How friggin' disingenuous. It's literally in the posts before. |
I think if they’d just done duplexes there wouldn’t have even been a lawsuit. But the six-plexes approved for 5000 sqft lots was pure stupidity. That means no dedicated space for parking and who wants a dumpster next door when you didn’t buy in an area that ever had dumpsters before or where you suddenly have to fight for street parking? Of course it ended this way. Better to refocus energy on changing rules for lot coverage and make storm water regulations/non-permeable coverage limits so stringent and expensive that it’s not worth it for developers to prevent this McMansion spread and tree destruction. |
The best thing for the common hood would be for people to understand that if you want something nice in this country you have to sacrifice and work your tail off. In an era of student loan forgiveness, free housing for illegal immigrants, and countless other government giveaways it’s gotten totally out of control. |
As a current Arlington homeowner, I don’t want to dumpy duplex next to me either! If I was fine with that, I would have lived in a more populated area of Arlington, not in my nice quiet neighborhood where I am now. |
This is why there is a huge disconnect with some liberals in Arlington, extremely socially liberal, but also believe what you said above that you should work hard to get to where you are and should enjoy the benefits of that hard work. They’re happy to donate their hard earned money to those less fortunate, but don’t want them living next-door. |
It’s not surprising that a generation of young people who grew up getting participation trophies would have no shame in thinking they deserve to live in close-in high income neighborhoods. The lack of self awareness is galling. |
Devils advocate, why does someone who can’t afford it think they should “deserve” to live in a particular neighborhood? |
I hear your point, but I think you’ve got the wrong generation. We’re talking about adults who grew up in the 70s and 80s. No participation, trophies, no mental health care, no test retakes. |
They are MAGAs whether they realelize it or not. |
Ok great - then buy the adjacent properties and make sure they don’t get built up. Oh, you can’t afford that and think you have the right to control what others do with their property? Interesting. |
How does someone sacrifice and “work their tail off” for sidewalks and wind farms? That’s total disingenuous NIMBY bullsh*t. You don’t believe people need to work for themselves - if you did, you’d never try to legally block what they do with *their own property.* What you want is to control what happens to property and public spaces that you *never worked for*. So stfu about “hard work.” |
They’d be new construction, and not dumpy at all. You might not like it, but it’s not really going to change your neighborhood or impact your life. Have you seen the few that have been built? You can hardly tell they are duplexes, and each one has a garage and driveway (on a corner lot the main door, garage, and driveway aren’t even on the same street). A six-plex, however, would really alter the nature of things on a SFH street, especially on the small lots that have no space to add any off-street parking. I think the lawsuit was more about this than a duplex. But, whatever, there won’t be either, so the YIMBYs need to refocus on repurposing the empty office space in Metro corridors to housing. If housing is what this is all about. |
why does someone who doesn’t own the. neighboring lot think they “deserve” to decide what to do with it? |
And of course YIMBYs advocate for that too - and of course NIMBYs will also come up with reasons to oppose that. |
There is a specific, yet to be named type of psychological rage that exists amongst nonprofit workers and humanities degree holders when they reach adulthood and realize they cannot have the same types of things that their peers who went into business, law, STEM, etc. It is sad to to watch. |