• Sentrovasi@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    I’m not sure if we’re reading the same article or some parts didn’t load for you, but it seems full of whys:

    Why the supermarkets left at the start
    Why it’s harder for them to come back
    Why certain urban areas have made it more difficult for them to come back (things like zoning)
    Why supermarkets themselves may not want to come back (interview with rep and speculation on violence)

    Do these not help answer the question?

    • EndOfLine
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      8 months ago

      I get that it started 60 years ago with white flight and was exasperated 40 years ago with the consolidation of major changes, but why has their been no progress in correcting this? Why are zoning laws not being updated? Why do grocery store chains think inner cities are riskier? Why are new stores, like the referenced Whole Foods, not lasting? Why the focus on supermarkets instead of smaller neighborhood grocery stores that don’t have the same logistic issues?

      Those questions are not directed at you. They are more a representation my disappointment and disillusionment. Thank you for the reply.

      I guess that I was hoping that there would be more current information and not just an article about how nobody cares so nothing has been done in more than half a century.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Whole Foods? In a low income area? I’m not questioning why they left but rather why they thought they’d get business in the first place.

      • Sentrovasi@kbin.social
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        7 months ago

        Some of those are answered. Some of those are also answered in the piece they linked that talks about the zoning issues. And some of those don’t have an answer beyond the obvious. I think the root of your unhappiness may lie with the few points that fit into that last category, but that’s hardly the fault of an article that I wouldn’t consider clickbait.