No crime San Francisco trip!

I can speak to San Francisco and L.A. (and I'll assume New York is no different). Kids come from all over the country, heck even the world, post graduation to work here. There can be a benefit to going to a local school because of the alumni base but I've never heard of people hiring saying they would interview/not interview a person based on whether they went to school in an urban or small college town environment. They can definitely base that decision on the quality of the school though.

I have plenty of friends I grew up with in Oakland that left the Bay Area or state for college and moved back post graduation. They were not punished, or unable to get jobs, because they didn't stay local for college. My folks went to undergrad in a small college town in Ohio. They said lots of their classmates moved to Chicago for a period of time post graduation. If having to go to college in Chicago was a requirement to get a job in Chicago I would assume most wouldn't have moved there.

You are obviously reading and riffing off my posts, and true to form as a reprehensible liar, you utterly misrepresented what I wrote.

I didn't write that schools in rural areas are looked down upon.

The advantage of going to school in or near a large metropolitan area is the amount of internships available the amount of employers one can apply to, and the number of interviews within a reasonable driving distance one can get to.

I don't think Laramie Wyoming or Moscow Idaho have as many internship opportunies or employers as Chicago or Seattle.

Not all of us were planning on going home to live with Mommy and taking our leisurely time getting a job upon graduation.
 
As I said in another post, it depends on what your major is. Employers do consider the quality and prestige of an education based on where you got it. A law degree from Liberty U isn't nearly as valuable as one from Harvard, eh?

I found in the petroleum business, that graduates from Texas - Austin, University of Oklahoma, LSU were disproportionately represented. Their engineering schools are geared towards that industry, at least to an extent.

Where do Liberty U grads work?
 
Urban living definitely comes with both benefits and challenges. Speaking to San Francisco at least violent crime isn't much of an issue. Crime is but not so much violent crime. It's just a lifestyle choice. I live in a high rise condo building. As much as I love it I think about my young kid and would it be better to have a front (or back) yard where she can play and run out in the street and play with kids on the block. I don't have that now.

But there's a certain excitement to urban living and its a very diverse environment. A lot of pluses to that.
I live in a 4500 sq ft house on 3/4 acre lot in one of the most affluent cities in North Texas. There is a reason why Central Market chose to build a store here. I put a small zip line in for my grand kids they love it.
 
I live in a 4500 sq ft house on 3/4 acre lot in one of the most affluent cities in North Texas. There is a reason why Central Market chose to build a store here.

My wife has expressed interest in moving to the 'burbs. Now in the Bay Area your money doesn't go very far but when I visit the in-laws in the Dallas area and see what you can get its eye opening, like what you described. It's definitely enticing. I think of having a man cave or anything else you can do when you have a good sized property and my mouth salivates.

I guess we are all drawn to different things and urban living energizes me.
 
Central Market here in Houston is my favorite market! The HEB chain is one of the best grocery chains I have encountered.
I shop at Kroger's for most regular things and Central Market for fruit , veges ,and fish etc. Kroger's and Central Market are about a 1/4 mile apart here.
 
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My wife has expressed interest in moving to the 'burbs. Now in the Bay Area your money doesn't go very far but when I visit the in-laws in the Dallas area and see what you can get its eye opening, like what you described. It's definitely enticing. I think of having a man cave or anything else you can do when you have a good sized property and my mouth salivates.

I guess we are all drawn to different things and urban living energizes me.
I have a One car shop for all my hobbies wood working mostly. It is two stories and has my pool table above it. Check out Southlake when you visit Dallas.
 
My wife has expressed interest in moving to the 'burbs. Now in the Bay Area your money doesn't go very far but when I visit the in-laws in the Dallas area and see what you can get its eye opening, like what you described. It's definitely enticing. I think of having a man cave or anything else you can do when you have a good sized property and my mouth salivates.

I guess we are all drawn to different things and urban living energizes me.
I have a One car shop for all my hobbies wood working mostly. It is two stories and has my pool table above it. Check out Southlake when you visit Dallas. With me I don't want to hear my neighbors through the floor or walls.
 
Going back to the issue of crime. Stating the obvious, crime is not unique to San Francisco or other urban areas. Even the richest suburbs have crime. What differentiates San Francisco, and why it gets so much national attention, is the amount of crime and how much it dominates local discussion and life. Here is just another example.

From a political discussion perspective there was a push to defund the police in 2020. As crime has increased that has faded but there's still a battle over whether more police is a good thing (in pursuing a more equitable City). This is a very liberal City but not everyone is monolithic on this issue. Everyone has their line where they think things have gone too far and want more law and order.





Whole Foods closing Civic Center store in S.F. over 'safety' concerns


Whole Foods Market has temporarily closed its downtown San Francisco location Monday after business hours due to public safety issues, according to a spokesperson for the company.

The closure comes just a year after the store opened at the Trinity S.F. apartment building at Market and Eighth streets in March 2022.

“To ensure the safety of our Team Members, we have made the difficult decision to close the Trinity store for the time being,” a Whole Foods Market spokesperson said in a written statement. “All team members will be transferred to one of our nearby locations.”

Supervisor Matt Dorsey, who lives in the neighborhood and frequented the store, said he’d seen signs that the Whole Foods was struggling. As a near-daily customer, he said, the store had gotten rid of handheld shopping baskets, allowing only carts. An employee told Dorsey that all 250 baskets the store had when it first opened were stolen — something Dorsey said he saw evidence of during neighborhood cleanups on nearby Natoma and Minna streets. Staff also reportedly complained about “people acting out” inside the store, he said.

