« August 2006 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
View Profile
a list of links from Iraq
Iraq Blogcount
Lewyn Addresses America
Thursday, 3 August 2006
another Jewish voice against sprawl

The prophet Zechariah states "Old men and old women will yet sit in the streets of Jerusalem."

R. Soloveitchik interprets this statement to mean that after the final redemption of the Jews, "Jerusalem will be densely populated, even by elderly men and women. A young man likes to be on the street, but an old man likes to be home. But the city was going to be so populous that there would be no room for the elderly at home, so they will have to sit on the street."

The Lord is Righteous in All His Ways, p. 47

Evidently, Messianic deliverance means MUCH more compact development!


Posted by lewyn at 1:56 PM EDT
Monday, 31 July 2006
We're healthier than ever

some of my friends think that Americans have become less healthy due to junk food and pollution.

But a recent story in yesterday's NY Times suggests otherwise. (link at http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/30/health/30age.html?ref=health )

Money quotes:

Over the past 100 years, says one researcher, Robert W. Fogel of the University of Chicago, humans in the industrialized world have undergone "a form of evolution that is unique not only to humankind, but unique among the 7,000 or so generations of humans who have ever inhabited the earth."

The difference does not involve changes in genes, as far as is known, but changes in the human form. It shows up in several ways, from those that are well known and almost taken for granted, like greater heights and longer lives, to ones that are emerging only from comparisons of health records.

The biggest surprise emerging from the new studies is that many chronic ailments like heart disease, lung disease and arthritis are occurring an average of 10 to 25 years later than they used to. There is also less disability among older people today, according to a federal study that directly measures it. And that is not just because medical treatments like cataract surgery keep people functioning. Human bodies are simply not breaking down the way they did before.

Even the human mind seems improved. The average I.Q. has been increasing for decades, and at least one study found that a person's chances of having dementia in old age appeared to have fallen in recent years.

The proposed reasons are as unexpected as the changes themselves. Improved medical care is only part of the explanation; studies suggest that the effects seem to have been set in motion by events early in life, even in the womb, that show up in middle and old age.

"What happens before the age of 2 has a permanent, lasting effect on your health, and that includes aging," said Dr. David J. P. Barker, a professor of medicine at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland and a professor of epidemiology at the University of Southampton in England.

Each event can touch off others. Less cardiovascular disease, for example, can mean less dementia in old age. The reason is that cardiovascular disease can precipitate mini-strokes, which can cause dementia. Cardiovascular disease is also a suspected risk factor for Alzheimer's disease.

The effects are not just in the United States. Large and careful studies from Finland, Britain, France, Sweden and the Netherlands all confirm that the same things have happened there; they are also beginning to show up in the underdeveloped world.

Of course, there were people in previous generations who lived long and healthy lives, and there are people today whose lives are cut short by disease or who suffer for years with chronic ailments. But on average, the changes, researchers say, are huge.

Even more obvious differences surprise scientists by the extent of the change.

In 1900, 13 percent of people who were 65 could expect to see 85. Now, nearly half of 65-year-olds can expect to live that long.


People even look different today. American men, for example, are nearly 3 inches taller than they were 100 years ago and about 50 pounds heavier.

"We've been transformed," Dr. Fogel said.

What next? scientists ask. Today's middle-aged people are the first generation to grow up with childhood vaccines and with antibiotics. Early life for them was much better than it was for their parents, whose early life, in turn, was much better than it was for their parents.
....Scientists used to say that the reason people are living so long these days is that medicine is keeping them alive, though debilitated. But studies like one Dr. Fogel directs, using records of of Union Army veterans, have led many to rethink that notion.

The study involves a random sample of about 50,000 Union Army veterans. Dr. Fogel compared those men, the first generation to reach age 65 in the 20th century, with people born more recently.
The researchers focused on common diseases that are diagnosed in pretty much the same way now as they were in the last century. So they looked at ailments like arthritis, back pain and various kinds of heart disease that can be detected by listening to the heart.

Skip to next paragraph
The New Age
Older and Better
This is the first article in a series looking at the science of aging. Other articles will explore the genetics of aging, body image and frailty, and who ages well and why.

Multimedia

Video: The New Aging

Graphic: People Today Have Fewer Chronic Illnesses

Graphic: Longer Lives, Larger Bodies
Related
Living Large and Healthy, but How Long Can It Go On? (July 30, 2006) The first surprise was just how sick people were, and for how long.

