If you're interested in exploring more options specifically in Northern Virginia, I'd recommend checking out the article '6 Affordable Places to Live in Northern Virginia: Finding Your Dream Home' www.ushistorians.com/affordable-places-to-live-in-northern-virginia/ for a deeper dive into the region. It complements the insights provided here and can help you make an informed decision about your future home!
@TheVagolfer5 ай бұрын
I've lived in Virginia my whole life, I currently live in THE best place in the state, thank you for not telling people about it!
@seabreeze73785 ай бұрын
Wish you would share, born and raised here and not happy…
@ZenityStudios4 ай бұрын
hi where do you live
@TheVagolfer4 ай бұрын
@@ZenityStudios In a wonderful place full of horses, rainbows and freshly mowed grass. It's secret and can only be accessed by hot air balloons.
@ZenityStudios4 ай бұрын
@@TheVagolfer i also live there
@lovenature22512 ай бұрын
@@TheVagolfer 😂"can only be accessed by hot air balloons" - That's funny
@Oldparson2204 ай бұрын
I live in Greene County, north of charlottsville. Although the 29 corridor is developing quickly, we still enjoy a tranquil lifestyle while not being far from all city amenities. Best of both worlds really.
@MsLane616 ай бұрын
How in the world did we get to the point of 3/4-million-dollar homes being average lifestyle and rent almost $2k monthly for a one-bedroom abode in The U.S.A.? This nation is in serious trouble.
@jaimerivera2414Ай бұрын
The bathroom must be REALLLLY nice!!!😂
@zerincastle3183Ай бұрын
Something to do with how the American financial system prints money to drive World Trade. It's a machination that got out of control since we started doing it during ww2 to fight a proxy war against Italy. Now if we stop the world economy changes drastically for the worse, but if we keep going it all collapses anyway.
@lovepink78047 ай бұрын
I lived in Virginia Beach, and it is beautiful. Nice place to live. I went back north due to low paying jobs down there.
@Toni-id2pv Жыл бұрын
They have a few busses from williams burg to Newport News and Hampton
@gigglybeast7 ай бұрын
I’ve heard Bugs Bunny likes Newport News.
@terp83734 ай бұрын
I've lived in northern VA, in different towns including Arlington and Alexandria (currently), for 50 years. I love it and am not going anywhere, but yes, it's quite expensive, has horrendous traffic, and is unbearably hot and humid most of the summer.
@terry41372 ай бұрын
So woke!
@andresretan9759 Жыл бұрын
I will be moving back to Northern Fairfax Virginia in January 2026
@billgibson2418 Жыл бұрын
Good, as long as it northern VA. We don't want anybody else in S W Virginia
@dontneednomanstoptelllingm8481 Жыл бұрын
@@billgibson2418 I'm coming there so here I come
@SolarwithJett4 ай бұрын
All good information. If you wanna save money in any of these neighborhoods I can help! Solar is now cheaper than paying the local energy company dominion!
@agordon20024 Жыл бұрын
Both Alexandria and Charlottesville are home to University of Virginia?
@babysisdolls33366 ай бұрын
When Amazon got kicked out of New York...the came to Va. 1/2 people in Va are from the North in Va..we are the gateway to the south..
@elronsavage344 Жыл бұрын
Virginia Beach is not the Eastern Shore... Eastern Shore is north of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel...
@blancarosas-jp3mw2 ай бұрын
I Love Virgiia.
@Classy4514 Жыл бұрын
VIRGINIA IS THE BEST STATE IN AMERICA 🇺🇸 FOR SURE.
@sidehustlesam7753 Жыл бұрын
Why?
@AP90x Жыл бұрын
Lol sure
@parsaeskandari17053 ай бұрын
Perfect ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉
@jackkelly9022 Жыл бұрын
This person got PAID for this. Northern Va...is expensive and crowded.
@maryannfields3304 Жыл бұрын
You mispronounced the city of charlottsville
@cizzle3716 ай бұрын
It's Ai
@jacobdye40375 ай бұрын
And Loudoun…
@seabreeze73785 ай бұрын
Ummm University of Virginia is NOT in Alexandria, it’s in Charlottesville 😮😮
@1bobsgirl6 ай бұрын
You didn't say anything about the best places to live in Virginia. What you said was the biggest cities. Not good
@1deep4996 ай бұрын
757 area is the best
@southernbelle5573 Жыл бұрын
You're wrong about the crime rate.
@JacquelineStapleton-im1kkАй бұрын
Never move to northern. Virginia. The costs are ridiculous, crime increasing daily and the traffic is horrendous. I am moving, just so tired of it. But where to move is the question.
