West Coast baby

  • RushingSquirrel
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    1 year ago

    Another fix: remote work for all who can. No more traffic, no more living close to economic centers (expensive housing), leaves a lot of available housing in the cities (no more homelessness).

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      My biggest worry is that people already have no sense of community. Third places (is it still a third place if we remove going in to work?) can’t really exist in suburbia. People sit inside when off work, drive to work isolated from everyone, then sit at work mostly not building a community. Americans have no sense of community, which I would blame for most of our current political issues. People spreading out and not going in to work (I’m not in favor of this, just not looking forward to this one effect of it) can only further degrade any sense of community that currently exists.

      • foksmash
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        1 year ago

        I don’t understand how you’re gonna have a good sense of community when you share 1sq mile with millions of others in a large city. What percentage of people can you even engage in friendly banter with? The community we have in our modest sized town is so amazing, my wife and I talk about how grateful we are to live here.

        Our kids can walk to a dozen different houses where they can play. We are close enough with all those families that we could drop the kids with any of them if we needed to. There are tons of parks and great recreational sports activities to be outside.

        I do respect others who choose to live all crammed on top of each other. I love the culture that big cities offer. I just couldn’t live there, it’s too impersonal.

        • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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          1 year ago

          The community would be those who you see at the same café or whatever. Ideally places would have some kind of board or system for people to organize activities. These could be political or just something fun, like a board game night or other things.

          As for the kid thing, in many cities the kids will commute to school or other places on their own. We’ve created a system where that’s unsafe in almost all locations in the US, but it isn’t required. We have a society of helicopter parents, partially out of necessity because kids can’t get anywhere on their own.

      • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        People don’t really connect outside of echo chambers and then claim they believe in voter fraud because they encountered a different-looking persin at the polls…

    • Moneo@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I doubt it.

      Housing is expensive near city centers partly because that’s where people want to live. Even if I could 100% WFH I wouldn’t move out of the city to save money. But I suppose that doesn’t apply to everyone.

  • Spaceinv8er@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I understand what’s trying to be said here but I’d pass on that.

    I’ve lived in apartments most my life. Now that I live in a home that has a backyard, a garage, can’t hear what my neighbors are saying, don’t need to pay for laundry, don’t need to go down an elevator to throw away garbage, and don’t have to worry about people pissing in the elevator. I’m not going back to an apartment.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      All those issues are not intrinsic to apartments. We can have nice apartments too. Sure, cheap ones will cut corners, but it’s not required.

        • rexxit@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I think the kids are deluded and have no idea what they’re missing. Density is hell. Single family homes are expensive because the vast majority of people don’t want to spend the rest of their lives living in apartments.

            • rexxit@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Maybe 40s-50s for some of them. Maybe never for others, but I think the only way they can idealize apartment living is lack of life experience. City living is hip and fun for young people but it gets old. Maybe we’re dealing with extreme extroverts who can’t bear the quiet of a green suburb, and having private space in a personal vehicle instead of being crammed on the bus or train with the general public.

                • rexxit@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Maybe I’d be less vocal about it if there wasn’t a loud minority of people - I suspect mostly born after 1990 - who have these opinions largely as a result of lack of other experience. Maybe I’d be less pissed off about it if they stopped moving from huge cities to small ones and fucking up the cost of everything whilst trying to convert everywhere to NYC and Amsterdam.

                  I’m sick of the Zennial/euro anti-car, ultra pro-urban densification, unopposed bandwagoning online, and I feel compelled to speak up about it.

      • space@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        Exactly. My main reasons why I want a home instead of an apartment is the lack of space, the need to have some private space outside (i.e. a courtyard) and privacy. A lower density apartment building that has all these things could be built, but it would probably be a luxury apartment that would cost an obscene amount of money.

    • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      1 year ago

      I can’t hear my neighbors, don’t need an elevator, and don’t need a garage because I don’t need a car. I don’t have a back yard but I’m pretty close to a massive city park. This apartment is pretty okay.

      Meanwhile the suburbs were just crushing isolation and cultural wasteland. And needing to drive everywhere was awful.

      • Spaceinv8er@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Other than SF. Where do you live in CA that doesn’t require you to need a car?

        I know you can make due. I lived without one for a long time, but it was a the biggest pain the ass not having one. Unless I only wanted to stay in my little local bubble.

    • Chunk@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You (or whoever) can opt to live in a cute neighborhood, I would. But you cannot opt to live in a cute neighborhood in the middle of a massive city. I think that’s the key piece here.

    • Gormadt@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      There is a middle ground between single family housing and high density housing, it’s just not less common in the US than either apartments or single family housing.

      Medium density housing, duplexes, quadruplexes, and town homes.

      And yeah crappy apartments with little to no sound dampening are really common. At my brother’s apartment I can hear his neighbor’s coffee pot turn on both outside and inside the apartment building. Shit’s got tissues for walls I swear.

    • zackwithak
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      1 year ago

      You could meet all of your apartment complaints with some decently designed medium density projects. I agree though that not everyone needs to live in a towering skyscraper

    • Maalus@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Good for you since you can afford it. Most people cannot. Which means you would still have your house in the suburbs somewhere, but all of these problems would be solved.

    • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You are still paying for laundry. As a homeowner the full cost of replacing and maintaining the machines is on you. You also have to pay for the electricty and the water usage.

      • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        So what? This is standard and it’s perfectly acceptable for the average homeowner. It sucks a million times worse to have to go to a laundromat, I’ve been there and done that.

        • Kiosade@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Having to share on-site laundry facilities with other residents is bad enough (especially with the BRAND NEW machines breaking down all the time). If I had to go hang out at a laundromat every couple weeks for hours, I’d be even more depressed…

          • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I used to just put in mine and leave. Nobody stole my clothes that I know of but I’m sure it happens on occasion.

            • Kiosade@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              Probably depends how busy it is and the area. But yeah knowing my luck, my clothes would get thrown on the floor or something if I didn’t stay to watch it.

        • Liquid_Fire@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Question from a European: Why does living in an apartment mean you have to go to a laundromat? Do apartments in the US not have washing machines?

          • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            It’s a mix of some that do and some that don’t. Many apartment dwellers have a coin-operated laundry facility on the premises of the complex or nearby that they use if they don’t have washing machines in their apt.

    • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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      1 year ago

      I think you’re making the common mistake of thinking that advocating for dense, mixed use housing means YOU can’t have a single-story home. In reality, rezoning for this kind of thing makes your preferred kind of living much more attainable.

      Think of it like this. You take a giant suburb of repeating box homes. Take what is a dozen homes next to the highway, and build a couple of four and five story apartments with bars and restaurants and a few grocery stores and hair salons on the first level. Now you’ve made a nice little main street. Put a little office space on the second levels, and suddenly there’s less congestion coming and going every morning and evening, since folks don’t need to take the highway to get to work. Shrink the highway to make room for a bus lane, and add a separated bike lane and nature trail to connect your little main street to the next one a few miles away, and eventually the next major metropolitan area.

