• thantik@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    It’s literally the argument in the image. That the bottom image is “worse to look at”…what are you on about?

    I’m simply commenting on a third option that people regularly complain about looking at, “Urban Sprawl”. There’s no strawman here - you should really learn what that word means. I live comfortably in a medium sized neighborhood. I don’t have to deal with the sights of either of these images at all… there’s no “poor you” because I’m…not complaining. I’m offering a third option to a 2-choices fallacy presented in the OP.

    • trailing9@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      Where does the land for the sprawl come from? You either have to destroy nature or farmland.

    • MeowZedong@lemmygrad.ml
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      10 months ago

      I think you missed the point of the meme and then argued about a common, tangentially related topic, which made it sound like a strawman argument. Because you seem to be more genuinely confused as to my response than arguing in bad faith, I’ll drop it. Those types of dismissive comments are meant for people arguing in bad faith.

      The image is not attacking urban sprawl, it’s attacking the very mindset that you displayed in your comment: “why do I have to choose between these two things? I hate living in apartments, so why would you force me to do this?”

      The meme is showing two different approaches to dealing with a massive housing crisis where many people did not have access to housing. In the first image, we see how the USSR dealt with it: they needed more houses for people, so they forced families with homes to share with those without until new homes had been built. The government subsidized the construction and focused on building economical housing that functionally fixed the problem, but at the expense of luxury and some comfort. Would people have liked more space? Yes. Was it reasonable to accommodate that want before the needs of people without housing? No.

      The lower image is showing how the US has handled a massive housing crisis…it hasn’t. If someone can’t manage to find and/or afford to house themselves, they choose to force those people to live on the streets. The thought process is more individual focused rather than community focused as in the top image. “Why should the people who have houses be inconvenienced by those who do not?” This assumes that those without have some type of moral or personal failure that justifies them having nowhere to live rather than the situation being a result of a system that does not prioritize human needs. It rests on the callous assumption that people do not deserve a place to live, but they instead must earn a place to live.

      As to your argument, I don’t think you offered a third option so much as a complaint about the state of the things. To be honest, I agree with your complaint. Assuming the context of your comment was focused on the US, there is plenty of space for people to live in larger homes and there isn’t some false dichotomy where we only have the options of urban sprawl or dense apartments. The problem with how you approached the problem is that without further analysis of why a housing crisis exists and how we can eliminate the source of the problem, saying “just build more medium-density housing” equates to no more than a complaint.

      You cannot fix a problem unless you address the root of the problem. Pushing the homeless out of sight does not fix the problem. Much of the problem is caused by our economic and political systems, but there is also the influence of the cultural aspect in how we think about the problem and how we think about people (individualistic vs collective focus). When you focus on yourself and how the problem affects you, it is often at the expense of other people. For the people this hurts and the people cognizant of the cultural influence, seeing individualist-focused complaints really rubs them the wrong way.

      • thantik@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Sorry, I know there are a lot of bad-faith actors here on Lemmy, I understand if you thought I was just being antagonistic.

        I think the discussion about where people live is probably less helpful than discussing the method of getting there. You obviously already know my preference for where to house people, but I think the conversation we should all be having is how to get people out of the situation they’re in in the bottom picture.

        Housing prices right now are out of control due to places like AirBnB, so more regulation needs to be slapped down there for sure. “Below the line” pricing needs to stop, and taxes on these short-term rentals need to be raised so that all housing doesn’t just keep looking like an investment opportunity to offshore investors.

        Another problem is that a lot of the people that are homeless suffer from massive mental issues which make them unfit to live in everyday society. Many homeless suffer from schizophrenia, drug addiction, or other major mental illness. I won’t pretend that I have even the beginnings of a solution for this. Of all the solutions I hear about, many require taking these peoples rights away from them and putting them under government care, but that rarely works out the way people think it will.

        I agree pushing them out of sight is not the way to handle it. I think that’s true in most things – I think a lot of us agree on a lot more than we disagree on, but we get so hung up on the details that often times online conversations spiral out of control. I commend you for being one of the few here who can actually hold a legitimate discussion without losing your cool. It’s hard to find that when half the people on here are just looking for a fight.