Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a concrete suggestion of how to fight the Mayor's plan? After all, she has the density bros on her side...![]()
One idea is that DC can quit electing mayors that are addicted to crack
Unless you mean, developer money, do not see this applying to current Mayor. Any helpful suggestions? My issue is that once the wheels are in motion (and the wheels on this density thing are well in motion for Ward 3), they become impossible to stop.
Bowser doesn’t seem to be a crack addict. But in many respects, certainly loose ethics, she is more like Marion Barry than any of the other DC mayors. She’s not as smart as Barry was, but her administration is nearly as corrupt as Barry’s. And she’s even cozier with favored developers than he was.
Which D.C. mayor has not been close with developers, exactly?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a concrete suggestion of how to fight the Mayor's plan? After all, she has the density bros on her side...![]()
One idea is that DC can quit electing mayors that are addicted to crack
Unless you mean, developer money, do not see this applying to current Mayor. Any helpful suggestions? My issue is that once the wheels are in motion (and the wheels on this density thing are well in motion for Ward 3), they become impossible to stop.
Bowser doesn’t seem to be a crack addict. But in many respects, certainly loose ethics, she is more like Marion Barry than any of the other DC mayors. She’s not as smart as Barry was, but her administration is nearly as corrupt as Barry’s. And she’s even cozier with favored developers than he was.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone with a brain in her head understands that density is a driving force in this pandemic. Stop the contortions trying to argue otherwise. We’re not idiots.
But people are conflating a whole bunch of issues so that ANY density means we will all die of a viral infection. Increasing density more than current levels in most of the District would still make it far less dense than most neighborhoods in New York, which people keep bringing up in the context of covid and density. And there’s a whole separate question around work and exposure while commuting or working, which is how many current cases appear to be happening. It doesn’t matter if you live in a 3,000 detached house on 4 acres of land if you have to go work in a grocery store full of customers.
Hyperbole why don't you. No, nobody is saying that everybody will die. That has not been stated once in this thread. But go ahead and use extreme language to avoid making a fact based argument. Who stated it earlier? So far there are LOTS of experts talking about the problems with density and corona virus. I have not seen a single expert quoted yet saying that dense growth is the future of combatting COVID like pandemics...well actually Mayor Bowser said that. But on the expert side of things, nobody yet.
In fact the Density Bros are already trying to reshape issues with density into 'overcrowding'. Density good, overcrowding bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a concrete suggestion of how to fight the Mayor's plan? After all, she has the density bros on her side...![]()
One idea is that DC can quit electing mayors that are addicted to crack
Unless you mean, developer money, do not see this applying to current Mayor. Any helpful suggestions? My issue is that once the wheels are in motion (and the wheels on this density thing are well in motion for Ward 3), they become impossible to stop.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a concrete suggestion of how to fight the Mayor's plan? After all, she has the density bros on her side...![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a concrete suggestion of how to fight the Mayor's plan? After all, she has the density bros on her side...![]()
One idea is that DC can quit electing mayors that are addicted to crack
Unless you mean, developer money, do not see this applying to current Mayor. Any helpful suggestions? My issue is that once the wheels are in motion (and the wheels on this density thing are well in motion for Ward 3), they become impossible to stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a concrete suggestion of how to fight the Mayor's plan? After all, she has the density bros on her side...![]()
One idea is that DC can quit electing mayors that are addicted to crack
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a concrete suggestion of how to fight the Mayor's plan? After all, she has the density bros on her side...![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone with a brain in her head understands that density is a driving force in this pandemic. Stop the contortions trying to argue otherwise. We’re not idiots.
But people are conflating a whole bunch of issues so that ANY density means we will all die of a viral infection. Increasing density more than current levels in most of the District would still make it far less dense than most neighborhoods in New York, which people keep bringing up in the context of covid and density. And there’s a whole separate question around work and exposure while commuting or working, which is how many current cases appear to be happening. It doesn’t matter if you live in a 3,000 detached house on 4 acres of land if you have to go work in a grocery store full of customers.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone with a brain in her head understands that density is a driving force in this pandemic. Stop the contortions trying to argue otherwise. We’re not idiots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So it appears that Crestwood was practically the DC epicenter of racial covenants. Yet this single family neighborhood in the mayor’s own Ward 4 gets additional safeguards in her proposed comprehensive plan changes to “protect neighborhood character” from development!
She is SUCH a freakin' hypocrite
Anonymous wrote:I have not seen a published expert yet saying that there is no link between density and COVID cases.
I have seen dozens of experts say that density IS directly related to COVID transmission.
Someone posted a few posts ago (yesterday) a few experts theorizing that DC will recover at a more rapid pace that other areas because it is a LOW density city with the resources of higher density cities. Way to go DC. Now lets use the fruits of our LOW density to pull through this and not change that formula for the future.
Let's keep our nice low density life saving formula.