      The next thing you know, folks like you are still live just fine in your classic American home, but now you have places to shop within walking distance. You’ve got somewhere for your kids to move out to that won’t put them a plane ride away from home. And you’ve got less competition for land. This means that you can get a bigger backyard for the same price, and if your kids want to come back one day to start a family, there are affordable starter homes and condos.

      Keep it up, and next thing you know, you can commute to the office without driving and kids can walk themselves to school. You see what I’m saying? You don’t have to live in the apartments to get a lot of benefits.

    • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      YEP. Same here. It’s a world of difference, having room to do whatever you want in peace and privacy.

      When I lived in apartments back in the 2000s I couldn’t even leave anything of value on my porch or doorstep without fear of it being stolen. My girlfriend’s bike was stolen from the 2nd floor where it was parked right in front of our apartment door. At my apartment before that a drunk stole a wooden pallet that I had on the porch. They stole fucking wood!

      But out here at my rural home, I have land and a garden and we can leave our cars unlocked and bikes or whatever outdoors and nobody messes with it.

      So y’all can keep all that urban density and I will stay far away from it most of the time.

  • synae[he/him]@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Could easily fix “LISA” in the last panel to “USA”, and remove California from the first panel, and boom, you got a meme for the whole country

  • HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Yeah it won’t really solve it in a single city though. NYC has tons and tons of dense urban housing but still insane housing prices.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_New_York_City

        Population density in NYC ranges from 8.6k people/sqmi to 74k people/sqmi

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Francisco_Bay_Area

        San Fransisco manages 1.1k people/sqmi on average with a San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA Combined Statistical Area density of 953 person/sqmi density.

        The insane traffic in New York is easily avoidable if you’re traveling to points on the subway line. If you’re trying to take the Bay Shore ferry to Ocean Beach, you’re going to have a bit of trouble getting from the LIRR to the port, because they never bothered to build a connecting route. But that’s more a feature than a bug - Fire Island is made deliberately inaccessible as an enclave to the New York elites. Getting into and out of JFK and La Guardia airports is, similarly, nightmarish by design (or lack there of). Modern NYC city planners hate you for using any kind of public transit. But I can walk out my front door on 17th street Manhattan at 8am, amble over to the Amtrak, and be in DC by lunch. No other part of the country is like that.

        Similarly, if you make it out to the Bronx or the north side of Manhattan (where they’re having all the nasty flooding because nobody invested in proper build up / drainage up there) you can find some pretty cheap housing. Used to be you could find cheap housing all over Brooklyn and Staten Island too, but… it all got developed into “luxury” spaces with more sqft units for a smaller, wealthier group of people.

        But to say SF has the same problems as NYC is wildly inaccurate. NYC simply could not exist under the conditions LA and SF have been developed. We’re not just talking “bad traffic” but “not enough physical real estate to store that many cars”. We’re not just talking about homelessness but “physically not enough space for this many people”.

        NYC would look more like Connecticut or Rhode Island under the SF development model. Even suburban New Jersey manages higher density rates. At that scale, you’re not “solving” homelessness. You’re just defining it away by denying people the physical space to exist inside the city limits.

        The meme presents dense development as a panacea, and it absolutely isn’t. At the end of the day, more units at the same price point won’t solve homelessness and more rail absent sufficient stations/operating hours can’t serve the same public (as NYers are struggling to come to terms with). But the number of people who can and do live reasonably comfortably in NYC at a lower price point vastly outstrips the peers in California. And, as a consequence, the kind of problems NYC suffers from boil down to maintaining a heavily utilized urban environment rather than building one over the suburban sprawl that chokes off development at every turn.

        Two totally different problems.

    • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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      1 year ago

      Not as much as you think. Here’s some trivia for you: which urban area is more densely populated, NYC or LA?

      The answer is actually LA. Everyone imagines Manhattan or Brooklyn when they think of NYC but actually a huge part of the city in an economic and cultural sense consists of low density suburbs, enough so that it brings the average below famously sprawling LA. Allowing more density in these neighborhoods would likely help reduce the cost in the core of the city. Some neighborhoods might remain expensive—if you’re competing with investment bankers who will pay any price to be in walking distance of Wall St, adding more housing in other boroughs or satellite communities won’t help with that. But it could make a dramatic difference on overall cost of living in NYC. It’s only expensive because way more people want to live in a relatively small urban core than can fit there.

      The same solutions can solve or greatly mitigate these problems in virtually every American city. This is because even large, older cities that predate the horrific car-centric development of the post-war era are surrounded by huge swathes of this type of development.

  • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Anybody claiming one general solution will fix every single grievance they have sounds a step away from buying essential oils.

    Don’t get me wrong, it will help, but no every pet problem will not be magically solved by waving hands and going “just do better urban panning, duh”

    Just don’t romanticize your proposed solution to a degree where you think you can slap it in and problems solve themselves.

    • spiderplant
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      I mean the overarching problem being talked about here is not having well planned cities (ie 15 min cities) that provide housing for everyone.

      The solution mentioned would absolutely solve or go a long way to solve all the problems mentioned in the meme.

      • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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        I don’t disagree that it would improve things. But don’t just expect something to fix all the problems magically, especially not when it’s basically waving your hands and going “just city plan better this time around.” It won’t be magical, 40 years down the line when this movement of new planning strategies is finally finished, it will already have been outdated for 35 years. These problems are hilariously complicated.

        • spiderplant
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          1 year ago

          Outdated? The things that people are now advocating for are things that used to be commonplace:

          • being close to shops, work, and third places
          • large areas of inner cities left for public parks
          • roads not yet dominated by cars
          • majority of people relying on decent affordable/free public transport or walking
          • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Sure. And now we clearly know that it would’ve been better to develop things that way in the first place; instead of rapid relatively unplanned sprawling residential. At the time these developments were being mostly planned, zoned, and legislated, that was seen as the right strategy.

            That’s literally my point. We don’t know everything, don’t expect magic fixes. This will be better, it will need improvements.

            • spiderplant
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              I mean without researching I know that Tolkien was pro-car and then flipped to really anti car early on (I think either 10s or 20s). There was no doubt others that saw that car infrastructure was bad for society. I think you can probly blame a really strong car lobby for how bad we ended up.

              Its’s also not that crazy to undo, look at the Netherlands. There is at least one example where they got rid of canals for motorways, realised it was terrible and put the canals back. Amsterdam also was a mess of roads and it only took 20 years to get to what it is today.

