to add to this, an iterative approach can also serve as a positive feedback loop. You improve places to the point they become desirable to local business, and the free market will make those gradual improvements over time. If you sap the economic productivity of a place by gutting commercial density and mixed use, it will always be a place that requires a lifeline, either through federal grants or through local tax revenue . The wholesale destruction of these vibrant places and the millions of dollars spent on urban renewal and suburbanization in post war America accelerated the negative feedback many cities are still stuck in, all on the backs of tax payers.
Exactly. It’s funny when I see conservatives and libertarians oppose these ideas because they require government intervention. The status quo already requires huge amounts of government subsidies to make it even function because the free market can’t even operate properly.
@@chickennoodle6620 Hit the nail on the head. Not to mention the intergenerational wealth that their family benefited from (i.e. homeownership) was likely highly subsidized by post-war suburban centric policy. Meanwhile they point their fingers at communities of color and yell "pull yourself up by your bootstraps". It's completely backwards and American literacy on these topics and our history is astonishingly bad.
Charles Marohn is one of those rare Republicans that aren't overly attached to financially insolvent suburbia. This guy is actually practicing what he preaches (fiscal conservatism). They'd probably call him a RINO nowadays.
RINO's support Democrat-lite policies and paying for today with tomorrow's dollars- the opposite of fiscal conservatism. Is this what you would consider Charles Marohn?
Unfortunately politics in America is stagnated in the cultural concept of shortsighted growth without consideration of the distant future, borrowing more and more wealth from future generations to do the opposite of what this video is trying to convince people to do. In this lobbyist state the federal government is incentivized by mega corporate duty to increase quarterly revenue rather than 20-year revenue. We need to stop looking next quarter. We need to stop making shortsighted decisions. But with our culture I just don’t see that happening.
@@seymaloji7940 anladım haklısınız önemli değil İngilizce de yazabilirsiniz.Burada biraz yabancı insanlarla fikir alışverişi yaparak İngilizcemi geliştirmeyi amaçlıyorum.Neyse hayırlı akşamlar size :)
@@morganharris2413 Yep. Typical Walmart in the US is located within a 34 acre parking lot. But Walmart operates in 20 countries. I found a bunch of Walmart Express in Mexico City with no parking lots that take up less than 1/4 acre of space. It's just the groceries and other things you'd find at a grocery store, but its value relative to acreage is off the charts.
It is regrettable nobody volunteered to teach you the difference between "your" and "you're", or "cities" and "citys", in what I presume to be your first language. Perhaps you should use the free market to remedy this issue.
So glad NotJustBikes shed light on Strong Towns, this is genius
I see you found Strong Towns from NJB as well! Me too!
Lol bike shed
@@flipvdfluitketel867 heh
We are so thrilled we found Strong Towns and the Not Just Bikes. Positive change is so needed in this country.
“We need to look at the way our people are using the city”
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
to add to this, an iterative approach can also serve as a positive feedback loop. You improve places to the point they become desirable to local business, and the free market will make those gradual improvements over time. If you sap the economic productivity of a place by gutting commercial density and mixed use, it will always be a place that requires a lifeline, either through federal grants or through local tax revenue . The wholesale destruction of these vibrant places and the millions of dollars spent on urban renewal and suburbanization in post war America accelerated the negative feedback many cities are still stuck in, all on the backs of tax payers.
Exactly. It’s funny when I see conservatives and libertarians oppose these ideas because they require government intervention. The status quo already requires huge amounts of government subsidies to make it even function because the free market can’t even operate properly.
@@chickennoodle6620 Hit the nail on the head. Not to mention the intergenerational wealth that their family benefited from (i.e. homeownership) was likely highly subsidized by post-war suburban centric policy. Meanwhile they point their fingers at communities of color and yell "pull yourself up by your bootstraps". It's completely backwards and American literacy on these topics and our history is astonishingly bad.
