The People Who Hate People – The Atlantic

overcrowded busy street on narrow city street Photo by ร–zgรผr รœNAL on Pexels.com

Of all the objections NIMBYs raise to new housing and infrastructure, perhaps the most risible is that their community is already too crowded.

By Jerusalem Demsas, May 24, 2022

H. Armstrong Roberts / Retrofile / Getty

Some propositions are so obvious that no one takes the time to defend them. A few such propositions are that human life is good, that people can and often do provide more benefits to the world than they take away, and that we should design society to support people in leading lives that are good for themselves and others.

These ideas came under attack, sometimes subtly and sometimes overtly, by environmentalists in the 20th century who were worried about overpopulation. Although major organizations have abandoned population management as an explicit policy goal, the underlying fear that too many people are running up on the limits of too few resources and Well shouldnโ€™t someone do something about that? has never fully been rooted out of American political thought.

It is alive and well among NIMBYs. Of all the objections people raise to new housing and infrastructure, perhaps the most risible is that their community is already too crowded. Some even suggest that municipalities should limit housing supply explicitly to combat population growth.

Source: The People Who Hate People – The Atlantic


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