![]() But in the post trump era those divides hit hard, for those who aren't extremely one way or the other.Īnyway thanks for sharing all the responses it's really helpful. Not that that's a concern for me and this isn't an anti or pro trans post. The rising crisis of what it means when half of seventh graders identify as trans, is that indoctrination and what does it even mean. Can be hard to date if you're male and straight and believe in any traditional anything, someone mentioned. The modern politics thing I find quite interesting. In twenty years it's not going to be a Boulder that everyone's going to be frustrated with, it's going to be instead an annoying place, but a place with a massive future that's developed into a wildly interesting thing, is my intuition. Area has a lot going for it, though, more so than a lot of places. Though Boulder was in its hey dey earlier maybe). Reminds me of Boulder and other great towns that have run dry so to speak (gentrification, massive homelessness influx at odds with increasingly expensive living standards-or as a guy in hade Ashbury told me, all that's left are yuppies and street people-flood of no nothing enlightened persons moving for a vibe, housing and jobs crisis, loss of culture, etc. Vibes sound same as then, same direction, same future fated. ![]() (I say this because I get concerns with people moving to avl ruining everything) ![]() And, even I'm coming with something of a tiny house, so more I'd be supporting someone with land, than draining housing resources. I would be living rural and working for myself, if I open an office I'd be hiring someone. On this and the other things appreciate your manner of thought thanks for response all for legislation to demolish $3million and up homes to replace with affordable housing options. other options were $650 with no utilities, $750 with no utilities, saw rv pads up to $900. where i am in colorado i found a parking spot for $400/month, and i am paying less rent than anyone i know by super far. but i think i have friends network that could find me farm space, i dont think i could stomach to pay the as you note often crazy rent for an rv pad. just kidding but huge rise in tiny house hippie side, tiny house waspy side, and then with the economy being the economy, regular people with rvs side. and now everyone's grandma is talking about converting a skoolie. rent, i never paid more than $225, usually paid $100 / month. yes, 10-15 years ago it was always exciting to find interesting ass weird places to host me in my then airstream (connecticut vermont asheville and a couple other places ive lived). Interesting thing to think about with lot prices. Blue Ridge Parkway, Hiking deep in the woods, huntin', fishin', bluegrass in the country these all remain constant.Biltmore Park Town Square was just finishing up 10 years ago it's basically the fly trap for Hendersonville and South Carolina day trippers, as well as retirees.Areas like Leicester and Alexander have become more interesting as well, but still no real central areas.Oakley has become a more hot neighborhood, lots of new construction, but a more traditional clientele not as 'weird' as WAVL.You will recognize a lot of the same restaurants from 10 years ago. North Asheville remains almost completely unchanged imo.Homeless situation is most obvious downtown, but like I said, locals stopped going downtown as much when the tourism got more intense, and it's only after that that the anti-homeless sentiment really started to get stronger so take from that what you will.Still other Ashevillians have moved farther afield to places like Johnson City or Colorado. Canton, Sylva, even Swannanoa are doing better than 10 years ago and a lot of the people living in Asheville ten years ago have moved out to places like that.South Asheville has definitely improved Sweeten Creek has a lot more going on than 10 years ago, but the Fun Depot closed.Gentrification has continued at a speedy rate, especially on the Southside near AB-Tech, East End neighborhood, and Shiloh. West Asheville has gotten more bougie and more expensive, but it's not that different from ten years ago.Downtown has continued to expand, but it's become more for tourists and less for locals.Recently commented this in response to someone with almost the exact same question two months ago (they also had been gone for a decade and were moving back). Header image courtesy of u/MicahMack76 at Subreddit originally designed by Devin Holmes Design No posts directly related to crowd-funding No hate speech, insults, or personal attacks Please our detailed rules and Reddit's overall Reddit's Content Policy. Welcome to /r/Asheville, the best place on the internet to discuss what's going on in and around Asheville, North Carolina.
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