Instead of inferring health from causes of death on death certificates, Dr. Fogel and his colleagues looked at health throughout life. They used the daily military history of each regiment in which each veteran served, which showed who was sick and for how long; census manuscripts; public health records; pension records; doctors' certificates showing the results of periodic examinations of the pensioners; and death certificates.

They discovered that almost everyone of the Civil War generation was plagued by life-sapping illnesses, suffering for decades. And these were not some unusual subset of American men - 65 percent of the male population ages 18 to 25 signed up to serve in the Union Army. "They presumably thought they were fit enough to serve," Dr. Fogel said.

Even teenagers were ill. Eighty percent of the male population ages 16 to 19 tried to sign up for the Union Army in 1861, but one out of six was rejected because he was deemed disabled.

And the Union Army was not very picky. "Incontinence of urine alone is not grounds for dismissal," said Dora Costa, an M.I.T. economist who works with Dr. Fogel, quoting from the regulations. A man who was blind in his right eye was disqualified from serving because that was his musket eye. But, Dr. Costa said, "blindness in the left eye was O.K."

After the war ended, as the veterans entered middle age, they were rarely spared chronic ailments.

"In the pension records there were descriptions of hernias as big as grapefruits," Dr. Costa said. "They were held in by a truss. These guys were continuing to work although they clearly were in a lot of pain. They just had to cope."

Eighty percent had heart disease by the time they were 60, compared with less than 50 percent today. By ages 65 to 74, 55 percent of the Union Army veterans had back problems. The comparable figure today is 35 percent.

The steadily improving health of recent generations shows up in population after population and country after country. But these findings raise a fundamental question, Dr. Costa said.

"The question is, O.K., there are these differences, and yes, they are big. But why?" she said.

"That's the million-dollar question," said David M. Cutler, a health economist at Harvard. "Maybe it's the trillion-dollar question. And there is not a received answer that everybody agrees with."
...Common chronic diseases - respiratory problems, valvular heart disease, arteriosclerosis, and joint and back problems - have been declining by about 0.7 percent a year since the turn of the 20th century. And when they do occur, they emerge at older ages and are less severe.

The reasons, she and others are finding, seem to have a lot to do with conditions early in life. Poor nutrition in early years is associated with short stature and lifelong ill health, and until recently, food was expensive in the United States and Europe

...Dr. Fogel and Dr. Costa looked at data on height and body mass index among Union Army veterans who were 65 and older in 1910 and veterans of World War II who were that age in the 1980's. Their data relating size to health led them to a prediction: the World War II veterans should have had 35 percent less chronic disease than the Union Army veterans. That, they said, is exactly what happened.

Skip to next paragraph
The New Age
Older and Better
This is the first article in a series looking at the science of aging. Other articles will explore the genetics of aging, body image and frailty, and who ages well and why.

Multimedia

Video: The New Aging

Graphic: People Today Have Fewer Chronic Illnesses

Graphic: Longer Lives, Larger Bodies
Related
Living Large and Healthy, but How Long Can It Go On? (July 30, 2006) They also found that diseases early in life left people predisposed to chronic illnesses when they grew older.

"Suppose you were a survivor of typhoid or tuberculosis," Dr. Fogel said. "What would that do to aging?" It turned out, he said, that the number of chronic illnesses at age 50 was much higher in that group. "Something is being undermined," he said. "Even the cancer rates were higher. Ye gods. We never would have suspected that."

Men who had respiratory infections or measles tended to develop chronic lung disease decades later. Malaria often led to arthritis. Men who survived rheumatic fever later developed diseased heart valves.

And stressful occupations added to the burden on the body.

People would work until they died or were so disabled that they could not continue, Dr. Fogel said. "In 1890, nearly everyone died on the job, and if they lived long enough not to die on the job, the average age of retirement was 85," he said. Now the average age is 62.

A century ago, most people were farmers, laborers or artisans who were exposed constantly to dust and fumes, Dr. Costa said. "I think there is just this long-term scarring."

Searching for Answers

Dr. Barker of Oregon Health and Science University is intrigued by the puzzle of who gets what illness, and when.

"Why do some people get heart disease and strokes and others don't?" he said. "It's very clear that current ideas about adult lifestyles go only a small way toward explaining this. You can say that it's genes if you want to cease thinking about it. Or you can say, When do people become vulnerable during development? Once you have that thought, it opens up a whole new world."

It is a world that obsesses Dr. Barker. Animal studies and data that he and others have been gathering have convinced him that health in middle age can be determined in fetal life and in the first two years after birth.

