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by rsync
1212 days ago
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"What it sounds like is the stereotypical upper-middle-class white suburban boogeyman of "Those People" that you don't want around, because they bring down property values, with a healthy helping of implied racism and explicit classism." I don't know what it "sounds like" and I cannot speak to your stereotypes. I no longer have any interaction with residential property, zoning, development, or any of these housing politics. I am not affected by "property values". I look at these issues as an interested, outside observer and I have tremendous enthusiasm for urban spaces, walkable cities, mixed use environs, etc. But at the same time I appreciate well regulated[1] single family neighborhoods/developments and while I don't live anywhere like that I appreciate the reasons that someone might have for preferring that. I hope that it is useful and interesting to you to learn that there are a variety of practical and aesthetic reasons for (not agreeing with you) that come from ideas and experience that (aren't the stereotypes you have in mind). [1] This is the correct term. Arguing for abolishment of residential zoning is arguing for deregulation. |
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I bet you do, unless you have moved to orbit.