Where you live is a compromise. I want to have 100 square miles all my own, with my front door on Time’s square. (I’m using times square as a proxy for a desirable place to live, but since I’ve never been there I don’t know if that is actually where I’d want to live) That isn’t possible, but it is what I want. Sometimes I want to live on Broadway so those famous shows are easy to get to. Sometimes I want to live where I can safely shoot a gun off my back deck. When I feel like seeing people I want to live where there are a lot of people, when I feel like being alone I want to be far from civilization - yet I still want electric service. Everyone has forms of the above. suburbs are one compromise answer.
That’s the neat part: I don’t really ever want to be around people. Yes, theaters and museums and clubs are nice, but there’s still too goddamn many people and it stops being appealing when I realize I’ve got to deal with a bunch of psychotic apes.
I’ll drag the solar panels out to the boonies myself if want electricity. I just do not want to be around people. If they’re half as awful as I am they’re not worth it.
I was going to reply with my usual pro city stuff but then I recognized your name and realized we’d already had the whole conversation. So, uh, hello again. Hope you’re making progress on your mountain home dreams.
Kowloon city was crazy dense because it was a tiny tract of disputed land in an otherwise regulated urban area. An ancient city is actually a much more typical example, and yeah, I choose that. I’ll just get some noseplugs, avoid the most flammable areas, and wash my hands a lot.
And, funny enough, tent cities are super against zoning and other regulation. Homeless people are supposed to leave at all times, wherever they happen to be, while being complained about.
Outcome of too much zoning regulation is tent cities.
Outcome of zero zoning regulation is Kowloon Walled City.
I’ll take Kowloon any day of the week.
That many people that close together is my idea of hell, but you do you
Over a tent city? Keep in mind I live in Canada. Tent city in Canadian winter might or might not be Hell, but it’s a good way to get there.
I’d rather freeze to death in a tent than live near that many people.
The suburbs are too dense for me.
Where you live is a compromise. I want to have 100 square miles all my own, with my front door on Time’s square. (I’m using times square as a proxy for a desirable place to live, but since I’ve never been there I don’t know if that is actually where I’d want to live) That isn’t possible, but it is what I want. Sometimes I want to live on Broadway so those famous shows are easy to get to. Sometimes I want to live where I can safely shoot a gun off my back deck. When I feel like seeing people I want to live where there are a lot of people, when I feel like being alone I want to be far from civilization - yet I still want electric service. Everyone has forms of the above. suburbs are one compromise answer.
That’s the neat part: I don’t really ever want to be around people. Yes, theaters and museums and clubs are nice, but there’s still too goddamn many people and it stops being appealing when I realize I’ve got to deal with a bunch of psychotic apes.
I’ll drag the solar panels out to the boonies myself if want electricity. I just do not want to be around people. If they’re half as awful as I am they’re not worth it.
I was going to reply with my usual pro city stuff but then I recognized your name and realized we’d already had the whole conversation. So, uh, hello again. Hope you’re making progress on your mountain home dreams.
Kowloon city was crazy dense because it was a tiny tract of disputed land in an otherwise regulated urban area. An ancient city is actually a much more typical example, and yeah, I choose that. I’ll just get some noseplugs, avoid the most flammable areas, and wash my hands a lot.
And, funny enough, tent cities are super against zoning and other regulation. Homeless people are supposed to leave at all times, wherever they happen to be, while being complained about.