Submitted by PostPostMinimalist t3_117qc0e in nyc
sutisuc t1_j9dfmtd wrote
Reply to comment by gonzo5622 in PSA: New York State tax brackets are not what they seem by PostPostMinimalist
CA also taxes high income earners at a higher rate than NYS while not taxing low income earners at a lower rate. NYS taxes all income earners starting at 4 percent and going up from there. CA starts at 1 percent for lowest income earners then works up from there. Plus the parts of California that are equivalent to cost of NYC are much nicer than NYC
JeromePowellAdmirer t1_j9dgrqs wrote
SF and LA are much nicer than NYC? I beg to differ
AceContinuum t1_j9dj6gh wrote
The previous commenter may be thinking of places like Palo Alto or Marin County that are plenty expensive ("equivalent to cost of NYC"). But those places are really much more comparable to Westchester or the North Shore of LI than NYC.
magnetic_yeti t1_j9dnovy wrote
Palo Alto is not particularly nice, though it is absurdly expensive. It’s fine if you’re OK sitting in your car for 30+ minutes every day, and having to drive everyone everywhere, including if you want to go for a run or to the dog park. But don’t expect to hang out with friends unless all your friends make $500k/year or more, or you drive for an hour each way (so you better not drink!)
It also practically only has 3+ bedroom homes: in NY you can buy a place for around 1 million, in Palo Alto those don’t exist. There is currently ONE 2 bed townhouse at $2 million for sale, right on the border of East Palo Alto. Then there’s a 2 bed bungalow (900 square feet) for sale for 2.6 million.
And you need a car! I cannot stress enough: you can’t live in Palo Alto comfortably without one. And your neighbors are all driving $60k+ cars, so add at least $1k each month in payments, insurance and maintenance. And enjoy your one “downtown” street with about as much to do as exists on the third-most-interesting commercial street in any Brooklyn neighborhood. Like imagine if the only place you could go grab a bite was the time out market building in dumbo. That’s as exciting as the entirety of Palo Alto’s downtown.
AceContinuum t1_j9dogbj wrote
Exactly! Yet to a certain demographic - those who live in Palo Alto, and those who wish they could afford to live there - that kind of "premium suburban" lifestyle sounds like a dream. Wouldn't it be so nice to sit in traffic in a $60k+ car??
JeromePowellAdmirer t1_j9dticw wrote
It's a stockholm syndrome type thing. Their job forces them there so they have to pretend to like it if they want to be satisfied with their life.
payeco t1_j9ejt0k wrote
I don’t know man. I spend a lot of time in the Valley and a lot of people really do love living there. I mean the weather really is incredible year round if you’re not someone that cares about really warm weather.
PomegranateChance502 t1_j9e24jn wrote
Plenty of people could and would say the same about new York City lmfao. Get over yourselves
JeromePowellAdmirer t1_j9fvga6 wrote
Lmao does your life consist entirely of nyc bashing?
PomegranateChance502 t1_j9i4gj0 wrote
No. I just find it ironic how small minded many New Yorkers are about the world. I don't think anyone who values quality of life could really stand to live in nyc. But the people living there fiercely defend the city. Which is a pretty great comparison to Stockholm syndrome if you ask me.
oreosfly t1_j9djb4c wrote
I'd throw Orange County to that list as well.
PostPostMinimalist OP t1_j9dkdu7 wrote
There is not a single place in the USA much nicer than NYC (only reason I'm bothering with this).
lemonjalo t1_j9dorco wrote
I guess it’s your definition of nice. I moved away because I couldn’t stand it anymore. The city is nice but it’s just not worth the premium.
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