@2PIXELS246 ай бұрын
Try to live in chesterfield.
@seabreeze73785 ай бұрын
Is it bad? Saw a rental there…but was hesitant as price seemed too low 😮
@dj-bn1fj4 ай бұрын
You must be a realtor as you picked the cities that COL is much higher than anywhere else in the state, southwest Virginia COL are the best in the state.
@Aigberaedion_Samson9 ай бұрын
“So what does ignorance have to do with greed and fear?” I asked. “Because it is ignorance about money that causes so much greed and fear,” said rich dad. “Let me give you some examples. A doctor, wanting more money to better provide for his family, raises his fees. By raising his fees, it makes health care more expensive for everyone. It hurts the poor people the most, so they have worse health than those with money. Because the doctors raise their fees, the attorneys raise their fees. Because the attorneys’ fees have gone up, schoolteachers want a raise, which raises our taxes, and on and on and on. Soon there will be such a horrifying gap between the rich and the poor that chaos will break LAGOS CITY out and another great civilization will collapse. History proves that great civilizations collapse when the gap between the haves and have-nots is too great. Sadly, America is on that same course because we haven’t learned from history. We only memorize historical dates and names, not the lesson.” “Aren’t prices supposed to go up?” I asked. “In an educated society with a well-run government, prices should actually come down. Of course, that is often only true in theory. Prices go up because of greed and fear caused by ignorance. If schools taught people about money, there would be more money and lower prices. But schools focus only on teaching people to work for money, not how to harness money’s power.” “But don’t we have business schools?” Mike asked. “And haven’t you encouraged me to go for my MBA?” “Yes,” said rich dad. “But all too often business schools train employees to become sophisticated bean-counters. Heaven forbid a bean-counter takes over a business. All they do is look at the numbers, fire people, and kill the business. I know this because I hire bean-counters. All they think about is cutting costs and raising prices, which cause more problems. Bean-counting is important. I wish more people knew it, but it, too, is not the whole picture,” added rich dad angrily. “So is there an answer?” asked Mike. “Yes,” said rich dad. “Learn to use your emotions to think, not think with your emotions. When you boys mastered your emotions by agreeing to work for free, I knew there was hope. When you again resisted your emotions when I tempted you with more money, you were again learning to think in spite of being emotionally charged. That’s the first step.”
@MsLane616 ай бұрын
You lost me at Cher-letts-ville. Seriously? And you repeated that ridiculous mispronuncation several times. That's not even bad research; it is just plain ignorance.
@cizzle3716 ай бұрын
Ai generated.
@lukestevenson73584 ай бұрын
I have lived in VA all my life. Other than Charlottesville, these are all the worst places to live. How bout Strasburg, Lexington, Lynchburg and Luray???? These cities are the absolute worst. Especially Loudoun County and Richmond
@b2bw358 ай бұрын
I lived in Hampton Roads for way too long. Please do yourself a favor and DO NOT move to Hampton Roads ...it is a horrible place to live!
@tinabapple62705 ай бұрын
These are not the best places to live in Va.
@nourestani3 күн бұрын
Hell 😂 houses in Europe 100 years old better built and energy efficient than the new ones in America 😂
@oldnavcat Жыл бұрын
Holy cow! Every town you selected, except Williamsburg, is in either Northern Virginia or the welfare centers of Richmond and Virginia Beach. You even selected The People's Republic Of Charlottesville (the southernmost extent of the liberal DC blight). Central and western Virginia are beautiful, friendly, and affordable.
@Nga-1984 Жыл бұрын
Small town are druggie area, northern VA have drugs but more professionals and job opportunities, better education and safer but way too expensive. Also Richmond is not northern VA.
@EuropeanUS Жыл бұрын
Charlottesville and Richmond are Central Virginia. Western Virginia is just good weekend adventure, that’s all.
@southernbelle5573 Жыл бұрын
Fredericksburg is part of Central Virginia not Northern Virginia. The culture is very different. And again crime rates you claim are incorrect.
@gigglybeast7 ай бұрын
Nobody wants to live in a town full of racists, except racists.
@Aigberaedion_Samson9 ай бұрын
Nigeria's other natural resources include natural gas, tin, iron ore, coal, limestone, niobium, lead, zinc and arable land, that you can invest into in Nigeria do well to come buy and also invest
@Toni-id2pv Жыл бұрын
Richmond use to be murder capital are you Serious
@josh7693 Жыл бұрын
Every City has bad areas.. Richmond isn't nearly as bad as a dozen other Northeastern Cities lol
@babysisdolls33366 ай бұрын
we lost that title to Detroit years ago, but still high murders, the same location...they all know each other.
