Quote:
Originally Posted by Tboo
I understand that more development is the answer, that supply and demand are real things, but my original point was that the planning process should include the people and help to meet the needs of the people rather than pushing them out. I just think it's unconscionable to drop a plan on a neighborhood without consulting those people.
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Yeah, but people are stupid. They do not understand or accept that more development is a solution, rather than the problem. So that involvement you seek turns into a forum for anti-growth NIMBY sentiment. Also, people are selfish. So for every one person you claim is worried about the loss of their neighborhood, they have two neighbors who are thrilled to death to be able to sell out at a ginormous profit. Which also creates perverse incentives - by opposing growth, they can increase their own property values until they sell (for 30 seconds of their lives, at the closing table, they are pro-development). So the result is two camps of people - one stupid and naive, the other selfish, but BOTH opposed to development.