His work has been controversial. Some say that other factors, like poverty, may really be responsible. But Dr. Barker has also won over many scientists.

In one study, he examined health records of 8,760 people born in Helsinki from 1933 to 1944. Those whose birth weight was below about six and a half pounds and who were thin for the first two years of life, with a body mass index of 17 or less, had more heart disease as adults.

Another study, of 15,000 Swedish men and women born from 1915 to 1929, found the same thing. So did a study of babies born to women who were pregnant during the Dutch famine, known as the Hunger Winter, in World War II.

That famine lasted from November 1944 until May 1945. Women were eating as little as 400 to 800 calories a day, and a sixth of their babies died before birth or shortly afterward. But those who survived seemed fine, says Tessa J. Roseboom, an epidemiologist at the University of Amsterdam, who studied 2,254 people born at one Dutch hospital before, during and after the famine. Even their birth weights were normal.

But now those babies are reaching late middle age, and they are starting to get chronic diseases at a much higher rate than normal, Dr. Roseboom is finding. Their heart disease rate is almost triple that of people born before or after the famine. They have more diabetes. They have more kidney disease.

That is no surprise, Dr. Barker says. Much of the body is complete before birth, he explains, so a baby born to a pregnant woman who is starved or ill may start life with a predisposition to diseases that do not emerge until middle age.

The middle-aged people born during the famine also say they just do not feel well. Twice as many rated their health as poor, 10 percent compared with 5 percent of those born before or after the famine.

"We asked them whether they felt healthy," Dr. Roseboom said. "The answer to that tends to be highly predictive of future mortality."

But not everyone was convinced by what has come to be known as the Barker hypothesis, the idea that events very early in life affect health and well-being in middle and old age. One who looked askance was Douglas V. Almond, an economist at Columbia University.

Dr. Almond had a problem with the studies. They were not of randomly selected populations, he said, making it hard to know if other factors had contributed to the health effects. He wanted to see a rigorous test - a sickness or a deprivation that affected everyone, rich and poor, educated and not, and then went away. Then he realized there had been such an event: the 1918 flu.

The flu pandemic arrived in the United States in October 1918 and was gone by January 1919, afflicting a third of the pregnant women in the United States. What happened to their children? Dr. Almond asked.

He compared two populations: those whose mothers were pregnant during the flu epidemic and those whose mothers were pregnant shortly before or shortly after the epidemic.

To his astonishment, Dr. Almond found that the children of women who were pregnant during the influenza epidemic had more illness, especially diabetes, for which the incidence was 20 percent higher by age 61. They also got less education - they were 15 percent less likely to graduate from high school. The men's incomes were 5 percent to 7 percent lower, and the families were more likely to receive public assistance.

The effects, Dr. Almond said, occurred in whites and nonwhites, in rich and poor, in men and women. He convinced himself, he said, that there was something to the Barker hypothesis.

 

 

 



Posted by lewyn at 10:01 AM EDT
Updated: Monday, 31 July 2006 10:11 AM EDT
Sunday, 30 July 2006
unclear on the concept

Last night I was talking to someone who lives in my new [sprawl suburb]
neighborhood.

She says she sees people walking all the time.

I say "but I go on San Jose Blvd. (the neighborhood commercial street, photo
at http://atlantaphotos.fotopic.net/p29142204.html)  and I don't see many
people walking at all."

She says "but that's a busy street."

Gee, in a civilized city wouldn't you want to walk on the street where all
the businesses are? But that's what bad street design does to people.

Posted by lewyn at 3:15 AM EDT
Friday, 7 July 2006
what I've been reading (1-1 to 7-7)

 

