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Impossible Santa Wife's avatar

Re Tim Redmond: I am pretty sure he’s the guy who wrote an article in the SF Bay Guardian during the dot-com boom, saying something to the effect of “please do not build more housing, as it will encourage more people to move here, and we can never ever build enough housing to satisfy demand. Therefore we must try to keep people from moving here.” (It’s been decades and my memory is probably faulty, but that is what I remember.)

It’s a truly galaxy brained take, yes, but I’ve seen it from liberal NIMBYs everywhere. Basically, “Where’s my Hukou Policy? People need to learn to bloom where they are planted, and stop moving to [city name]!” Ironically, many of them were newcomers once, but I guess…one of the good ones?

Having briefly lived in Berkeley lo these many decades ago, and in San Francisco for far longer than that, I can absolutely attest that there has been a homeless problem and discussions about it beginning in the 80’s. NIMBYs almost always have to say something along the lines of “It’s Reagan’s fault for closing mental institutions, which is why we have a homeless issue.” Never mind that deinstitutionalization started as a humanitarian movement to free people from “snake pits” on the Left, and that the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act was the work of Democrats.

I also heard that the homeless are but free spirits who *want* to sleep under the open sky. Yes, I know there are a few to whom this applies, but the vast majority of homeless people do want some sort of shelter. That, or “blah blah other states bus their homeless here,” but that’s not really true. Yes, it’s easier to be homeless in the Bay Area compared to, say, Arizona or Minnesota, but the vast majority of unhoused people lived in the state before they lost their housing.

Liberal NIMBYs are just going to have to deal with more housing being built, and their dear little quirky quaint enclaves changing. Which to me sounds a lot more like conservatism. Places change; that’s the nature of cities and towns. It’s not the 70’s anymore, your precious quirky college town IS going to change, just like you’re not driving around in your Chrysler Cordoba with its fine Corinthian leather in the 2020’s.

I’m glad the YIMBYs are winning. “What if that older homeless person is me one day” is not really a groundless fear.

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Jake Dennie🔸️'s avatar

>"but don’t want to admit it because a developer might make money or capitalism won’t be abolished."

Great line, really gets at the heart of much of the issue, in addition to the mentioned not wanting the local area to change.

1. Zero-sum thinking has taken off amoung progressives, leading many to assume that hurting capitalists means helping the poor and that capitalist profits must come at the expense of the poor.

2. The more radical progressives engage in a "shoot the moon" strategy of revolution or bust, so they fight incremental improvements that make capitalism more palatable

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