Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 11:41     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

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Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!


No, it certainly is not, but one would hope that a poster who is very concerned about evidence and deductive reasoning would be able to easily furnish fact-based logical arguments. Alas!


Just answer the question. You've spent a lot of time deflecting, distracting, pretending, and insulting in an effort to avoid it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


I'm amused that you think this is some kind of gotcha. As I said earlier, I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable. You brought up Baltimore County and Baltimore City after the evidence that suburban finances are necessarily subsidized. This is how discussions work. Person A makes a claim, person B rebuts the claim with evidence. Person A must respond to Person B's rebuttal, not blab on about non sequiturs. The ball is in your court.


It's not a gotcha. It's a straight forward question based on your own claim. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


Your continued insistence on asking this question instead of examining and rebutting the evidence countering your assertion is a tacit admission that you are wrong, you know you're wrong, and you're pathologically incapable of admitting it.


You made a rhetorical assertion. A legitimate question was asked regarding that assertion and you keep avoiding it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


I made an assertion backed with evidence. You are choosing to ignore this evidence and are instead insisting that I respond to a non sequitur. You can choose to respond to my counterargument. Or, you can continue to pretend that it doesn't exist in the hopes that I'll grow tired of your tactic and give up. Your call.


There's no non-sequitor in that question. And all you're doing is deflecting and distracting in an attempt to avoid answering it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 11:32     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

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Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!


No, it certainly is not, but one would hope that a poster who is very concerned about evidence and deductive reasoning would be able to easily furnish fact-based logical arguments. Alas!


Just answer the question. You've spent a lot of time deflecting, distracting, pretending, and insulting in an effort to avoid it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


I'm amused that you think this is some kind of gotcha. As I said earlier, I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable. You brought up Baltimore County and Baltimore City after the evidence that suburban finances are necessarily subsidized. This is how discussions work. Person A makes a claim, person B rebuts the claim with evidence. Person A must respond to Person B's rebuttal, not blab on about non sequiturs. The ball is in your court.


It's not a gotcha. It's a straight forward question based on your own claim. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


Your continued insistence on asking this question instead of examining and rebutting the evidence countering your assertion is a tacit admission that you are wrong, you know you're wrong, and you're pathologically incapable of admitting it.


You made a rhetorical assertion. A legitimate question was asked regarding that assertion and you keep avoiding it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


I made an assertion backed with evidence. You are choosing to ignore this evidence and are instead insisting that I respond to a non sequitur. You can choose to respond to my counterargument. Or, you can continue to pretend that it doesn't exist in the hopes that I'll grow tired of your tactic and give up. Your call.
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 11:19     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

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Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!


No, it certainly is not, but one would hope that a poster who is very concerned about evidence and deductive reasoning would be able to easily furnish fact-based logical arguments. Alas!


Just answer the question. You've spent a lot of time deflecting, distracting, pretending, and insulting in an effort to avoid it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


I'm amused that you think this is some kind of gotcha. As I said earlier, I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable. You brought up Baltimore County and Baltimore City after the evidence that suburban finances are necessarily subsidized. This is how discussions work. Person A makes a claim, person B rebuts the claim with evidence. Person A must respond to Person B's rebuttal, not blab on about non sequiturs. The ball is in your court.


It's not a gotcha. It's a straight forward question based on your own claim. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


Your continued insistence on asking this question instead of examining and rebutting the evidence countering your assertion is a tacit admission that you are wrong, you know you're wrong, and you're pathologically incapable of admitting it.


You made a rhetorical assertion. A legitimate question was asked regarding that assertion and you keep avoiding it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 11:03     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!


No, it certainly is not, but one would hope that a poster who is very concerned about evidence and deductive reasoning would be able to easily furnish fact-based logical arguments. Alas!


Just answer the question. You've spent a lot of time deflecting, distracting, pretending, and insulting in an effort to avoid it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


I'm amused that you think this is some kind of gotcha. As I said earlier, I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable. You brought up Baltimore County and Baltimore City after the evidence that suburban finances are necessarily subsidized. This is how discussions work. Person A makes a claim, person B rebuts the claim with evidence. Person A must respond to Person B's rebuttal, not blab on about non sequiturs. The ball is in your court.


It's not a gotcha. It's a straight forward question based on your own claim. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


Your continued insistence on asking this question instead of examining and rebutting the evidence countering your assertion is a tacit admission that you are wrong, you know you're wrong, and you're pathologically incapable of admitting it.
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 10:56     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!


