the_honeyman t1_ivpjvjq wrote
Reply to comment by robzilla71173 in Galloway zoning issue fails, blocking plans for development across from Sequiota Park by Cloud_Disconnected
They won't, I was told on this sub by the loudest voices against this proposal that if low income neighborhoods wanted to stop development they should pony up the resources to do it, otherwise tough shit.
robzilla71173 t1_ivpv86y wrote
We did fight it in my neighborhood. We just didn't have the means to take it to court or get it on a ballot. But we went to zoning meetings and it didn't matter. In my parents neighborhood a developer actually tore the windows and doors off the houses and told them they wouldn't finish demolition until the zoning change was approved.
the_honeyman t1_ivpy1pf wrote
Exactly. Nobody cares unless you have enough money to buy somebody. So fuck it, good for the goose, good for the gander and all that.
robzilla71173 t1_ivpuwmy wrote
I remember reading that comment and its when my no became a yes for sure.
the_honeyman t1_ivpxty3 wrote
Same. I was on the fence about it mostly until then, but the fucking audacity and arrogance put on display cemented my choice.
robzilla71173 t1_ivq747z wrote
It seems like any other day, this group wants more mass housing in walkable neighborhoods. Except just not their neighborhood?
WendyArmbuster t1_ivraa3a wrote
It may seem that way, but you've got to remember, most people don't want mass housing. No young kid says, "When I grow up I'm going to live in an apartment!" People look at the heat maps of reported crime and see the obvious relationship between high density apartments and rentals and crime. Nobody aspires to work in a call center, go home to an apartment, and spend their evenings taking mad bong rips and playing video games outside of the Reddit community. I mean, it was fun in college, but as an adult? Nobody wants that.
robzilla71173 t1_ivrcp5r wrote
The people in this group are who we're talking about. It's weird to watch the group think reverse course.
WendyArmbuster t1_ivrv7xf wrote
I don't think there's as many people who are for high density housing as it seems though. They're just loud about it. Even the ones who are for high density housing aren't really for luxury high density housing, especially when it's plopped right across from a favorite park.
Me personally, I hate apartments, and especially when they're placed in existing neighborhoods. I hate the lifestyle it forces the residents to endure. I hate the inability to earn equity on your housing budget. I hate how landlords get richer and tenants get nothing in the long term. I hate how they destroy the value and character of neighborhoods. I hate that you can't practice your trumpet or drums there, do woodworking projects, store your canoe, work on your own vehicle, build a skateboarding half-pipe, or grow a garden. I hate the consumer lifestyle apartments promote.
the_honeyman t1_ivqb8ju wrote
Bazinga.
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