1. Hirsch Chumash

2. Breyer, Active Liberty

3. Hoffman et. Al. My People’s Prayer Book: vol 7, Shabbat at Home

4. Hirsch, Nineteen Letters

5. Epstein, A Conspectus of the Public Lectures of Rabbi Joseph B. Solovetchik

6. Diamond, And I Will Dwell In Their Midst

7. Astren, Karaite Judaism and Historical Understanding

8. Leibowitz, Judaism, Human Values and the Jewish State

9. Daniel Schiff, Abortion in Judaism

10. Robert Bruggeman, Sprawl

11. Crooks/Arsenault, Jacksonville

12. Bartley, Keeping The Faith: Race, Politics and Social Development in Jacksonville, 1940-70

13. Soloveitchik, Festival of Freedom

14. Roth, The Halakhic Process

15. Fishkoff, The Rebbe’s Army

16. Breuer, Modernity within Tradition

17. Ginzberg, Students, Scholars and Saints

18. Steinsaltz, We Jews

19. Grant, The Jews in the Roman World

20. Kranzler, Hasidic Williamsburg

21. Solomon, Global City Blues

22. Sacks, Arguments for the Sake of Heaven

23. Ortiz, Eva Peron

24. Kellner, Must A Jew Believe Anything?

25. Cowley, What Ifs of American History

26. Feagin, Free Enterprise City

27. Lieberman, Hellenism in Jewish Palestine

28. Queenan, Queenan Country


Posted by lewyn at 9:27 AM EDT
Thursday, 6 July 2006
Kotkin rides again

Kotkin had another weird piece on Newsweek that I thought deserved a good whack. My responses are in italics.

Building up the Burbs
The suburbs are the world's future because most people love them, so why fight the sprawl?
By Joel Kotkin
Newsweek International

July 3-10, 2006 issue - Sorry, city sophisticates, but the metropolis of the future may prove far less intensely urban than you hope. For all the focus on trendy downtowns and skyscrapers, the real growth in jobs and population is likely to take place on the periphery. The new urbanism, built around downtown revival and beloved by the celebrated starchitects, will cede pride of place to the "new suburbanism." And not only in the land of free-ranging suburbs, America.

Me:The claim that new urbanism is "built around downtown revival" is a misrepresentation.  There are quite a few new urbanist developments in small towns and suburbs (such as Seaside and Celebration).  In fact, some pro-urban commentators (Alex Marshall comes to mind) denounce New Urbanists for being willing to build in suburbia. 

Very clever of Kotkin to use the term "starchitects" to make New Urbanists seem out of touch with reality.  When you can't win the argument, fight with epithets.

 

In contrast to the powers who fight "sprawl," advocates of the new suburbanism focus on ways to make the periphery work better.

Me: again, see Celebration (and for that matter, other New Urbanist developments like Kentlands and King Farm), all New Urbanist attempts to make the periphery work better.  

It's about bringing business and jobs, not just bedrooms, to the outer rings, and reviving main streets in smaller towns and cities, not just in major urban centers. In some senses, the new suburbanism seeks to recover the ideals of early advocates of decentralization such as the early-20th-century British visionary Ebenezer Howard, who proposed dispersing populations into largely self-sustaining "garden cities."

Me: There you go again.  We've tried decentralizing jobs for 50 years, and all we've gotten for it are commutes that get longer ... and longer ... and longer.  Even though the average commute has increased only slightly, the number of 90-minute commutes has nearly doubled since 1990.  (See  http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_08/b3921127.htm ) What Kotkin fails to realize is that if the boss moves to northern suburb X and then moves the company along with him, that's great for the boss.  And its even great for the other workers who live in northern suburb X.  But the workers who live in the southern suburbs are worse off than if they worked downtown, because they have to travel twice as many miles.  And the workers who live in the city might as well be dead.  The major reason they moved to the city may well have been to be close to work and have a less car-centered life.  And instead they have to buy a car and drag themselves to northern suburb X every day.  And if they are too poor to afford a car, they have a 90 minute commute on two or three buses if the job is on a bus line, and are out of work if its not.

Correcting the problems of suburbia is an international imperative. Almost everywhere, cities tend toward sprawl, more like much-maligned Los Angeles than like Manhattan, the urbanist's heaven.

Me: Define "tend."  In Tokyo, 70% of the commuters get to work through transit, biking or riding - in Stockholm, 69%, in Munich 62%.  I don't see a tendency towards sprawl there.

This pattern owes largely to the preference of the middle and working classes for privacy and space—choices ridiculed as boringly bourgeois by urban theorists. "L.A. is the realization of every immigrant's dream—the vassal's dream of his own castle," observed the Italian-born, Los Angeles-based urbanist Edgardo Contini in the 1960s. "Europeans who come here are delighted by our suburbs. Not to live in an apartment! It is a universal aspiration to own your own home." Today, surveys find that 70 to 80 percent of Americans prefer a single-family home and only 15 percent, an apartment in a dense urban area.

Me:  Ah, yes, the false dichotomy, between single-family homes (which, in Kotkinland, must always be in suburbs) and apartments (which must always be in the dense urban area).  Most people of course prefer owning to renting, given the American dream of getting rich off real estate investments.   But another survey asked a different question (this time of Houston voters):

Would you personally prefer to live in a suburban setting with larger lots and houses and a longer drive to work and most other places, or in a more central urban setting with smaller homes on smaller lots, and be able to take transit or walk to work and other places? 

