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Originally Posted by Jdawgboy
Downtown is the heart of this city. It is the gathering place for residents to do everything from going to music shows to parades, to street festivals. It accounts for 80% of all the city's revenue and that's saying something.
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Holy moly, that't astonishing! What are the boundaries of downtown for purposes of determining that stat? Wow, I would have guessed it generated less than half that! Austin is a sprawling, low-density city by population measures, and I had assumed that economic activity was similarly distributed.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jdawgboy
You know what I just don't get. Many Austinites take pride in their progressive values but how is not accepting or denying change in a rapidly growing city progressive? To be progressive means to be open and embracing of change, not to shun it.
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Amen to that. It makes sense to apply liberal/progressive principles to the process of change so as to direct it in a way that doesn't undermine liberal values, but the kind of reactionary "all change is bad" attitude that is apparent throughout humanity around the world doesn't seem very "liberal" and certainly can't be considered "progressive."
My least favorite form of obstructionism is the human instinct to honor the past through preservation in perpetuity. It might seem silly to think about this, but just imagine cemeteries, burial grounds, and other memorials being preserved forever. How many millennia would it take before we'd all be forced to live on boats or under water because every square inch of land is occupied by some form of tribute to the dead? And yet this is how we behave, and we do it without questioning! Add to this all the historical monuments and landmarks, and all the structures that cannot be touched out of respect for history, and it becomes obviously absurd. Yes, we want to preserve as much of history as is significant, worthwhile, and practical, but all too often the instinct to honor the past is used as a justification for blocking progress that is unwanted by a certain vocal faction.
I might get my ass kicked for suggesting this example, but I was personally stunned by arguments that the Lamar bridge over Town Lake is "historical" and therefore shouldn't be replaced or changed. WT actual F. Call me a philistine, but to me that is a very unremarkable and badly-designed bridge which fails every test of functionality and safety for the various modes of transportation that utilize it. And if that doesn't make you want to kick my ass, then wait until you hear my opinion about those stupid ugly moon towers...
--- edit: oops, I just realized this is the Waller Park Place thread, so if this comment is too far off topic then good riddance to it.