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simit patel's avatar

a lot of "suburban castle" ideology complete with swing sets in the backyard and such is driven not by true fiefdom aspirations, but by the more mundane practical matter of needing to do the dishes and prep dinner while keeping the young kids occupied and within visibility. as for older kids, it is more about steering them away from populations deemed dangerous (whether this judgment is correct, racist, etc is another matter, and of course somewhat subjective).

new suburbs, specifically those constructed after 2014, shy away from the fiefdom design, and opt more for a community playground and small backyards. this is to foster a sense of community, and for the more economic reasons that people are increasingly too lazy to maintain their property and builders want to squeeze in as many houses as they can into a subdivision.

there is a book called _strong towns_ that i think you guys might like, if you are not familiar with. it talks about how suburbs have this "let's build the whole thing at once" design approach, which lends itself to awkward forms of isolation that cities do not have as well as very problematic design pattern in which the whole thing falls apart at once and then all the people with enough money move out, and those that can't stay, and then property values fall, tax receipts fall, etc. the authors argue this pattern will increasingly play out in the USA. the detroit model, as it is sometimes referred to.

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Benjamin Glover's avatar

I've been to a number of major cities in America the past decade or so. In Seattle I've seen lines of homeless people screaming - not just standing about - full-on screaming in front of Seattle's King County courthouse more than once. Go ahead and look at the street view of 3rd avenue on google maps - chances are you'll see a "clean" version but look at other snapshots from previous years and you'll see that line of people.

In Tucson I saw someone standing on a miserable traffic island in the middle of, like, 6 lanes of the speedway in ~30 degrees celsuis heat last spring somehow begging. There's no grass, hardly any vegetation, all concrete and strip malls. Dust.

Chicago in my limited experience wasn't nearly as terrible beyond the subway occasionally filled with people smoking weed or the beliigerent drunks, and neither was Boston, but both were absolutely teeming with cops to an almost comical degree.

There is a tendency to point to the British stereotype that English people love to be miserable, but I don't think people in the US are even aware they're swimming in misery, putting on a rictus smile throughout.

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