Difference between revisions of "Washington, DC"
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Revision as of 17:51, 30 March 2009
Washington, DC has been the de jure capital of the United States since some whiny southerners decided to throw a fit. Their carping resulted in the seat of government being relocated from congenial New York City to a filthy swamp on the Virginia-Maryland border. The US government's ethics have subsequently evolved to match the sweaty, rotting stew that was Washington's original landscape.
Washington is not so much a city as a collection of pompous monuments surrounded by blocks of bland, IAB-like office parks, surrounded by crack dens. If the layout of its vaunted "Mall" looks familiar, it's because Charles McKim of Columbia campus designers McKim, Mead, and White was on its planning committee.
It does not lie in a state, but rather a federal territory with the gumption to call itself the District of Columbia. It is forgiven for doing so only because it was given its name during the same orgiastic naming ceremony that bestowed Columbia College its own - and because the name "District of Yale" would have sucked far more.
DC, as the locals call it, has made some marginal improvements since a Columbia graduate began to reign over things.