I'm trying to help you duh! Lol
On Tuesday, May 21, 2013, GtwoG PublicOhOne wrote:
The dumb thing about saying "the dumb thing about this thread," is that in
the time it takes to complain about someone else's use of recycled
electrons, one could have ignored the thread entirely, or done some other
productive task, rather than telling the author of the thread what task
they should have been doing instead.
If I'm not interested in a topic, I just don't read that topic, or thread,
or whatever.
And one of the key reasons that rents are so high, is that a state
legislator from somewhere in 925 managed to pass, about 15 years ago, a
state bill that effectively wiped out rent control. Getting him voted out
of office would be good retaliation (better late than never) if he's still
around, but introducing a ballot measure to re-establish rent control would
be even better. That will also take some of the speculative pressure off
the finite supply of land. Ultimately what's going to be needed is some
kind of comprehensive land reform, prohibiting speculation and the
mechanisms that feed it. Another topic for another day.
-G.
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On 13-05-21-Tue 7:19 AM, Sonja Trauss wrote:
The dumb thing about this thread is that in the time it took to write any
of the multiple paragraph emails, the author could have looked to see
whether there are any organizations in SF (or berkeley) lobbying to make
building new housing housing easier.
Whether or not you can have a relationship in a single bed is
irrelevant. Everyone agrees here, rent is too damn high. Part of the cause
of this is artificially limited supply.
On Tuesday, May 21, 2013, Georgio510 wrote:
Re. Romy-
Yes, apts in HK and Tokyo are small, but not so small that you can't have
a double bed and a dinner table (Tokyo apts even have space for small
washing machines & small wall-mounted dryers). And in any case, Japan has
a decent social safety net, something we shredded starting with Reagan.
If you're interested, I can show you some floorplans I've created for
micro living spaces. The stuff I designed is geared toward the
hacker/maker lifestyle with a strong emphasis on sustainability. I'd
happily live in a tiny space of my own making, but not a developer's design
that can't be hacked or modded and is geared toward the media-consumption
lifestyle.
Agreed, the large houses Americans have had for the past century or so are
ridiculous, not to mention _lawns_. But there's a difference between a
wasteful 4,000 square foot suburban sprawl, and an apartment that's smaller
than a camping trailer.
Something else about those tiny apartments: if your best friend loses
his/her job, s/he can't sleep on your couch when there's no room for a
couch. Sleeping on the floor in the tiny aisle next to your bed gets old
after about the second time s/he gets stepped on when you get out of bed at
night to go to the bathroom.
The Oligarchy likes to have it both ways: Big houses for people who can
afford to buy more stuff. Prison-sized apartments for people who can't.
Increase the class divide: more at the top, less at the bottom.
The profit motive for those prison-sized apartments is that developers get
more per square foot. $750 for 200 square feet translates to $3.75 per
square foot. Contrast to $2,000 for 800 square feet, which translates to
$2.50 per square foot.
See how that works? Fifty percent increase in price per square foot.
Clever racket, eh?
Decrease in cars is a factor of available public transport for the hours
and places needed. Someone who works the late shift across the Bay and
comes home after BART stops running, is probably going to end up with a
car, even if they have to play parking space roulette every day. BART
running 24/7 would do more to decrease car commuting in the Bay Area, than
squeezing people into shoe-boxes.
Larger apartments mean you have more choices as to how you live and who
you live with. Smaller apartments mean fewer choices. Again, we're not
talking about multi-thousand-square-foot sprawl, but about having enough
space for someone to choose whether to live alone or with a friend, or
offer their couch to an unemployed friend, or the options available for
single parents with kids who are toddlers or older.
200 square feet also means you can't telecommute or telework, because
there's not enough space for even a small desk for a computer. Using a
tablet while sitting on the edge of the bed gets old real fast too. And
forget about modifying the space in any way: those places are like hotel
rooms, no user modifications or space hacks allowed. What's important is
_choice_. The choice to work and play at home sometimes, and in communal
space sometimes.
How these neo boarding houses are worse than work lofts: for one thing,
you can't work there. And no space for a kitchen table, so forget about
inviting friends over for dinner. No space for anything that involves
having more than on
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