Cleveland OH needs this movement
Charles Marohn is one of those rare Republicans that aren't overly attached to financially insolvent suburbia. This guy is actually practicing what he preaches (fiscal conservatism). They'd probably call him a RINO nowadays.
Doesn't seem like a rino to me
yeah otherway arround; the RINOs are the pro subsidy republicans, the DINOs are the pro-war democrats. e.g. all politicians.
RINO's support Democrat-lite policies and paying for today with tomorrow's dollars- the opposite of fiscal conservatism. Is this what you would consider Charles Marohn?
The paranoia over 15 Minute Cities proves your point
Unfortunately politics in America is stagnated in the cultural concept of shortsighted growth without consideration of the distant future, borrowing more and more wealth from future generations to do the opposite of what this video is trying to convince people to do. In this lobbyist state the federal government is incentivized by mega corporate duty to increase quarterly revenue rather than 20-year revenue. We need to stop looking next quarter. We need to stop making shortsighted decisions. But with our culture I just don’t see that happening.
Not Just Bikes, anyone?
Thank you, that is a fantastic primer to Strong Towns. But no Jimmy's Pizza?
Facts water Is Still out in my city since winter storm ⛈ 3 weekends now no water JACKSON MISSISSIPPI south in the hills no water 2 weeks
Great talk!
great video!
Can you follow me 🙏🤗🌼
Thanks so much 🙅
There has to be something that causes ppl to change.
Very nice video I watched fondly 🌷🌷
Can you follow me 🙏🤗🌼
@@seymaloji7940 tabii ki takip ederim ☺️
@@ferdi.official.page01 😂🖒 Çok thank you.. Gebelde yabanclar oluyor ismini okumadan direk ingilizce konustum :)))
@@seymaloji7940 anladım haklısınız önemli değil İngilizce de yazabilirsiniz.Burada biraz yabancı insanlarla fikir alışverişi yaparak İngilizcemi geliştirmeyi amaçlıyorum.Neyse hayırlı akşamlar size :)
@@ferdi.official.page01 😊 Hayırlı Akşamlar. Teşekkur ederim takip ettiginiz icin. :) 🙏🌼
Nice sir
A Good Quote, Only Dead Fish go with the flow.
Nice video
early vibesss
Can you follow me 🙏🤗🌼
More Dads around kids. BOOM!
He didn't read the whole quote. 😔
👍🏻
Should i comment
If you're ready... We are ready.
@@Exodus26.13Pi 😂🙏
Gelin Türkiye de yaşayın da göreyim
♥️♥️
Beni takip eder misin 😊🌼
Make a movie/video for Kill Politician
Hmko laura samajh me nhi aata hai iiiii sab 😭😭😭
People watching this like:--
- in bed...
- not in a full screen
- reading comments....
You re godamm right
One
Can you follow me 🙏🤗🌼
We'd lose fewer homes to fires and tornadoes if we lived in hobbit holes
Fifth
Can you follow me 🙏🤗🌼
How is a tiny attorney’s office more productive than a Walmart?
It isn't, but the sum of all the businesses on one small, traditional block sure are more productive than a Walmart, and are way more adaptable too
Taxable value per square foot, probably.
It produces more revenue per acre, probably because 70% of the acreage at Walmart is a parking lot.
@@morganharris2413 Yep. Typical Walmart in the US is located within a 34 acre parking lot. But Walmart operates in 20 countries. I found a bunch of Walmart Express in Mexico City with no parking lots that take up less than 1/4 acre of space. It's just the groceries and other things you'd find at a grocery store, but its value relative to acreage is off the charts.
Yep give your time and money for the benefit of others = Your now all poor
It is regrettable nobody volunteered to teach you the difference between "your" and "you're", or "cities" and "citys", in what I presume to be your first language. Perhaps you should use the free market to remedy this issue.
@@flagrarus How am I wrong though.... Also you understood what I was saying so doesn't matter how I spell -_-
@@ArkNation6666 You seem pretty antisocial, in the most literal sense.
I'm sorry your parents raised a sociopath.
You already do. It's called living in a society