55 percent preferred the more urban setting.  (See http://www.blueprinthouston.org/documents/blueprint_survey_results.doc ).  If you ask the question a little differently you get a very different answer!

you get a different result.  For example: a survey in Houston asked

These preferences are increasingly universal. In Europe, Canada, Japan and Australia, growth is spilling out of urban centers, even in places that boast extensive mass-transit systems. In London, the center has been losing population since at least the 1960s.

Me: Wrong.  Inner London lost population for many decades - but like New York City, it has been regaining population for the past two decades.   See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inner_London

In fact, Inner London is doing slightly better than outer London.  Inner London's population has increased from 2.5 million to 2.9 million since 1980 (about a 15% increase)- the population of Greater London as a whole increased from 6.8 million to 7.5 million (about 10%).  See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_London )

 As H. G. Wells predicted a century ago, much of southern and central England is a vast suburb of the capital. In Frankfurt, the suburbs now reach out as far as 80 kilometers and in Paris, the center is losing about 1 percent of its population annually as businesses and the middle class move out past the heavily immigrant banlieues. In Japan, too, high prices and congestion have propelled an exodus: between 1970 and 1995, 10 million people settled in suburbs around the main cities of the Kanto Plain, including Tokyo, Yokohama and Kawasaki.

Me: Wrong again. Tokyo is following the same path as London- some depopulation, but increased population in the last couple of Censuses. http://www.chijihon.metro.tokyo.jp/english/PROFILE/OVERVIEW/overview3.htm

And the repopulation of Tokyo and London is a lot more noteworthy than population increases in the USA.  The USA has had about 17% growth since 1990 (from 250 million people to 293 million) - so with a tide rising that fast a lot of votes will be lifted.  Due to plunging birth rates, Japan's population grew by about 3% (from 123 million to 127 million) and Britian's by about 5% (from 57 million to 60 million). 

The impulse of many authorities is to try to stop sprawl and the problems (particularly overdependence on cars and malls) it brings. Planners in cities from Sydney to Portland, Oregon, have imposed "anti-sprawl" strategies that attempt to force people back into dense concentrations. Sydney's strict land-use regime, now under attack from both the political left and right, is helping drive up home prices—and drive young families to less highly regulated Australian cities. In Portland, a similar campaign is pushing development beyond the reach of city planners, across the Columbia River to Washington state.

Me: Sydney's population has increased by about 20% since 1991 (from 3.5 million to 4.2).  See http://www.citypopulation.de/Australia-Agglo.html  

I don't know my way around Australian census data well enough to focus on "young families" specifically.  But given Kotkin's error-filled discussion so far I doubt he knows more than I do. As far as Portland goes, the city of Portland's population grew from 368,000 in 1980 to 533,000 in 2004- not exactly a place where development is being "pushed" to suburbia.  Does Mr. Kotkin think Detroit or St. Louis (both of which have lost over 20% of their 1980 population) are more successful?


In contrast, the new suburbanism seeks not to fight market forces, but to address the problems. Many of the brightest ideas can be found in planned communities, often modeled on Howard's garden cities, such as Valencia, California; the Woodlands, outside Houston; Reston, Virginia, or Marne La Vallée outside Paris. They are not mere bedroom communities with malls but boast well-developed business parks, town centers and, in some cases, notably the Woodlands, a large amount of well-preserved, natural open space. Other successful models are being developed in older suburbs. Fullerton, California, and Naperville in Greater Chicago have revived abandoned core districts as centers for entertainment, dining and community events. Naperville has also developed a lovely riverside park that attracts strollers, hikers and bicyclists.

Such patterns of enlightened suburban development could be applied around the world.

Me: The only one of these places that I've been to is Reston. It struck me as a not very well done version of the New Urbanist developments that Kotkin sneers at- a nice little pedestrian-friendly shopping area ringed by a moat of sprawl streets that a pedestrian would be highly unwise to cross.  And outside the shopping area its the usual sprawlscape isn't it?

I do think Kotkin actually has a point here.  It is important to improve suburbia; but it takes more than just a shopping district to get it right.

 Many nations still get it wrong, building anonymous tracts 30 to 50 kilometers from the closest jobs or town center, mainly as bedroom communities for a big city. A leading example of enforced centralization is Seoul, where the average density of more than 14,000 people per square kilometer is three times London's, five times L.A.'s and 10 times that of growing U.S. cities like Houston or Phoenix.

