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luciaphile's avatar

I think you may have to face the fact that people don’t necessarily believe this in good faith, in a way susceptible to evidence either way. They believe it because it’s important for their ideological commitments. It so happens that this is shared by the three strands in American politics, more and less cynically, each for distinct reasons. That’s a powerful countervailing lobby; as with many other things reality is no match.

David Wilkens's avatar

Housing is a distribution problem. I will say that in the desirable to live category, NIMBYism is real. I live in VT and it's no joke. Zoning laws are local and current residents have almost all the power and potential residents none. This shits lots of people out. Plus Vermont has shot itself in the foot with Act 250.

White collar workers who have relocated to the desirable to live places no longer provide the anchor for the multiple service jobs that supported them in the places they left and there is not enough housing in places they have moved to. This is probably small relative to the big picture, but it's happening.

I recently met with a local non-profit focused on the elderly and they said, to my surprise, that it is cheaper to keep old people in place, in their mostly empty homes, than to find a place for them to go and put a family in that home. This at least in Vermont. There are not enough old folks homes and they are too expensive.

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