their own. It's either that or leave the city to live in a suburb not too far from the city.
 
Boston is a hub for Bio-Tech, Nationally Ranked Universities, Championship Sports teams, Start-ups, Largest & most historic New England City, Education, Medical facilities, and much more. There's a huge demand and desire for intellectual capability that keeps that wages high for many industries. Making less than $70K per year in this city pretty much means you're struggling.

As far as night life is concerned it's no NYC, but it does have a robust and active theatre and clubbing scene. We have over 250K college kids within a small radius in Boston alone and that is one of the highest concentration of college students in the country. We have some of the most beautiful women come thru for 4-6 years but they leave to larger and warmer cities. We're very similar to San Fran and DC in many ways...
Boston girls are easy... That is a town full of smuts... If you want some easy freaky puss y go to boston... I swear that is untapped porn potential as far as place.. Quietly a pimp dream if you can get them to leave that state... Man I'm juss gonna stop right there
 
Man Boston is a complete fucking shithole for progressive blacks. I know a 30 something i mentored who left DC for a gig in Boston and its lower living cost. She is busting her ass to get back ASAP.


It depends on how well connected you are to the white power structure.
Like any other major city, there's some fuckery within the corporate sector, but those who are able to navigate it do very well for themselves. I couldn't do it and sought the entrepreneurial route.
 
Boston girls are easy... That is a town full of smuts... If you want some easy freaky puss y go to boston... I swear that is untapped porn potential as far as place.. Quietly a pimp dream if you can get them to leave that state... Man I'm juss gonna stop right there

YES!!! The college and young professional bitches are fuckin' like there's no tomorrow.
I've often thought about that shit but I'm way past that now and I'm too entrenched within the business and political system to pursue such a path. Trust me bruh, if I could, I WOULD...
 
Americans Now Need at Least $500,000 a Year to Enter Top 1%


according to this, i am in the top 10% (not that i give a fuck), and my firm's clients are all in the top .01% and above. that shit is mindboggling

edit: wtf is up with that URL name?
forgot to mention, AGI (or any similar measure) is a measure income, not wealth. the income is the faucet water, the wealth is the bathtub.
 
@KingTaharqa @Soul On Ice @gene cisco Should we break this down to be more ADOS-specific or leave it alone?
Yes.
Average Black family worth $1700 (not counting the family car) .
Double digit unemployment for our youths
Twice the unemployment compared to cacs
Rampant homelessness
Mass incarceration

Let's talk about it.
How we're pretty muched priced out because our preceding generation were redlined and relied on illegal substances and alcohol.
 
Yes.
Average Black family worth $1700 (not counting the family car) .
Double digit unemployment for our youths
Twice the unemployment compared to cacs
Rampant homelessness
Mass incarceration

Let's talk about it.
How we're pretty muched priced out because our preceding generation were redlined and relied on illegal substances and alcohol.

Don’t come in here bringing raw truth and data! This is BGOL and that shit doesn’t fly here!!
 
I've spent a lot of time in DC. The longest I spent there at one time was 6 months. It's always been a paid trip with an apartment and about 75 dollars a day for meals and expenses, plus a 6 figure salary. I was always fucking broke when I left there. There's just so much to do. I couldn't imagine living there with an 80k salary. I was out eating and drinking every night. I hadn't been drunk for 7 or 8 years before I went there, I was drunk the first weekend I got there. The guys that were permanently assigned there were broke AF but all of them lived in Virginia.

There's one thing I've learned in my career that took me around the country, there are poor people everywhere you go. It doesn't make a difference how expensive that town is, there somebody there to do the menial work.
 
@KingTaharqa @Soul On Ice @gene cisco Should we break this down to be more ADOS-specific or leave it alone?
Yes.
Average Black family worth $1700 (not counting the family car) .
Double digit unemployment for our youths
Twice the unemployment compared to cacs
Rampant homelessness
Mass incarceration

Let's talk about it.
How we're pretty muched priced out because our preceding generation were redlined and relied on illegal substances and alcohol.
:eek2::eek2::eek2: I have to google that shit. That is insane.
 
I've spent a lot of time in DC. The longest I spent there at one time was 6 months. It's always been a paid trip with an apartment and about 75 dollars a day for meals and expenses, plus a 6 figure salary. I was always fucking broke when I left there. There's just so much to do. I couldn't imagine living there with an 80k salary. I was out eating and drinking every night. I hadn't been drunk for 7 or 8 years before I went there, I was drunk the first weekend I got there. The guys that were permanently assigned there were broke AF but all of them lived in Virginia.

You were doing too much.
 
Boston girls are easy... That is a town full of smuts... If you want some easy freaky puss y go to boston... I swear that is untapped porn potential as far as place.. Quietly a pimp dream if you can get them to leave that state... Man I'm juss gonna stop right there

:yes:

College me was running through Cape Verdeans from Boston. haha
 
If "Making less than $70K per year in this city pretty much means you're struggling," then the average Bostonian is struggling according to U.S. News & World Report. (That number did not strike me as believable.)

10. San Diego, California
Average annual salary: $56,410
Unemployment rate: 3.3%
9. Denver, Colorado
Average annual salary: $57,400
Unemployment rate: 3.0%
8. Anchorage, Alaska
Average annual salary: $58,980
Unemployment rate: 6.1%
7. Hartford, Connecticut
Average annual salary: $60,040
Unemployment rate: 4.2%
6. New York, New York
Average annual salary: $63,079
Unemployment rate: 4.0%
5. Seattle, Washington
Average annual salary: $63,120
Unemployment rate: 3.9%
4. Boston, Massachusetts
Average annual salary: $65,420
Unemployment rate: 3.1%
3. Washington, D.C.
Average annual salary: $69,210
Unemployment rate: 3.4%
2. San Francisco, California
Average annual salary: $69,700
Unemployment rate: 2.7%
1. San Jose, California
Average annual salary: $77,180
Unemployment rate: 2.6%



The most recent Wal-Mart pay info I could find for Massachusetts was 2015:

Massachusetts' minimum wage became $9 in January, and increases to $10 in January 2016. On Thursday, Walmart, the largest private employer in the U.S., announced that 1,030 workers in Massachusetts received pay raises as part of raises that went into effect this week across the country. The average full-time hourly wage for Walmart workers in the state is $13.88, according to the release.

Minimum wage in Massachusetts is now $11 an hour, there's no indication of if Wal-Mart raised wages there when they announced they were starting people at $11 nationally. But let's just say the average full-time hourly wage for Walmart workers in the state is now $16.00. That's $33,280, barely half the state average! Which is below what you defined as struggling! And that's working full-time year-round without missing a week (for a company famous for messing with people's schedules)!

Some people are working those jobs and trying to support families. I don't understand why, unless you had roots there, you wouldn't move to Phoenix or Vegas or some other reasonably affordable city in that case. (Even if you have roots there, I understand it but it's probably a questionable decision.)

I do understand that sometimes people are too poor to even move and it's not that easy. But the reality of the situation is mind-boggling to me.
depends on your living situation. struggling in the sense if you want a home and extra money to spend. most millennials in major cities live with roomies, living check to check, but enjoy the amenities of the city while doing so and having the latest tech. that's struggling to some but if you go somewhere in the middle of west virginia, struggling is a completely different thing. it's all relative. plenty of people in san diego don't have much money as assets but enjoy the beach, weather, and activities.
 
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