              • Umbrias@beehaw.org
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                Hindsight is 20/20 yadda yadda. It’s very easy to look back and see what the correct solution might’ve been (well, until you dig into it, normally, then it becomes much harder). It’s so so so much harder to have a solution in front of you and be justifiably confident you were on the right side of every issue for the rest of time, especially when it comes to engineering.

                We all wish we could wave a magic wand and fix every problem with all of our various solutions, but it’s simply unknowable and unfeasible.

                That point about the car lobby is one I see a lot. It’s of course true… But probably not in a way that makes it a boogeyman in the same way we’re aware of lobbying now. Let me put it this way, did automakers lobby hard for car centric transportation, downplaying downsides? Almost definitely. Did people generally feel cars may lead to greater social and economic prosperity than the alternatives? Yeah, probably so. There was push back, for sure, but there was pushback on the existence of electricity too. And what’s more, did we even have the modeling and research to be able to definitely say cars wouldn’t be worth their cost then? No we didn’t. We don’t even now, but on balance we have enough that people are generally favoring different urban panning priorities in certain spheres. We don’t even know that the science and engineering that went into vehicles wasn’t worth it. It’s unknowable.

                This is a long winded rant to say, we know better now, shame on us for not improving now, though we are. We will know even better in 20 years, 40 years, 100, shame on us then if we don’t improve then. But there are no magic bullets in life. We see one solution, but even what that solution looks like in the details can make or break it, and those details will need to be different for every community, both spatially and temporally. What we build now, even if it is a super perfect solution to everyone it effects, may not be right for people 50 years from now. Life is fundamentally chaotic and we can only ever hope to do the best we can with what we’ve got. And to that point, people are people, we will never be perfect, never be able to achieve even that temporarily perfect solution. There will be good and bad implementations, things won’t be implemented to anyone’s ideal, there will have to be compromises and time and knowledge constraints.

                No magic solutions.

                • spiderplant
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                  1 year ago

                  Hindsight is 20/20 does not make a good argument here. Cars are bad for people, we have the studies and the research.

                  • they kill a higher number of people than other modes of transport.
                  • on average car drivers are more unhealthy and die earlier than people who self propel/use public transport
                  • fumes and particles from cars lower the air quality in cities and are responsible for more deaths than just collisions
                  • even if you go full electric particles from the tyres released at speed are terrible for people
                  • car parking is a massive waste of land in city centres
                  • commerce benefits more from cycle infrastructure than car infrastructure because more people are likely to get off their bike to go in to a shop they didn’t intend to go to than car drivers who have to find a parking space

                  There are definitely more examples of why cars are bad in urban settings. Banning cars in city centres is the very easy solution that would make everyone’s lives in the cities better today. It’s also not a super crazy solution, cars didn’t always occupy space in cities.

                  Also car drivers are not the majority in cities or even some contries but somehow the whole population is beholden to them.

    • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, this is not a “slap it in” solution. If indeed it does solve all of these problems. Traffic is gonna get worse before it gets better if you take away roads and lanes. Culture has to shift and people have to leave their cars at home, or really affordable housing and good transit? Thats just gonna supply the outsized demand to move to California’s densest areas. So you’ll have the same problem, but with lots of new people who don’t experience it. Planning has to find people who will change their lives to make all of society better, too.

      • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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        1 year ago

        Traffic was pretty damn good during covid when everyone was working from home. We could go back to that for starters.

        • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago

          Forming the international pajama workers union. 😋
          You’re right this is probably the biggest wedge issue in transportation for regular joe.

  • PieMePlenty@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m not american and have never even been there but doesn’t New York city have the same problems? And AFAIK NYC is very vertical.

    • Marcbmann@lemmy.world
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      NYC doesn’t have as bad of a homeless issue as LA.

      But NYC is also an extremely expensive place to live, and built vertically due to a lack of space for outward expansion.

      • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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        Might also be good to point out that NYC has a lot more commercial office and high-end condo development than high-density housing.

        But that also has a lot to do with how expensive land is, which is mostly due to it being land-locked as mentioned.

      • Adramis@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        This is anecdotal from browsing vagabond sources, but there’s a lot of reasons NYC might have fewer homeless.

        A) The pigs and rules on the east coast are a lot more brutal towards the homeless than the west coast. This both leads to migration away from the east coast and for the homeless that are there to be much more invisible.

        B) The west coast has a history of being relatively welcoming to the houseless / a lot of lore built up around it, so people tend to gravitate towards it.

        C) The west coast has a much more survivable climate than the east coast - this is the reason I hear the most.

        • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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          1 year ago

          As a local, I’ll add what I think are more meaningful differences.

          First, most homeless people in CA are locals who were forced out, not interstate homeless migrants looking for a good place to be homeless.

          The main reason is that CA doesn’t have nearly as many temporary shelters for people to go to. And as you noted, it’s more survivable to live outdoors.

          Overall, NYC still has a pretty big population of folks in shelters, but CA has way more folks living in cars, trailers, and tents.

        • Marcbmann@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Hm, that article is putting LA at about 75k homeless.

          NYC also has more than twice the total population of LA. So homed to homeless ratio is a lot worse in LA

          • Knightfox@lemmy.one
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            1 year ago

            The article says that Los Angeles county has 75k and the city has 46k. As for population, NYC has a population of 8.8 million and LA city has a population of 3.8 million. This means that NYC has a homeless population percentage of 11.3% and LA has a homeless population percentage of 11.9%.

            It’s probably a bit of an apples and oranges comparison, NYC is split into the five boroughs each of which is its own county. Some of the boroughs seem to have radically different homeless situations, some being as low as 1000 homeless persons. LA (city) on the other hand is approximately 45% the population of NYC and doesn’t take up it’s entire county, but has nearly the same homeless rate.

            At the same time Los Angeles seems to run into other towns and be nearly seamless with them. Should Anaheim get lumped in with LA? If we’re counting those should we expand NYCs area to include Yonkers and Newark?

      • SokathHisEyesOpen@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        NYC doesn’t have as bad of a homeless issue as LA.

        Because you’ll literally die the very first winter night you’re homeless without shelter in NYC. They have a bunch of shelters, so the problem is less visible, and when they run out of space they bus them to L.A… Those that remain are found frozen to death in the morning.

        • Marcbmann@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          NYC also has a roughly equivalent homeless population to LA, but LA has less than half the population than NYC.

          Being a NYC native, I can agree that if the situation definitely is not visible. But considering the population differences, I’d say it’s not as bad in NYC.

    • frezik@midwest.social
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      In addition to the other replies, it can also matter where in NYC you’re talking about

      https://metropolismoving.com/blog/housing-costs-nyc/

      Bronx has a median rent to income ratio of 45%, while Manhattan is 30%. This is primarily due to the fact that median income for Manhattan renters is double what it is in the Bronx, but rent doesn’t scale up the same. Against my own expectation, this makes Manhattan a reasonable-ish place to live, at least if we’re just talking about rent and income.

