Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

No one can afford to buy a home they plan to grow old in and those that do make their way into the professional, upper middle class find themselves drifting from $MAJOR_US_CITY_A to $MAJOR_US_CITY_B every 5 years or so.

How could someone possibly expect this not to happen to furniture?



Wut?

I bought a house outside DC. Unless I retire to the mountains, I'll grow old here. It's my second home, the other was a few miles away, I've been in this area since 2000. Pretty sure my middle-management position fits my squarely in "professional, upper-middle-class."

Most of my friends are similar. Moved here after college, no plans to leave the area, almost all are home owners, and upper-middle-class.


> Wut?

Is what I should say to you. I should not have to inquire the specifics of your personal life to figure out your true income, who has maybe subsidized your living expenses over the years, and your total expenses, to determine how you were able to save for property in one of the most expensive areas of the nation. Although, you have already earmarked your comment with "upper-middle-class", which speaks to your ancedote-rooted perspective.


The OP made the ridiculous absolute statement that NOBODY can afford a home unless they’re a rich person who also moves every 5 years.

That’s simply not true. Thousands of people buy homes suburban DC every year. And not all of the white collar buyers plan to move in 5 years.


I'll wager you bought your home more than ten years ago. Home prices have, uh, changed a bit.


You’d be wrong.


Ah, I missed that this was your second home. Was your first home purchase 10+ years ago?




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: