Do NOT Fall For The Texas Propaganda

Tribal Outkast

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Dont move to Houston, Dallas, Atlanta or any other city thinking your life will drastically change. It wont. If you a loser in your town you will be a loser in Houston too. It is what you make it. i know folks that moved to Houston and are thriving. But they were thriving where they were from because they are educated, good work record, good work ethic, surround themselves with positive people etc. I know people who have failed and they "hate it" because they are a loser no matter where they damn go
This is why I’m glad I never moved to Atlanta when I wanted to. I fear that I would’ve been outta there quickly lol. People think all they need to do is move to a city to be around shyt and somehow that will work out well. You have to know how to make it out there too. Like you may not be able to live in Atlanta but you can live in Doraville or Marietta. Sometimes being near the big city is better than being in that city
 

CrushedGroove

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..
houston-traffic-congestion-bumper-to-bumper.jpg
Who knew love could come in such abundance.
:wow:
 

WIA20XX

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Had a homie making big money move from NYC to Houston.

Having lived in both, I was like, "You sure about this? Cause it's a major lifestyle change. Don't mistake a good weekend for what life is really like"

Potna was just looking at the cost of living versus his salary, "Yeah I'm gonna be doing major things in Houston"....

I think he lasted a year, begging his job to transfer him back up North.
 

WIA20XX

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What about Austin Texas?

I've lived in every major city in TX and visited most of the other ones.

In terms of weather - The Hill Country floods, and there are major roads in Austin that can get flooded out. The road by the original Whole Foods (started in Austin) will and does majorly flood.

And it's HOT most of the year. AC is everywhere, so you only have to deal with the heat for a few moments between your AC house, your AC car, and your AC work/shopping. But most of the time, you don't want to be outside.

White Cali/NYC People think they're gonna like Austin, but miss CA/NYC quickly. The lower income taxes get eaten up by higher property and sales taxes and lesser social services/infrastructure. That said, transplants can make a grip, but do they put down roots? Not if they can help it.

Austin (Texas, in general) food is usually pretty good and cheap, compared to most other cities - but it's not LA/NYC level levls of good and/or cheap.

It was always funny to hear the transplants yap about how "uncultured"/dumb most Texans are, when you realize they're mostly in White/Asian/Indian tech bubbles, and the only Texans they typically deal with are in a service capacity. They don't even really mix with people that have lived there all of their lives.

That out of the way...

Black People from any place with a lot of Black People - Houston, Dallas, ATL, DC, etc - find Austin to be very WHITE. Painfully white. There was a time when I knew where every Black barbershop was, there were so few options.

But it's like "Liberal" White Racism + 10-25% Redneck racism when they drive out to Georgetown (hell even in Town in Austin can be some BS with Travis County/Austin Police Dept)

Assuming that's racism is not the main issue, there just has never been a large Black population in Austin, as compared to Houston/Dallas, etc. Black women in particular realize that they're gonna have a tough time dating.

Brehs? If you want to taste the rainbow AND you're in shape AND you have your own car and place - like everywhere else on the planet - it's shooting fish in a barrel.

Like most Texas cities - Local Black People and Transplant Black People (even Black people from other TX cities) - don't really cross over too much. You gotta make the effort, and even then there's some latent suspicion. I was never from the 21 or the 23 - not that I cared, but you might run into folks that do care.

In terms of crime and safety - Austin was really safe. Might get your car broken into if you live where the students live, but it's certainly not gun shots every night, tuck your chain, don't drive through certain areas. If you looking for trouble you'll find though.

Even then, whatever you like socially about Austin, you can find in more #'s and more diversity in Dallas or Houston.

You gotta live in Austin during the summer before you move there imo. When it's hot, when the students aren't there, when the night life is kinda dead, when the city is kinda at its "worst" from a tourist perspective.

All that said, I'd move back to any big TX city in a heartbeat, if they'd pay me as much as I get paid in DC.
 

the bossman

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Dallas is dope. Always loved to see how you could get so much more space for your money compaeed to the east coast.... but that heat is just too much :scust:
 

feelosofer

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To be fair most of the people moving to Texas are already middle/upper middle class and can work through those issues.
 

Donny

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So many big businesses and Fortune 500 companies settling in Texas it makes look like the New New York just a lot of opportunity but the people from Blue States that move there always hate it lmao I was thinking of heading down South my best friends are in DC, Charlotte, Atlanta, and my sister is moving to Ft Lauderdale I just moved from Delaware to NJ last year I’m like the only one of my friends to move up north it’s just me and my girl here but Blue States carry a lot of benefits
 

MyApps

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I've lived in every major city in TX and visited most of the other ones.

In terms of weather - The Hill Country floods, and there are major roads in Austin that can get flooded out. The road by the original Whole Foods (started in Austin) will and does majorly flood.

And it's HOT most of the year. AC is everywhere, so you only have to deal with the heat for a few moments between your AC house, your AC car, and your AC work/shopping. But most of the time, you don't want to be outside.

White Cali/NYC People think they're gonna like Austin, but miss CA/NYC quickly. The lower income taxes get eaten up by higher property and sales taxes and lesser social services/infrastructure. That said, transplants can make a grip, but do they put down roots? Not if they can help it.

Austin (Texas, in general) food is usually pretty good and cheap, compared to most other cities - but it's not LA/NYC level levls of good and/or cheap.

It was always funny to hear the transplants yap about how "uncultured"/dumb most Texans are, when you realize they're mostly in White/Asian/Indian tech bubbles, and the only Texans they typically deal with are in a service capacity. They don't even really mix with people that have lived there all of their lives.

That out of the way...

Black People from any place with a lot of Black People - Houston, Dallas, ATL, DC, etc - find Austin to be very WHITE. Painfully white. There was a time when I knew where every Black barbershop was, there were so few options.

But it's like "Liberal" White Racism + 10-25% Redneck racism when they drive out to Georgetown (hell even in Town in Austin can be some BS with Travis County/Austin Police Dept)

Assuming that's racism is not the main issue, there just has never been a large Black population in Austin, as compared to Houston/Dallas, etc. Black women in particular realize that they're gonna have a tough time dating.

Brehs? If you want to taste the rainbow AND you're in shape AND you have your own car and place - like everywhere else on the planet - it's shooting fish in a barrel.

Like most Texas cities - Local Black People and Transplant Black People (even Black people from other TX cities) - don't really cross over too much. You gotta make the effort, and even then there's some latent suspicion. I was never from the 21 or the 23 - not that I cared, but you might run into folks that do care.

In terms of crime and safety - Austin was really safe. Might get your car broken into if you live where the students live, but it's certainly not gun shots every night, tuck your chain, don't drive through certain areas. If you looking for trouble you'll find though.

Even then, whatever you like socially about Austin, you can find in more #'s and more diversity in Dallas or Houston.

You gotta live in Austin during the summer before you move there imo. When it's hot, when the students aren't there, when the night life is kinda dead, when the city is kinda at its "worst" from a tourist perspective.

All that said, I'd move back to any big TX city in a heartbeat, if they'd pay me as much as I get paid in DC.
Im upper middle class myself. But how much money does a person need to enjoy Austin and also Dallas?
 

WIA20XX

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Im upper middle class myself. But how much money does a person need to enjoy Austin and also Dallas?

It depends on what you mean by "enjoy", but I'll take a swing.

Dallas is bigger, and because of that you can get more house for your money, but the trade off is driving long distances. 1 hour to travel 45-60 miles is fairly normal.

Austin is smaller, things are more compact, but the highways were never designed for the population. So 1 hour to travel 20 miles.

To me enjoying Austin/Dallas would mean
  • A home/apartment in a neighborhood with good neighborhood level restaurants, groceries and basic shopping.
    • Easy uber distance to the night life
  • Having a relatively new car, possibly a sports car or a sports sedan or a cool SUV/Truck
Renting - Median is like 1800 when I last looked, so call it 2500-3000 a month for "nice".

Buying a Place - Median is something ridiculous like 400-600, so call it 700-1M for "nice", and there are plenty of 1-5M homes in Austin.

Transportation is whatever you want to drive. If you want to post up with them Cars and Coffee's type dudes, you're gonna come out the pocket.

For me at my age/my stage in my career, I'd want to pull down 350K-500K. (but that type of money is good in most places except maybe NY and LA - and that's only to "enjoy" those places you need a TON of money - cause there are plenty of poor people in every rich area)

If I was just getting started, 100-150 would be great for Austin. You're gonna take home 6-9k per month (no state income tax!_ in that range, and that's enough to holler at chicks on 6th street, push a late model Lex, and eat good, imo
 
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