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dimva | 2 years ago
The amount of money required to fix the housing shortage is negligible for a country as rich as the US. But money isn't the problem here, politics is. And no amount of money can fix that.
dimva | 2 years ago
The amount of money required to fix the housing shortage is negligible for a country as rich as the US. But money isn't the problem here, politics is. And no amount of money can fix that.
spamizbad|2 years ago
There’s also a good bit of plain old racism involved but people are in denial about it and insist they’re implying something else.
For example, in a nearby community they were proposing some “starter townhomes” priced at $295K (median home price in the area is 350K). These were not rentals, low income, section 8a - they were new construction townhomes on the lower end of the pricing spectrum. People FREAKED out, and suggested they’d be bought up by gangs and junkies and all sorts of ne’er-do-wells and the project was killed. Someone stood up at a zoning meeting and said “Do you really want someone who lives in one of these as your neighbor? Do you want their kids going to our schools? I sure don’t!” To thunderous applause.
I personally can’t wrap my head around the logic. It’s not like these existing homeowners are rich - in fact the sort of person who scoops up a $300K townhome is probably a young professional with an office job who probably make the same or more as the residents complaining that they’ll bring poverty. It’s nuts!
bombcar|2 years ago
Even now, $50k is only $350/mo. I doubt there's terribly many gangbangers for whom $350/mo is the cutoff.
They just don't want anything to change (literally "conservative" even if progressive politically) and will make any argument they can find for it.
At some point you can't win by convincing them, you either bribe them or steamroll them.
The bribery is very effective, make the developer build a new library or redo all the streets or something.
jeffbee|2 years ago
mikrl|2 years ago
This logic is so backwards on behalf of homeowners it’s unreal. Which cities are associated with out of control house prices?
SF, New York, Toronto…
What do these cities have a lot of? Housing. Increasing population density increases the tax base, which increases the level and quality of services which increases property values.
This trend shows no sign of reversal AFAIK
brvsft|2 years ago
Oh, actually I think the problem is that I would like temporary housing to be built for the homeless, just far away from me. But certain people insist that they let homeless people, with their many varied problems, live up the street from me instead.
One would think that being willing to have temporary housing built somewhat distant from any major cities is a compromise on my part, but my opponents insist on getting everything they want and having homeless people live on the exact same block as me. It's like every other topic where people have zero intention of compromising, e.g. no abortions even in the case of rape, no guns allowed period, etc. etc. The internal debate people use to arrive at a position becomes: How can I best poke my neighbor in the eye and force them to exist in a political reality that they despise, instead of compromising? That is the position I would like to take.
And instead of reaching any sort of compromise that could help solve the problem, we get nothing, a political stalemate where no one wins and everyone loses. Politics in the US is absolute trash.
amanaplanacanal|2 years ago
unknown|2 years ago
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