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    The only thing I don’t see is how it would fix people being homeless. Many homeless are unable to be properly housed because they have mental illnesses, trauma, etc. If you put them in an apartment without extensive further help, many will get back on the street and/or destroy the apartment. You can’t solve their problems with just providing housing.

    • SinAdjetivos@beehaw.org
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      1. Shelter is critical to survival. The general rule of thumb places it as a higher priority than food or water. Arguing against people having access to reliable shelter, regardless the rational, is arguing for deliberately killing them.

      2. The “they’re defective and will destroy whatever they live. Don’t let them in!!!” is just calling them cockroaches in a different way. It’s fear mongering nonsense and there is no evidence to support that claim.

      3. You’re assuming correlation does not equal causation. It turns out being homeless, even for a relatively short period of time, is devastating to mental health and even if not the root cause (IE genetic predeposition, TBIs, etc.) it can strongly exasperate them and create some nasty co-morbidities.

      Being repeatedly assulted and or raided by police, neighborhood vigilantes and other desperate people is an extremely quick path towards PTSD/other general anxiety disorders. The aggressive de-humunization that occurs can be a potent factor in antisocial disorders. Direct health impacts like physical battery, hypo/hyperthermia, illness, etc. can cause more detect brain damage such as TBIs, etc. Schizophrenia is usually fairly treatable, schizophrenia with PTSD amplified paranoia much less so.

      • Knightfox@lemmy.one
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        I’d like to point out that the second item is pointless. You’re making an appeal to authority fallacy and referencing an article to support an opinion which doesn’t need the reference. The portion that needs a reference (if you’re gonna provide one) is the second part of the second point.

        Here is a link to the CAUF society in reasons why homeless people may refuse to go to shelters.

        I think that additional housing isn’t really a solution to homelessness unless you give them unmitigated access. Pretty much, “It’s free and you can do whatever you want.”

        The issue with homelessness isn’t available space, we have tons of open office space where they could stay at night. The problem is that these places have rules and restrictions (no alcohol, no pets, curfew, etc).

        For my own anecdote, there was a homeless guy who stayed by a gas station near my old apartment and I tried to check in on him from time to time and give him some money. He saved up his donations each day for a motel room and I asked him why he didn’t save his money and go to the shelter or share a room with someone else to save money? He stated that he didn’t like sharing a space with other people either in a shelter or as a roommate. The guy would rather sleep outside rather than share space.

        • SinAdjetivos@beehaw.org
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          The 2nd point is poorly worded, but the point wasn’t to appeal to any authority, but rather that I understand it can be a bit of jump to understand how the rhetoric being parroted by the parsnipwitch is harmful and was trying to provide further reading on that. You are correct in that was not well communicated… my bad…

          I can not prove a lack of evidence (proof of negative) which the original commenter agrees is true: https://feddit.de/comment/3535479

          I would argue that unmitigated access is the correct way to go and that all of the reasons people experiencing homelessness refuse shelter are perfectly valid, rational, and sane reasons. If you disagree I would encourage you to spend a couple nights in an overnight shelter and get your perspective after.

          Also, thank you for helping out gas station guy. I understand that wasn’t the point of your anecdote and it might have felt pointless, but the ability to have a door that locks probably meant the world to him.

          • Knightfox@lemmy.one
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            I certainly agree with the reasons why people don’t seek help, but it should be acknowledged that they are turning away assistance which makes it difficult to help them fix their problems. Some of these reasons to turn away help are also more addressable than others. If someone is just mentally impaired (mental illness or mentally handicapped) we can’t just force them to accept help.

            The guy at the gas station was a part of my community and people knew him well. He wasn’t a typical beggar and he was super honest. He would flat out tell you, “Hey I need some money for smokes or food.” I’d rather give money to him than the 2 guys who stand at the intersection with signs everyday.

            Unmitigated access probably would be the most successful solution, but if we follow the real world logical steps we also know that that wouldn’t work either. Whether in major high density apartments or in single family houses funding for these properties has to come from somewhere, likely the government. The government is never going to pass legislation which just gives out homes to the homeless, they probably wouldn’t even do it for low income workers who might be viewed as a better investment.

            If we imagined that the government would do such a thing there are problems like maintenance costs, de facto ghettos, de facto red lining, and social discrimination. Sure, the government could address these things as well, but if we have to move to theory just to reach this point we know that’s not going to happen. At a certain point the argument just moves to, “Well ________ country does xyz,” without addressing the social and political differences from wherever that place is. To make these things possible in this way would require a completely different government and thus a completely different social disposition.

            I’m all for social change and ending homelessness, but I think it’s a waste of time pretending that the unrealistic is a solution. Saying just build and give away homes to end homelessness without the social disposition for that to happen is as naive as the right saying to just build a wall to stop illegal immigration.

      • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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        This seems to be a general issue on Lemmy that people just love to put you into a group of people to start insulting them. You are so unhinged it’s unreal.

          • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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            No it is not. Tell me please where I said I was against giving people homes or that I was calling them cockroaches or similar.

            This is a typical issue on Lemmy that people are overly aggressive and want to hate and bully others for no reason whatsoever.

            I don’t know what kind of crazy that is, but you find it here a lot. It’s so extreme I start to think many here aren’t actually people but some type of enrage bot.

              • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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                The person alleged I said this:

                The “they’re defective and will destroy whatever they live. Don’t let them in!!!” is just calling them cockroaches in a different way.

                Not only did I not say this, I definitely am not calling homeless people cockroaches. The overall reaction to my post was hostile. What’s a better word to describe this behaviour on Lemmy in general? Because I see it happen quite regularly, not only to me, but others as well.

                • SinAdjetivos@beehaw.org
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                  The hostility wasn’t directed at you personally, it was directed at the specific brainworm of:

                  If you put them in an apartment without extensive further help, many will get back on the street and/or destroy the apartment.

                  What evidence do you have for that claim?

    • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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      Are you familiar with the “Housing first” model? It posits that even for people who need medical or living assistance, having shelter, a bed, a bathroom, a refrigerator, and a permanent address will allow them and whoever is providing support to deal with compounding factors and receive regular visits, Conversely, attempts to treat something like dementia or substance abuse on the street are next to impossible.

      • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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        Yes I know. And all housing projects I know about pre-select the people they give a home to, often only take in those who are already in the welfare system and all these projects offer extensive additional help.

        I feel like some people deliberately interpret stuff into my post just so that they can get angry (not you but, I got some really angry messages).

        So to make it extra clear: Giving people a home is great! There definitely should be a home for everyone, it’s a human right!

        But just giving people a home will not solve the problem with homeless! Putting people with severe mental illnesses, debt, etc. simply into a home does not work.

        • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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          If someone’s a jerk, don’t forget that there’s a “report” button for a reason.

      • Elivey@lemmy.world
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        A big issue with different social workers and such trying to reach and help homeless people is trying to find them. If they have a fixed address, you know where they will likely be. This makes services to take them to doctor appointments, get them welfare cheques, disability service notifications etc. all become reliable.

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        I don’t think it’s fair to paint homelessness as an urban planning issue just because housing is a part of the solution to both problems.

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      There’s multiple groups of homeless people.

      There’s the long term homeless, who often suffer from issues like mental illness, and short term homeless, who usually don’t.

      High housing prices absolutely causes people to become homeless when they lose their job, become addicted to drugs, etc.

      Being homeless is itself traumatic, and exacerbates most issues homeless people have. Affordable housing and giving homeless people an apartment aren’t a panacea, but it does prevent a ton of issues for newly homeless people.

      • Chr0nos1@lemmy.world
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        I don’t know if they’re included in the groups you mentioned, but there is also a vehicle dwelling homeless as well. Last I checked, there are over 3 million Americans living full time in a vehicle, whether it be a car, a bus, a van, an RV, or another type of vehicle. Some of them, it’s by choice, but for some of them, that’s all they can afford because housing prices have skyrocketed in so many places.

        • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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          when you said…

          The only thing I don’t see is how it would fix people being homeless.

          Many homeless are unable to be properly housed because they have mental illnesses, trauma, etc.

          If you put them in an apartment without extensive further help, many will get back on the street and/or destroy the apartment.

          You can’t solve their problems with just providing housing.

          That says to me, four times, that you are against giving people homes. Could you clarify how each of those points is a positive?

          • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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            Literally none of this says: don’t give people a home. My point is giving them a home is not enough, it won’t solve the problem.

            Is this a weird English language thing? Is this a Lemmy or an internet thing? People seem to deliberately put stuff into posts that aren’t said.

            It’s even in the text you quoted from me that my opinion is just giving them housing won’t solve the problem.

            How the fuck does that say “don’t give them a home”???

            • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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              I think the missing context is that when you write with majority negative phrasing, people assume your argument is against it.

              Consider: “You have to cover apples in sugar and put them in pastry, and then add custard to make me want to consider eating them!”

              This sounds like you hate apples, not that you like apple pie.

              • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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                I thought the situation was more like: “If you got apples you can make an apple pie”. And I was: “No, just apples make a bad pie, you also need the other ingredients”. And then people wrote: “How dare you hating apple pie!”

        • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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          not that I don’t believe you, but the reason I asked for studies/sources is I expect to be flooded with stories about how people knows someone who knows someone who knows someone where it didn’t work once or twice (respectfully, this is what your story boils down to), and I hope you won’t be insulted if I can’t consider that a good representation of a much-maligned part of society.

            • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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              the study you mentioned, but refused to link to, or quote, agrees with me and not yourself, I quote:

              a longitudinal study in London and three provincial English cities of resettlement outcomes over 18 months for 400 single homeless people. A high rate of tenancy sustain- ment was achieved: after 15/18 months, 78% were still in the original tenancy, 7% had moved to another tenancy, and 15% no longer had a tenancy. The use of temporary accommodation prior to being resettled and the duration of stay had a strong influence on tenancy sustainment. People who had been in hostels or temporary supported housing for more than 12 months immediately before being resettled, and those who had been in the last project more than six months, were more likely to have retained a tenancy than those who had had short stays and/or slept rough intermit- tently during the 12 months before resettlement. The findings are consistent with the proposition that the current policy priority in England for shorter stays in temporar y accommodation will lead to poorer resettlement outcomes, more returns to homelessness, and a net increase in expenditure on homelessness services.

                • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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                  you buried the “extensive further help” clause a little, and your use of “extensive” makes it sound onerous, which is why I responded assuming you were dead against it.

                  If you had said something like “While I agree housing can help, but there does need to be some support as well” - I probably would’ve taken it differently.

                  You are right that I could have been more generous in interpreting your use of the word “extensive” as negative.

      • Knightfox@lemmy.one
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        I think between their argument and your own, yours is the one in more need of citation. Which is more likely, that giving a house to everyone will solve homelessness or that some people have problems beyond just being homeless? He’s not saying that it wouldn’t help some people, he’s just saying that there would still be some number of people who need help beyond this.

      • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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        No, there aren’t statistics about these people. Just experiences and the experiences of others who work with them.

        Many homeless people refuse to take up help like housing because they do not want to cooperate with helper organisations. And they also don’t want to get interviewed: https://idw-online.de/de/news765112

        We don’t even really know how many there are because there are no reliable statistics. How would you count them anyway?

        All housing first projects pre-select the people they give a home to. The reason is clear. They don’t have homes for everyone, so they take those which will give the best results. In Berlin, Germany they literally have to write applications for the project: https://www.berlin.de/sen/soziales/besondere-lebenssituationen/wohnungslose/wohnen/housing-first-1293115.php

        https://housingfirst.berlin/aufnahme

        And they need to already be in the welfare system!

        The same goes for Finland, which is the model country for a housing first approach. Putting people who already are in the welfare system in homes with help offers has the best results. https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscpe/vol22num2/ch4.pdf

        Best results means it works for about half of homeless people.

        For the other half, they need a step-by-step approach to have them able living in a home again (or for the first time in a long time). You can’t just put them in an apartment with an address for counseling and that will work out.

        Source: you can read about that in the PDF above, for example. Or any other study about the homeless which usually mentions at least the many who fall through the cracks.

        These are migrants without refugee status and people with severe drug and alcohol abuse issues or other mental illness. It won’t work to “put them out of sight out of mind”.

        Homeless people aren’t a homogeneous group of people. And while it works for some, housing first is not the solution. Because it leaves an estimated half of them behind. It also omits that there a still a lot of help going on in the background. It’s not just give them a home and that magically solves all their problems. Far from it …

        • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          Even if it has issues, housing first solves far more problems than any other solution. If you are so opposed to housing first initiatives, then propose an alternative solution that will work better.

          I’m waiting.

          You can’t.

          • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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            Why do you think I am against housing first? I never said that I am against that. I said it does not solve homelessness. You need additional systems in place to solve it.

        • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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          I’m on mobile and can’t read German, I’ll have to wait until later to run those articles through a translator to see what they’re getting at.

          But I do wonder about you saying we can only halve homelessness instantly, and the next quarter needs some help, and the next 10% needs a lot of help and after that things get more diffocult: that means it doesn’t work and isn’t worth trying at all

          Wouldn’t halving homelessness be pretty damn successful?

          • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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            Of course it is great but it won’t solve homelessness. Which is what the image suggests. And obviously it doesn’t.

            • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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              What’s your tolerance threshold for a solution? One source I quoted elsewhere said it would solve up to 75% of homelessness.

              People are allergic or immune to penicillin, that doesn’t mean that its not a solution to bacterial infections.

              • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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                If someone said “Penicillin solves bacterial infections” I would also say this is not true. There are bacterial infections which can’t be cured by penicillin and some people can’t take it at all.

    • Elivey@lemmy.world
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      You can’t solve all their problems with just providing housing, but it would some.

      One thing I think people fail to see often when considering programs like this is the generational effect. A program to provide people housing might be considered a failure to some people because many may still choose to do drugs, will ruin their apartment, be violent to their neighbors, etc., some honestly valid concerns. But consider the shockwave 60 years down the line, for the next generations.

      Homelessness and drug abuse are generational. Think of a person who would have been homeless who has a child. Was mentally ill and didn’t take very good of the apartment, but not enough to not raise the child. Despite this, that child now has astronomically better chances at a decent life than if they had been raised on the streets or put into foster care just because they had housing and stability

      You continue generation after generation, and though many people will be considered “failures” of programs like this, the rate of them continues to decrease because the success stories are now out of the system, out of the cycle.

      The problem is half measures, which is what we have today. Bandaid fixes that don’t get to the root of the issues homeless people deal with, keeping them in the cycle but doing… Something? So they can say look we care…

      • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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        No, you need to provide additional help to keep homeless people off the street. I only have experience with homeless in Germany, though. The reasons for homelessness can be different depending on the country.

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    I don’t understand how the high density housing solves traffic. In lieu of an additional solution (public transit) I think it would make traffic worse.

    Edit

    The argument seems to be: high density housing would naturally result in public transit infrastructure. I don’t think that line of reasoning makes sense, it’s certainly not an obvious inevitability that public transit will always, naturally appear.

    • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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      With density and admitily mixed development, it is pretty simple to live within walking distance of everything around you. A car just needs much more space then a pedestrian and you do not park your body at the site of the street. Other then that the key to good public transport is high frequency. So for a transit connection the more people want to travel the route, the more high frequency makes sense.

      • Jesus_666@feddit.de
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        Public transit works perfectly fine in a low-density situation. Your urban planning needs to accommodate it, though, with walkability being a prime concern.

        A car-centric city will never mesh well with public transit no matter how dense it is. The best you can hope for is good subway coverage but that’s expensive and can’t be done everywhere. Nobody wants to take the bus if they feel they have no safe route to the bus stop.

        But if everything is opened up with proper sidewalks and bike lanes and maybe tram tracks, if street lights prioritize pedestrians over cars, if walking to the nearest convenient stop feels safe and effortless even if it’s two miles away – then you get public transit that actually works.

        It’s not terribly difficult. But your urban planning can’t be car-centric or you’re getting nowhere.

        • WalrusDragonOnABike@lemmy.world
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          I think when a lot of people say high density, they don’t mean 100floor residential buildings are all the housing, but tend to think of something more akin to densely packed midrise buildings and green spaces. If you have the later, there simply is not space for cars and high density. Large universities come to mind, where there may be 50k people using 1-2sq mile while 5+ story buildings are rare. You would have to walk a mile or two to get to a car to drive 6 miles around to the other side of campus at 5mph to walk a mile or two to get to you class 1000ft away from your starting point if they were car centric.

          You don’t even need public transit at that level of density but it’s an option.

        • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          I agree with everything except your first point. It doesn’t work at all in a low density setting, to the point that low density areas are always subsidized by high density areas. Low density needs to start paying their taxes and stop relying on the urban centers to build their infrastructure.

    • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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      You can’t have efficient public transport with low density housing. Also high density housing makes it easier to have things like supermarkets within walking distance of everyone.

    • Rinox@feddit.it
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      It doesn’t solve it, but I can see how it would help to solve it. If everyone lives in super low density suburban neighborhoods, public transportation doesn’t make any sense. You can’t build a train station that would realistically serve a dozen people tops.

      Higher density makes public transportation a viable option, which in turn reduces traffic and pollution.

      Also high density mixed used means you don’t need the car every time you need to go grocery shopping, or to a bar or even to a park. You can go by foot

      • Kiosade@lemmy.ca
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        How do you get all your groceries on foot? Do people buy personal handcarts or something? I live in a 1 BR apartment and I just would not have space for something like that.

        • Rinox@feddit.it
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          Well, it depends. Where I live I have a grocery store like 100m from home, and I go by foot there. One or two bags (the reusable kind that don’t melt away) and you just go, get what you need, go back home. Nothing special. I’ve also seen older people use like a mini trolley thingy with a bag attached in order to bring home the groceries. When you get home it folds and you can just put it behind a door or something.

          In Holland I’ve heard they also really like cargo bikes, but where I live there’s not enough bike infrastructure for that. I don’t live in a big city center like Paris or Milan btw, but in a medium density city on the outskirts, so I can also use a car and often do, especially if I need to buy lots of stuff. But if I just need a couple things, going by foot is way easier and faster.

        • Moneo@lemmy.world
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          Simple, you don’t buy a carts worth of groceries at a time. When you can walk to the grocery store in 5 mins it’s easy to go twice a week or more. Hell, I went to the grocery store 3 times in a half hour because I kept forgetting stuff for a recipe I was making.

          Also there are plenty of foldable carts that could fit under a bed or in a closet.

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      If you can walk/bike to your job without the threat of being run over, you are one less car on the road.

      Thihk of it in levels:

      1. People will skip work-commuting by car (including students) when there are other viable options that are not made life-threatening by other people in cars. Fewer trips= less traffic

      2. People will avoid driving for errands when there is decent local public transit that lets them shop where they want. Even fewer trips = even less traffic

      3. People will stop owning cars when there is decent local public transit and decent regional networks. Fewer cars = less traffic

    • Mog_fanatic@lemmy.world
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      Same with homelessness. The last city I lived in offered free housing with 3 meals a day for the homeless, as in they got their own little tiny house basically that was actually kinda nice. But tons of homeless weren’t interested. They just stayed on the street. I’m curious how just making dense apartment style buildings would just fix the problem.

      • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Often, those programs failing is because of having strings attached that people don’t like.

        However, ask yourself this: why do people become homeless in the first place? Does it have anything to do with the price of housing?

        • Moneo@lemmy.world
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          Similarly I’ve heard they are not always nice/safe places to stay and belongings are often stolen.

        • Mog_fanatic@lemmy.world
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          I’m not sure about the extra strings attached on that program but you’re probably right, there was probably something in there that was deterring some of them. It was still surprising to me to see so much disinterest in the program.