“It’s obvious to me that, as an employer, Whole Foods has a lot of concerns about the safety of their employees, and ultimately that’s why they made the decision to close,” Dorsey said. “I wish they hadn’t, but I’ve also been in there and seen some things that are off-putting.”

Dorsey seized on the store closure to announce Monday that he wants voters to decide on a ballot measure next year that would re-establish minimum staffing levels for the San Francisco Police Department and set a goal of reaching it in the next five years. Dorsey, a former SFPD spokesman, said he had asked City Attorney David Chiu in late March for help in drafting the language of the potential measure, which could appear on the ballot in March 2024.

“We’re not going to make progress on solving our public safety challenges if we don’t have a fully staffed Police Department,” Dorsey said. “San Franciscans are demanding progress — at least the San Franciscans I represent. People need to know that we are taking these challenges seriously, and that we are pursuing solutions that are as big as our problems.”

Dorsey told the city attorney that he wants his potential ballot measure to set a minimum police staffing level of 2,182 officers — a number previously recommended in an analysis the city uses to decide how many officers it will seek to hire. The number sought by Dorsey is higher than the minimum staffing requirement of 1,971 officers that voters agreed to do away with in 2020. As of last month, the number of full-duty San Francisco police officers who were not on leave was about 1,500.

Dorsey’s push for a new ballot measure comes just after the Board of Supervisors approved Mayor London Breed’s request for another $25 million in police overtime this year. Supervisors are also poised to consider approving a contract with the city police union that would give raises to new and current officers and cost taxpayers about $166.5 million over a three year period.

In order for his staffing proposal to appear before voters, Dorsey would need to get a majority of the 11-member board to send his legislation to the ballot. If that effort fails, supporters could launch a signature-gathering campaign.

The Whole Foods spokesperson said there is no timetable for the store’s possible reopening.


https://www.sfchronicle.com/sf/article/whole-foods-closing-civic-center-store-s-f-17889427.php
 
I found in the petroleum business, that graduates from Texas - Austin, University of Oklahoma, LSU were disproportionately represented. Their engineering schools are geared towards that industry, at least to an extent.

Where do Liberty U grads work?
Oil Country.
 
I have a One car shop for all my hobbies wood working mostly. It is two stories and has my pool table above it. Check out Southlake when you visit Dallas. With me I don't want to hear my neighbors through the floor or walls.

My sister-in-law lives in Grapevine so I'm familiar with the area. I believe Southlake has quite the football history. (also always makes the news for its school board and racial battles)
 
Not sure why anyone would turn down a free and full ride to a great school a few hours from home...to go thousands of miles away to an iffy place where you don't know anyone...especially at 18.... Or why their parents would want them to... or let them...;) Especially these days...
 
New Orleans can be a wonderful place to live and raise a family. I know several people who are doing it.

My point is a little bit of sarcasm, because if you turn on Fox News, or listen to the former president, you can’t go outside of your fortress of a home without something terrible happening to you. They have people in the Midwest, believing that these cities are pure war zones.

So Whole Foods in San Fran is just imagining the crime that has forced it to close a brand new store barely a year old, right halfwit?

San Francisco Whole Foods closes a year after opening due to crime

The popular grocery store chain shuttered its SF flagship location a little more than a year after it opened, citing worker safety concerns

https://nypost.com/2023/04/11/san-f...ses-a-year-after-opening-due-to-crime-report/

Apparently, the former Fire Commissioner is imagining the crime and homelessness at his mother's home in an upscale neighborhood, right halfwit?

Ex-SF fire commissioner attacked by crowbar-wielding transient speaks out: ‘This is unacceptable’

Ex-commissioner Don Carmignani was assaulted by the homeless man on April 5 after he asked him and his two pals to move their encampment away from his mother’s home in the city’s affluent Marina District.

https://nypost.com/2023/04/11/ex-sf...ked-by-crowbar-wielding-transient-speaks-out/

You're the dumbest of dumb lying hacks.
 
New Orleans:

The city ended the year with a rate of 70 homicides per 100,000 residents. Homicides: 280 Shooting: 482 Carjacking: 279 Robbery: 541, According to preliminary crime statistics compiled by the department for 2022, the NOPD responded to 4,379 incidents citywide classified as auto thefts

Jarhead is a lying, dishonest leftist moron on steroids. :laugh:
 
Not sure why anyone would turn down a free and full ride to a great school a few hours from home...to go thousands of miles away to an iffy place where you don't know anyone...especially at 18.... Or why their parents would want them to... or let them...;) Especially these days...

I think there is something to be said for great adventure at 18. I went to Europe for about 6 months when I was 18, it changed my life for the better in so many ways.

My son LOVES surfing and California culture, if that is where he will be happy, I want it for him.
 
Not sure why anyone would turn down a free and full ride to a great school a few hours from home...to go thousands of miles away to an iffy place where you don't know anyone...especially at 18.... Or why their parents would want them to... or let them...;) Especially these days...

He's legally an adult. How can his parents forbid him?
 
My father at 17 years old and on his own traveled 6,000 miles to continue his violin studies in New York City, and he only knew a few words of English. Some teenagers have confidence in what they want to accomplish.

Pointless absurdity; more likely bullshit. :palm:
 
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