No, it certainly is not, but one would hope that a poster who is very concerned about evidence and deductive reasoning would be able to easily furnish fact-based logical arguments. Alas!


Just answer the question. You've spent a lot of time deflecting, distracting, pretending, and insulting in an effort to avoid it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


I'm amused that you think this is some kind of gotcha. As I said earlier, I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable. You brought up Baltimore County and Baltimore City after the evidence that suburban finances are necessarily subsidized. This is how discussions work. Person A makes a claim, person B rebuts the claim with evidence. Person A must respond to Person B's rebuttal, not blab on about non sequiturs. The ball is in your court.


It's not a gotcha. It's a straight forward question based on your own claim. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 10:54     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!


No, it certainly is not, but one would hope that a poster who is very concerned about evidence and deductive reasoning would be able to easily furnish fact-based logical arguments. Alas!


Just answer the question. You've spent a lot of time deflecting, distracting, pretending, and insulting in an effort to avoid it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?


I'm amused that you think this is some kind of gotcha. As I said earlier, I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable. You brought up Baltimore County and Baltimore City after the evidence that suburban finances are necessarily subsidized. This is how discussions work. Person A makes a claim, person B rebuts the claim with evidence. Person A must respond to Person B's rebuttal, not blab on about non sequiturs. The ball is in your court.
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 10:49     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!


No, it certainly is not, but one would hope that a poster who is very concerned about evidence and deductive reasoning would be able to easily furnish fact-based logical arguments. Alas!


Just answer the question. You've spent a lot of time deflecting, distracting, pretending, and insulting in an effort to avoid it. How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County?
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 10:44     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!


No, it certainly is not, but one would hope that a poster who is very concerned about evidence and deductive reasoning would be able to easily furnish fact-based logical arguments. Alas!
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 10:17     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid

This isn’t high school debate club kid. You seem well intentioned but poorly informed. Good luck in life!
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 09:49     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


The link walks you through several case studies, not simply "posit[ing] that this is occurring." Check them out, then get back to us.

And, since your education on argumentation seems to be limited to what you can glean from Wikipedia, this link may help you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundum_quid
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 09:49     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


We have read your posts on this and other threads and observed how you respond when evidence contradicts your argument. Suffice to say, you do not appear to be interested in an objective discussion based on facts. It is not a particularly good use of anyone’s time to research the various facts that you are requesting when, ultimately, you are unlikely to be interested in them. You should be able to arrive at the answers you are seeking in any event by considering the fiscal relationship between areas that produce goods and services of economic value and proximate areas where little production occurs but where the resident population consumes luxury goods.

I am literally begging you for actual evidence.
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 09:21     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning


We have read your posts on this and other threads and observed how you respond when evidence contradicts your argument. Suffice to say, you do not appear to be interested in an objective discussion based on facts. It is not a particularly good use of anyone’s time to research the various facts that you are requesting when, ultimately, you are unlikely to be interested in them. You should be able to arrive at the answers you are seeking in any event by considering the fiscal relationship between areas that produce goods and services of economic value and proximate areas where little production occurs but where the resident population consumes luxury goods.
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 09:08     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.

Huh? The link posits that this is occurring, that cities are subsidizing suburbs. I am asking for an explanation of how that actually works in this specific circumstance. If you cannot provide an explanation for how it works in this circumstance, then it’s not a worthwhile idea. This link may help you.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_reasoning
Anonymous
Post 11/02/2022 08:44     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?


DP, but I'll gladly talk about Baltimore City and Baltimore County after you post a detailed, fact-based rebuttal to the Strong Towns series of articles about how suburbs' finances are unsustainable.
Anonymous
Post 11/01/2022 22:34     Subject: The Bike Lobby is too powerful in DC...

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wanna REALLY see them get upset? Have police start ticketing riders who exceed the new 20mph speed limits on neighborhood streets and not stopping at all for red lights (this is post-Idaho stop law, where stop signs are yields and red lights are stops).

It’ll be funny hearing them complaining about laws THEY wanted.


The bike lobby isn't primarily the bike rider bros; it is the companies that litter the streets with those lime and red bikes and scooters. They stand to make a ton of cash if it is easier to use bikes and they can convince people to actually use their bikes.


City Bike etc get paid by the city. They aren't proftable based on use amd wont ever be. Their entire model is built on goverment subsidies.