          As for why there are homeless… in my experience, no it’s usually not the price of housing. It usually has to do with drugs or mental illness. Now i’m absolutely no expert so the price of housing may be the main reason by a long shot but in my limited experience with people i’ve known and met that were homeless (which is admittedly and obviously a tiny number compared to all the homeless in this country), the large majority of them were put in that situation cause they were super addicted to drugs so that’s where all the money went and they couldn’t hold a job, or they had big time mental issues.

          • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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            Given the same drug addiction, are you equally likely to become homeless somewhere with really cheap housing vs somewhere with really expensive housing?

            • Mog_fanatic@lemmy.world
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              I would imagine less expensive obviously. But I would have also thought the same if the housing was free and that wasn’t the case! lol

              • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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                Housing price is highly correlated with homelessness. In fact, homelessness rates across geographic areas are much more closely correlated to local housing costs than to local substance abuse rates, mental health problem rates, poverty rates, social safety nets, etc.

                Whereas if you were right, you’d expect homeless rates to correlate better with local substance abuse rates.

                Which is to say: if you ask yourself why one person in San Francisco is homeless and another isn’t, the answer is probably losing a job or drug abuse. If you ask yourself why someone in SF is homeless but someone in Huntington West Virginia isn’t, the better answer is access to cheap housing in WV.

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    That could alleviate those problems, but I doubt it’d actually solve them. Not to mention, they could also get worse:

    • Cost of living -> Could actually be driven up. Stuff always tends to be more expensive in dense metropolitan areas. Big corpos and rich assholes would buy up as much real state as possible.
    • Traffic -> Without public transportation, this can actually get worse. The distances might be smaller, but the amount of people wanting to get there increases.
    • Homelessness -> directly related to cost of living. Having lots of places to live in that you simply cannot afford will force you to live elsewhere
    • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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      Cost of living is tied to supply and demand, more than anything else. When supply is constrained, prices tend to rise.

      People often want to have short commutes and to live in walkable areas.

      However, most cities in the US and Canada have huge swaths of their metro area zoned exclusively for low density single family housing. Upzoning neighborhoods on the edges of cities is politically difficult.

      Cities like NY become expensive because people want to move there, but it’s really difficult to add a lot of net-new walkable, transit accessible housing due to zoning, permitting, etc.

      If we build a lot of net-new housing, prices will fall.

      As for traffic, one of the benefits of mixed use development is being able to walk 5 min to buy groceries, eat at a restaurant or go to a pub. Being able to do many daily chores on foot or bike decreases the number of times you need to either drive or take transit.

      • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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        However, most cities in the US and Canada have huge swaths of their metro area zoned exclusively for low density single family housing. Upzoning neighborhoods on the edges of cities is politically difficult. If we build a lot of net-new housing, prices will fall.

        Also @spiderplant@lemm.ee

        This is a “your mileage may vary” case that definitely depends on where you live. Demand can always be artificially inflated

        I live within 10km of a very densely populated city (Brazil), zero houses and hundreds of 12+ stories residential apartments. Problem is, the vast majority of apartments are high value. They’re also in a very desirable area, so the price of a 24 m² apartment is usually the same of a 140 m² house in a less desirable place within 15km

        What about moving within said city? There’s plenty of stuff within walking distance, which is great, but the majority of people that do live there work in a different city. Also, most people that work there come from other cities. Since the only “real” public transport is a nearly straight line of metro, traffic is an absolute mess most of the day. I strongly suspect that the original planning wasn’t for such high density, especially when you account for the ridiculously low number of bus lines from there to anywhere and back, but I’d need to do proper research to assert for sure.

        • spiderplant
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          Ooh my first mention!

          I’m not familiar with Brazil’s housing situation specifically but building more affordable homes and increasing social housing stock would increase the supply and reduce prices.

          Definitely feel you on the lack of jobs locally. Its going to take provincial or national planning and investment to fix.

          Sounds like a major enough city, I think most major European cities with subways usually have multiple crossing lines and a decent bus network to fill the gaps. Interestingly I don’t even think that’s the weirdest metro layout, personally I have to give it to Glasgow. They have a single subway loop that runs 2 directions and its the 3rd oldest underground rail transit system but it hasn’t had the route changed or expanded in 125 years. They do have an advantage of having a decent bus system though.

    • WalrusDragonOnABike@lemmy.world
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      For the cost of living thing, ideally you just implement similar good urban planning across the country. The reason some places are so expensive is because they have relatively livable cities compared to most of the country, so people want to move their. If you just improve the cities in places people already want to be for some reason or another, then you’ll just get more people across the country interested in being there unless they have similar options near them. Guess you could alternatively make enough housing for like 50 million people in that one city. Technically, there’s always the excuse of “you just didn’t build enough”. Not sure how the cost per housing unit gets for super structures, particularly since the cost of them includes infrastructure costs we don’t usually value into the cost of the home (pipes, roads, etc) and commercial spaces + residential which would make a small city with huge population possible.

    • spiderplant
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      • cost of living - can be solved if its social housing provided by the government and/or assigned by need and/or there is a restriction that the properties can only be owned by individuals.
      • traffic - if everything is a walkable or cycleable distance traffic should be alright even with poor public transport. Although if we are trying to right the wrongs of bad urban planning you’d like to think public transport, green spaces, utilities and amenities would be well planned out in this scenario.
      • homelessness - homelessness is not directly related to cost of living, its more related to lack of a social safety net and social services. The cost of living rising just exacerbates the issue.
    • wanderingmagus
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      The problem is corporations, and lack of regulation and social services.

  • netwren@lemmy.world
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    Look. Clearly I need some education in this area. Why didn’t the “projects” in the 80’s and 90’s effectively provide these benefits?

    • Cosmonauticus@lemmy.world
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      Because they were inadequately funded, regulated to low income areas with no jobs and shit schools. They we’re just a glorified hole to stick brown ppl

      • TheMauveAvenger@lemmy.world
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        Unlike this new “grassroots” push for dense, mixed use housing, which will end up as a glorified hole to stick poor people of all ethnicities.

        • bassomitron@lemmy.world
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          Have you ever been to other major, population dense cities around the world? Like, Tokyo, Kolkata, Paris or, hell, even NYC? They all have dense housing areas and urban planning. It’s very possible to create dense urban design without it becoming a shit hole.

          • Jesus_666@feddit.de
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            It’s important to reconsider other aspects of urban design as well, though. “lol, just add more people” won’t work any better than “lol, just add more cars” did if taken in isolation.

            Walkability, public transit, green spaces, close-proximity shopping and services, and so on all need to be considered. Otherwise you end up with exactly what already doesn’t work but now with more people.

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            Yeah I lived in NYC for years. It’s a complete shithole urban nightmare with no space, no privacy, no quiet, and no way out. It’s filthy, decaying, and it smells bad. Density is the problem, not the solution.

