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by jajko
481 days ago
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You clearly haven't spent much time in Europe. Almost everybody wants to live in city centers where work is, especially the loudest complainers. Nobody ain't got no time for 1h commute to work each way, thats a bad situation by European standards and measurably lowers quality of life. Then there is the fact that city centers are choke full, no further place to build, what is there is often so old its protected from major changes by various rules and laws, and very expensive without exception. So where new stuff can be built is relatively remote. But then young folks complain how far that is from city center and their jobs, that they don't want to spend their lives commuting. Construction is certainly allowed, I haven't heard about single country banning it in any way, but folks want those central places for peanuts. Almost everybody wants them, still for peanuts. The fact is that even in proper communism stuff that was important, scarce and everybody wanted it was a prized treasure with hard competition and few winners. Thats one of the things I see is changing with new generations - wanting it all right now, never happy, not much humility or hard work to get to some desired place. Then hard disappointment when reality ain't some fabulated tiktok feed. Ie I am working on setting up my = my family modest wealth and even after moving to Switzerland with pretty good job it will take me till 60 at least, even with my wife being a doctor. Young consider this a failure, maybe my kids will do so too but I don't care. Then folks vote for trump since he keeps saying how everything is shit, thats so easy to identify with. But for every unhappy western kid there are 10 or 100 ones coming from rest of the world working hard, not complaining, with laser focus on their goals. A bit of discipline and focus can get one pretty far, especially with such competition. |
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> Construction is certainly allowed
> what is there is often so old its protected from major changes by various rules and laws
Construction being allowed on a field three hours outside of the city is irrelevant. The problem is that there are laws that de facto or de jure prohibit the replacement of most existing buildings with taller buildings that provide more housing.