I don't have a problem with them doing that. They're a nice recreational amenity. That's the problem though. That's all they are and pretending otherwise is foolish.


So is metro, the US military and other government services. If everything was profit centered, do you think anyone in rural America would receive USPS service at all?


And SO ARE ROADS THAT DRIVERS DRIVE ON. Taxes pay for all of this; suburbs are heavily subsidized by urban areas and if people who live in the cities want to bike two miles to their destination on roads their taxes paid for them drivers who insist on driving in a city because they want a big house ten miles away can slow down and recognize that there are other road users with conflicting priorities to them.


No, that's not true. Close in suburban areas subsidize both urban and rural areas. The ROI on the interstate highway system is off the charts.

DC residents are the ones opposed and complaining. This isn't about whatever weird hatred you have for rural areas. We do not benefit from isolation.


In what way do suburbs subsidize cities? The infrastructure to build a road that goes to ten houses is the same as a road that leads to ten apartments but the one with the apartments has a much higher tax base.

I don't have a hatred towards rural or suburban areas- I just think that they should pay the cost that it takes to provide roads, utilities, etc to them. Roads are financed mostly through state and local and federal taxes, not through gas tax or registration.

You don’t know how infrastructure in the suburbs is financed, which is funny for someone making policy recommendations based on that ignorance of suburban infrastructure financing.


It appears you don't either, since you're laboring under the misconception that suburbs subsidize cities. Here is the first of a series that is a decent primer on the issue, PP: https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2011/6/13/the-growth-ponzi-scheme-part-1.html


Baltimore subsidizes Bethesda? Richmond subsidizes Clarendon?

You're in a radicalized bubble and it's clouding your judgement.


The framing in this discussion hasn't accurately reflected the real issue which is that older & denser areas subsidize newer less dense areas.

It is enormously expensive to build the infra to support new suburbs and to support the services once they are built.

Maybe someone can find some citations but I seriously doubt user fees on new developments even come close to covering their costs - sure maybe they cover the new utility infra but I would be shocked if they cover the costs of road infra which usually runs into the billions - if you are skeptical go and look at not just what has already been spent on I-270 but what is proposed to be spent to expand it yet again.

And on-going operation costs for a lot of municipal services in the suburbs are much more expensive in the low density suburbs than they are in denser areas - this includes infra stuff like road maintenance and services like police and Fire/EMS which are a function of area as much as population.

So in your example yes the dense parts of Arlington almost certainly are subsidizing the low density parts which require much greater public expenditures.

And one of the tragedies of the last 75 years is that at some point when people fled cities like DC and Baltimore for the suburbs that white flight was heavily subsidized by the Federal Government mostly in the form of massive road subsidies that came at the expense of other funding and of course those same urban highways built to serve suburbanites in a lot of cases destroyed the very same neighborhoods they ran thru further exacerbating the problem.

So yeah in net cities & denser areas have subsidized and suffered because of car dependent suburbs.


This is a good explanation. It’s always amazing to read the nonsense that suburbanites tell themselves while to defend policies that support their lifestyles but are very damaging to almost everyone else in the world.


Lol

Does Baltimore subsidize Bethesda today? Does Richmond subsidize Clarendon today? Yes or no.

Reality matters.


That’s an interesting debating strategy. Do you find they it usually works for you?

Your supposed counter-examples demonstrate that you don’t understand the argument.

DP. You think this is a “debate”? Usually when people make claims they can back them up with facts. All
You have are platitudes and urban legends.

The PP is requesting that you identify the mechanism by which Baltimore has or is subsidizing Bethesda. It’s a good question that goes to the heart of your claim.


Is Bethesda a suburb of Baltimore? Was it ever? Do you even know what a suburb is?

How does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Please be specific.


I think this would be a great question to pose to David Simon. He would give you a very informative and entertaining response, albeit one punctuated by obscene insults.

Can you not answer the basic question of how does Baltimore City subsidize Baltimore County? Hmmmm. It’s almost like you are just making it all up.


Point is that if you want specifics, you need to ask someone who really knows that city. And few know the city better than David Simon. He will give you the information you seek. And some exotic insults.

So in conclusion, you have no idea what you are talking about. Good to know. Thanks!


About the city of Baltimore? Compared to David Simon? Most definitely not, oh smarmy one.

Again, do you have any information that you can provide that can describe how Baltimore City subsidizes Baltimore County? Anything?