              • rexxit@lemmy.world
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                NYC has more resources to function than just about anywhere. High tax, both state and city, combined with a massive number of taxpayers. Extremely high road and bridge tolls. Best-case, near-universal ridership of the long-established public transit (and significant rider fees). Very small land area over which to spread its city income.

                If they can’t maintain a clean and tidy city with the resources they have, the taxation and manpower required is probably not achievable.

                I think that unless you have a non-American (e.g. Japanese) community caretaking ethic that comes with other baggage (and can’t easily be recreated in American culture), the residents will wear it down and trash it faster than it can be fixed. If you put 10m rats in a proportional land area, they’d kill each other - I don’t know why we think it’s healthy for human habitation to exist at that level

        • peregrine_falcon@lemmy.world
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          Who would be doing the sticking, and why would they do it? There’s plenty of demand for dense, mixed-use housing - I don’t think anyone’s going to be made to move in.

        • Gabu@lemmy.world
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          Have you ever seen a city outside the US? I live in São Paulo - you can literally walk for two minutes (no hyperbole) and go from a rich (as in LOADED) neighborhood to a lower-middle class one.

          • Mog_fanatic@lemmy.world
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            This is absolutely in the US too. I’ve lived in multiple different cities where gigantic mansions with in ground pools and tennis courts and two Maseratis in the garage are like 2 blocks from busted ass poor neighborhoods

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      I saw a video that they intentionally made the projects bad to try to “incentivize” people to get out of them. The whole stupid pull yourself up by your bootstraps.

      It also centralizes the problem, which intensifies it. What you need is communities of mixed income, which has effects on schools, hospitals, stores nearby, etc.

      • netwren@lemmy.world
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        I think others provided the type of context I was looking for but when I think dense living I think of the dense high rise projects that were built to provide low cost, section8 housing that theoretically were supposed to provide benefits to poor folks that I assume would also include the benefits discussed in your meme. However they were notoriously dangerous and had a myriad of problems that made them far worse and extremely dangerous for residents.

        • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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          I’m a big fan of trying more than one thing at once, so even though I think it’s possible to learn lessons from effective public housing projects in Europe, I also think that we can achieve a lot through the private market. In CA, there are a lot of zoning barriers to building this kind of stuff. Even without government assistance, we can get some of this just by removing prohibitions on building this in a lot of areas.

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    I don’t like the idea that the colonisers took the land at the barrel of a gun (inc in England with the Enclosure Acts) and we’re demanding…a shell in return.

    Well designed, small, community living based on the ideas of the Commons would be just as effective as all of the above without forcing us to live on top of each other having zero connection to the land effectively in dog kennels or shipping containers.

    Connect to the local; don’t create ant nests.

    • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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      I don’t think it’s a choice between one and the other.

      First, the goal isn’t to make an endless sea of identical skyscrapers. It’s to make a blend of large and medium ones with rowhouses and duplexes mixed in, and then use the space that creates to make big, expansive parks and natural spaces for everyone. And if you want to start a commune, now there is a lot more space for communal, rustic living much closer to major cultural and transit hubs.

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        So like London…where I’m from…where those two articles describing the urban hellscape are located…

        All that happens is people get stuffed into smaller and smaller locations.

    • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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      Well unless you’re a First Nations or American Indian tribe member you don’t have any more claim to the land than the Europeans who stole it from them.

      • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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        Hold up a sec: I think this sometimes gets overlooked, but a right to occupancy has to recognize being born somewhere or growing up there as an entitlement to continued residence.

        None of us have control over how our parents brought us into a specific location, or what atrocities our forebears committed. And every child has a right not to be deported, full stop.

  • Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz
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    Anytime you have people living in dense, highly populated areas it will make nearby land a premium. High demand for land (and the resulting high prices) will result in high rent and high cost of living.

    I’m not really sure how to fix this. You could have some government managed system for what businesses get the high demand land, but that will result in less popular stores being in the best locations and greatly incentivize corruption as businesses want highly profitable locations that can only be granted by politicians.

    • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      To fix this that kind of development has to be far more normalized. A big part that drives up those land values is because that style of development is both rare and desirable. If it becomes desirable, common,and meets housing/commercial needs, the market will become more competitively priced.

      • rexxit@lemmy.world
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        Japan has declining population, unlike basically every county in the world.

          • rexxit@lemmy.world
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            20 years ago, Japan’s population was basically flat. It has the same population today as it did in 1995, having gone up and then down by only a couple million people in between.

            Land prices in the US were also low 20 years ago, before we added another 45 million people to the demand side of the equation.

            • Gabu@lemmy.world
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              You can’t just take the average value for a variable and assume it’s representative of all values at all times. If you take two cities, one with 100 people and another with 900, the average population is 500, but that doesn’t mean half of the people live in each city.

              • rexxit@lemmy.world
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                Yeah I made an error there. I wasn’t looking specifically at Tokyo population for some reason.

    • Gabu@lemmy.world
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      Actually, at some point the graph flips around. If everywhere is fairly dense, less dense areas go for a premium (rich people hate living near poor people).

      • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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        But you can’t make Everywhere dense in the USA - have you looked at the size of the land? It’s huge and mostly uninhabited

        • Gabu@lemmy.world
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          Considering the price of home ownership near city centers, I’ll call bullshit on that one.

          • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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            Haha what? Please explain exactly what is “bullshit” about any of that.

            “considering the price of home ownership near city centers” - yes those homes are very expensive and overpriced

            What does that have to do with the massive square mileage of the USA and how most of it is uninhabited? Do you think that there is any possible way to turn all of that massive land area into a dense urban environment?

            • Gabu@lemmy.world
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              Are you seriously this slow? What makes you think that every cm² needs to be paved and covered in concrete? Here’s a little non-secret for you: most land of most countries is inhabited.

              • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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                No I think it is you who are slow to understand what the conversation is even about. I responded to your comment, “If everywhere is fairly dense, less dense areas go for a premium” by saying that you can’t make Everywhere dense.

                You can’t make Everywhere dense in the USA because there are 3.7 million square miles of land that make up the USA. Much of that land does not have humans occupying it. The cities where most of the population stays take up only a small fraction of those millions of square miles.

                https://bigthink.com/strange-maps/nobody-lives-here-mapping-emptiness-in-the-us-and-beyond/

                • Gabu@lemmy.world
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                  Congratulations on confirming you are extremely slow. Again, why the fuck do you think anyone should build densely in the middle of the Mojave, instead of simply doing so in cities - where people actually want to live?

    • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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      I have a lot of suggestions, but one that I think you’d find particularly interesting is land tax rates.

      This video is 46 minutes, but it’s the mayor of Detroit explaining why low taxes on land incentivize blight and abandonment instead of productive use.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A_Z96gZxIM