No, it's people responding to people's desires for places to live. It's not the urban planners who oppose smart growth and more housing. |
Not unhinged. Yes it was over the top but the point is, you are focusing on the government when many more people do not work for the government and all cities are growing at the expense of the countryside. |
| Someone convince my wife that living in an exurban SFH (that we can afford) with two vehicles is not a requirement for happiness, then. I’ll be waiting. |
| Endless growth isn't good, it's a scam; it's overpopulation, traffic, crime, litter, disease, stress, unhappiness. Growth = good is banker propaganda, period. |
+ pollution* |
Often times, but that is not how the Trump Administration is doing it, so we will just have more giant single family homes taking over farmland. |
+1 million |
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People are going to keep having kids. They're going to need somewhere to live.
Either dense up the urban areas or destroy more natural areas with continued sprawl. Tree killing NIMBYs in the inner core have destroyed thousands of acres of countryside by refusing to build atop of metro stations and enhance more urban options for living. Sprawl stretches farther and farther adding to a lifestyle dependent on cars and traffic, which makes everything worse. Downtown Bethesda needs to look more like Roslyn than it does Potomac. |
As measured by GDP growth. Which by the way can't keep growing forever because eventually our country will be full. How about using GDP per capita as a measure of our success. |
Except that it is a Ponzi scheme. New residents cost more in infrastructure than they provide in tax revenue. Businesses maybe, but here in MoCo, we don't do business. |
Your point is a bit muddled but it costs Montgomery County much less to accommodate new growth down county than up county where you need new roads, utilities, services etc. Yes you need to increase school capacity in both places but everything else is much less expensive to do in existing transit anchored communities - even fire and EMS services are less expensive in denser neighborhoods because those services are largely a function of geographic coverage and not population density. And there are local and global benefits to preserving open space up county and not much downside to converting surface parking lots to higher density uses. Unless you are a zero population zealot you need to have a feasible plan for accommodating population growth - and most countries with shrinking populations are headed for demographic and fiscal disasters. |
That is propaganda. Japan, for example, is not headed for fiscal disaster. |
Tell that to the Japanese government. They're very worried. |
| This is insane. The population of all counties surrounding DC are growing. Do you want them closer in or driving an hour? It’s naive to think your “large mature trees” are environmentally valuable compared to plowing under forests up county. |
First your sentence is a run on and didn't make much sense. And second sorry pp but, the roads are for everyone. Just because more people in Bethesda are lawyers and got the special signs that limit others from driving through doesn't make it right. People in Montgomery county pay for your road just as you pay for the roads in Silver Spring ( where I live) Stop thinking of them as "your" roads. |