@mallardcutter7209 Жыл бұрын
If these are the best places in Virginia to live then leave me out.
@michellesouders2627 Жыл бұрын
Where do you live?
@TerryJohnson757 Жыл бұрын
🦗🦗🦗
@user-by2zl3vk5y8 ай бұрын
If you don't mind speeding and stop sign runners, Norfolk, especially Ghent commons is the place to be Mario andretti loves it zero traffic enforcement
@plainmilkvr3048Ай бұрын
Legalized weed here I come.
@nourestani3 күн бұрын
garbage looking cardboard made 2x4 houses covered with plastic so called vinyl lol
@plowthor6 ай бұрын
People are very unfriendly in Virginia.
@Aigberaedion_Samson9 ай бұрын
“You see, we’re all employees ultimately. We just work at different levels,” said rich dad. “I just want you boys to have a chance to avoid the trap caused by those two emotions, fear and desire. Use them in your favor, not against you. That’s what I want to teach you. I’m not interested in just teaching you to make a pile of money. That won’t handle the fear or desire. If you don’t first handle fear and desire, and you get rich, you’ll only be a highly paid slave.” “So how do we avoid the trap?” I asked. “The main cause of poverty or financial struggle is fear and ignorance, not the economy or the government or the rich. It’s self-inflicted fear and ignorance that keep people trapped. So you boys go to school and get your college degrees, and I’ll teach you how to stay out of the trap.” The pieces of the puzzle were appearing. My highly educated dad had a great education and a great career, but school never told him how to handle money or his fear of it. It became clear that I could learn different and important things from two fathers. “So you’ve been talking about the fear of not having money. How does the desire for money affect our thinking?” Mike asked. “How did you feel when I tempted you with a pay raise? Did you notice your desires rising?” We nodded our heads. “By not giving in to your emotions, you were able to delay your reactions and think. That is important. We will always have emotions of fear and greed. From here on in, it’s imperative for you to use those emotions to your advantage, and for the long term to not let your emotions control your thinking. Most people use fear and greed against themselves. That’s the start of ignorance. Most people live their lives chasing paychecks, pay raises and job security because of the emotions of desire and fear, not really questioning where those emotion-driven thoughts are leading them. It’s just like the picture of a donkey dragging a cart with its owner dangling a carrot just in front of its nose. The donkey’s owner may be going where he wants to, but the donkey is chasing an illusion. Tomorrow there will only be another carrot for the donkey.” “You mean the moment I picture a new baseball glove, candy and toys, that’s like a carrot to a donkey?” Mike asked. “Yes, and as you get older, your toys get more expensive-a new car, a boat, and a big house to impress your friends,” said rich dad with a smile. “Fear pushes you out the door, and desire calls to you. That’s the trap.” “So what’s the answer,” Mike asked. “What intensifies fear and desire is ignorance. That is why rich people with lots of money often have more fear the richer they get. Money is the carrot, the illusion. If the donkey could see the whole picture, it might rethink its choice to chase the carrot.” Rich dad went on to explain that a human’s life is a struggle between ignorance and illumination. He explained that once a person stops searching for information and self-knowledge, ignorance sets in. That struggle is a moment-to-moment decision-to learn to open or close one’s mind. “Look, school is very important. You go to school to learn a skill or profession to become a contributing member of society. Every culture needs teachers, doctors, mechanics, artists, cooks, businesspeople, police officers, firefighters, and soldiers. Schools train them so society can thrive and flourish,” said rich dad. “Unfortunately, LAGOS CITY for many people school is the end, not the beginning.” There was a long silence. Rich dad was smiling. I didn’t comprehend everything he said that day. But as with most great teachers, his words continued to teach for years. “I’ve been a little cruel today,” said rich dad. “But I want you to always remember this talk. I want you to always think of Mrs. Martin. And I want you always to remember that donkey. Never forget that fear and desire can lead you into life’s biggest trap if you’re not aware of them controlling your thinking. To spend your life living in fear, never exploring your dreams, is cruel. To work hard for money, thinking that it will buy you things that will make you happy is also cruel. To wake up in the middle of the night terrified about paying bills is a horrible way to live. To live a life dictated by the size of a paycheck is not really living a life. Thinking that a job makes you secure is lying to yourself. That’s cruel, and that’s the trap I want you to avoid. I’ve seen how money runs people’s lives. Don’t let that happen to you. Please don’t let money run your life.” A softball rolled under our table. Rich dad picked it up and threw it back.