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rsync | 23 days ago

"People would rather stay marooned in the middle of an endless desert of houses with essentials being a 30-45m drive away."

Not my preference but also not out of bounds as a democratic outcome.

If we want our respect for democracy to be taken seriously we need to respect democratic outcomes ... even when they are not the ones we prefer.

discuss

order

hash872|23 days ago

How about if your neighborhood wanted to keep out people of a certain ethnicity instead? Is that a democratic outcome that we need to respect?

The definition of democracy is that we hold regular elections for political office. It does not mean that every single decision in society is up for a vote at the local level. 51% of my neighbors cannot decide that they'd like expropriate my house or checking account. The point of YIMBYism is that these kinds of decisions have negative externalities and a larger group of voters- at the state or national level- are removing that decision-making power from a smaller group at the local level. This is a democratically legitimate outcome!

palmotea|23 days ago

> How about if your neighborhood wanted to keep out people of a certain ethnicity instead? Is that a democratic outcome that we need to respect?

Come on, you know that's not analogous.

> It does not mean that every single decision in society is up for a vote at the local level.

It also doesn't mean "any policy the voters want, as long as long as it's the one I want."

Nowadays, when people bring up examples like you did above, it's usually part of an attempt to shut down democratic decision making, by making false comparisons.

mlyle|23 days ago

The question is, -- is it a deliberate democratic outcome, or is it an accidental consequence of local zoning codes and city planning?

If governments are involved in planning, it's legitimate to use laws and the planning process to try and push these processes out of local minima towards more globally optimal outcome.

palmotea|23 days ago

> If we want our respect for democracy to be taken seriously we need to respect democratic outcomes ... even when they are not the ones we prefer.

>> The question is, -- is it a deliberate democratic outcome, or is it an accidental consequence of local zoning codes and city planning?

>> If governments are involved in planning, it's legitimate to use laws and the planning process to try and push these processes out of local minima towards more globally optimal outcome.

In a democracy, government planning is supposed to push the process towards local preferences. It's not supposed to "push these processes...towards more globally optimal outcome," which when decoded means "what you or what some distant technocrat prefers."

vel0city|23 days ago

There's also been studies showing how changing infrastructure designs can often be most unpopular just before the change but then become very popular after once the effects of the change are actually felt.

burnte|23 days ago

> If we want our respect for democracy to be taken seriously we need to respect democratic outcomes ... even when they are not the ones we prefer.

The flaw in this argument here is that the opposition is trying to prevent these folks from even having a voice, which is fundamentally undemocratic. So this isn't a relevant statement here because this isn't a complaint about a democratic outcome. It's a complaint about people trying to eliminate voices who want to solve a problem. It's an attempt to silence discussion, which has the effect of preventing action.

Retric|23 days ago

It’s not democracy when you exclude people impacted by the decision making process from the decision. Preselecting the outcome before the vote destroys any legitimacy the outcome has.

dh2022|23 days ago

Anybody who is eligible to vote can vote. How is this not democracy?

cosmic_cheese|23 days ago

Is it still a democratic outcome when NIMBYs are doing things like abusing environmental regulations to choke out developments that citizens had approved of with their votes?

enaaem|23 days ago

The whole issue with NIMBYism are: contradictory democratic wishes and disproportional power of home owners. This points to issues with the democratic process, and not democracy itself.

Most people agree that more homes need to be built, but no home owner wants it in their backyard. So you end up with a deadlock where nothing is done.

hackeraccount|23 days ago

NIMBYism is frequently driven by a small number of people who feel very strongly and use rules designed to protect minority rights to get their way. Is it democratic? I don't know... much of what's going on if put to a vote would be split 3 ways. A minority in favor, a large number who don't really care and another minority against (but they either don't get a vote or the default result is to go against their wishes).

Nevermark|23 days ago

What an odd viewpoint.

Effectively, we are all living in a shrinking prison of all decisions made before us. A "democratic" dystopia.

Respecting an outcome doesn't mean you have to (1) give up on differing views, or (2) stop working respectfully for another outcome.

doctorpangloss|23 days ago

I support upzoning. It is a bad idea to come after people’s comfy, expensive cars. People like cars.