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  • @[email protected]
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    1915 days ago

    For me, I don’t like living that close to people. People, in general, are horribly inconsiderate. They make a lot of noise, they smell. The fewer people I can see the better.

    • thejevans
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      2115 days ago

      For me, I don’t like living that close to cars. Cars, in general, are horriblely inconsiderate. They make a lot of noise, they smell. The fewer cars I can see, the better.

        • @[email protected]
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          1015 days ago

          For me, I don’t like living that close to horses. Horses, in general, are horribly inconsiderate. They make a lot of noise, they smell. The fewer horses I can see the better.

            • @droporain
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              215 days ago

              Bike to get a weeks worth of groceries?

                • @droporain
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                  115 days ago

                  Shucks I just wanted to live in a fantasy where I grew my own veggies and slaughtered my own meat.

  • @chillinit
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    1315 days ago

    It’s because they know nothing different and are justifiably afraid of change initiated by governance.

    I’m going to guess WaPo makes an emotional/psychological argument. If I were trying to mislead the masses I’d tell them that everyone else enjoys their daily commute and uses it as a time to destress.

  • @[email protected]
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    515 days ago

    Having lived in both, I rather like being in a dense neighborhood like I am at the moment, but long term, I simply doubt I’ll be able to afford it, which I think may be a pretty significant factor for many people. I already live at the extreme northern edge of my city, but if my rent goes up by more than another few hundred dollars a month, I doubt I could afford to find another place in the city that isn’t in a terrible neighborhood. NIMBYs make sure that the housing crisis keeps going strong, aided by the byzantine process of community board review for any project that doesn’t manage to get killed early on.

    Prices are going up in all the similarly dense cities in my region. My options for the future look likely to be sprawl in my home region, with somewhat tolerable conditions despite bad Democratic policies, or sprawl in another state, with worse conditions and worse Republican policies. It’s unlikely I could even afford a place in a nice urban region in red states, as their lower cost of living tends to go hand in hand with substantially lower wages. I looked into it at one point, and while apartments in that city were much nicer for maybe 40% of the cost, I would have had to take about a 50% pay cut, while also needing to buy and maintain multiple motor vehicles, as public transit was essentially nonexistent there.

    • edric
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      114 days ago

      I also prefer dense, urban living, but currently not in that situation. Working in tech in a tech hub blue city in a red state. Relatively lower cost of living, but above average pay. But yes, public transportation is almost non-existent, and you have to deal with the state trying to screw your city over all the time because of politics.