Me: I don't even know what he's saying here.  Is Seoul an example of "anonymous tracts 30 or 50 miles out" or an example of "enforced centralization."?

Greater Seoul, in short, is almost hostile to human life, a widening ocean of high-rises with a shrinking number of traditional Korean houses.

Me: If its so hostile to human life, how come 10 million people live there? 

 Suh Yong-bu, a Korean expert in business demographics, notes that high housing prices and cramped spaces have helped send Korea's birthrate into free-fall, down 30 percent since 1993;

much the same problem is felt in other ultra dense urban societies like Japan and China. "The same patterns can be found throughout Asia," notes demographer Phil Longman, author of the "The Empty Cradle," a study of world population trends. "Once everyone is forced into a small city place, there's literally no room left for kids."

Me: Let's run some numbers (from our friendly US Statistical Abstract, not any fancy shmancy foreign web sites):

                 Population density      Birth rate per 1000

                 per square mile 

South Korea    1277                     10.1

Japan              835                     9.6

UK                  646                     10.9 

Germany          609                      8.5

Italy               511                       9.1

China              361                      13.0

France             287                      12.3

Spain             209                        10.1

The above table compares Kotkin's unholy trinity (China, South Korea, Japan) to five affluent European countries. 

South Korea, the only nation that really is much denser than the rest, has a birthrate that is higher than two of the European countries, the same as Spain, and only slightly lower than Britian and those of France).  Japan is also ahead of two of the five. 

China has a somewhat higher birth rate- but then again, China isn't even "ultra dense", so here Kotkin flat-out doesn't know what he is talking about.  Maybe birth rates have more to do with affluence than density.

Certainly, the history of the United States bears this out.  American cities were much denser 60 years ago; St. Louis, for example, had more than twice its current population in 1950.  But were birth rates really lower?

Um, no.  The American birth rate plunged from 24 per 1000 in 1950 to 14 per 1000 today (Statistical Abstract, Table 72).

Now it may be that there is a birth rate problem in big, dense cities.  But Kotkin sure hasn't made the case.

We now see the beginnings of a battle over the future of the suburbs. In Britain—where suburbs are home to roughly half the population, but the bias of most planners and politicians is still toward the city—there's a growing movement to bring arts, from galleries to symphonies, to smaller villages. The increasingly high cost of city living may help pro-suburban forces from Britain to Japan, where the government also fights sprawl with limits on megamalls and other measures.

Perhaps the ultimate test will come in the fastest-growing major economies, India and China. Mall developers like Aeon Co. Ltd. (the same people now being told to back off in Japan) are rushing to build suburban homes and shopping areas in India, outside Mumbai, and in China outside Shanghai, Guangzhou, Tianjin and Beijing. Many of them are following American, Australian or Canadian models. There's one Chinese development named "Orange County," named after the famous southern California suburb. To hip urbanites, of course, that will sound like a bad joke. To the world's aspiring majority, it sounds like a bright promise.

Me: First of all, how does Kotkin know what the "world's aspiring majority" thinks?  Has he polled the hundreds of millions of Chinese and Indians?  And doesn't the existence of these suburban developments have something to do with the fact that governments are essentially subsidizing these developments with highways?  (See http://www.china.org.cn/english/2004/Jun/99324.htm - Chinese highway system has doubled since 1980; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Highways_Development_Project - India planning major highway expansion).


Posted by lewyn at 4:18 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, 6 July 2006 10:17 PM EDT
interesting Brookings study on decline of middle-class neighborhoods
That can be found here.

Brief summary: cities have fewer middle-class neighborhoods, many more rich and poor ones.

 Most surprising facts (on p. 10): though most cities gained both rich and poor, most cities gained a lot more poor than rich since 1970.

For example, Atlanta experienced a 22% increase in the number of very low income (50% of regional median or less) areas, and only a 9% increase in high income areas (150% or more of regional median).  And Atlanta was the most gentrifying city (of twelve listed) in this respect.  By contrast, Baltimore experienced a 26% increase in very low income areas, and only a 1% increase in rich areas.

Conclusion: the extent of gentrification is clearly overrated.  For every neighborhood that has "flipped" towards wealth, two or more have "flipped" towards poverty.

I realize that these numbers would look a little different if they were calculated only on a 1990-2000 basis (when cities generally did better than in previous decades). Nevertheless, the basic concern underlying complaints about gentrification (that cities are running out of poor neighborhoods) is just rubbish. Most cities have far a more bounteous supply of poor neighborhoods than they did before 1970, let alone before 1950.

Posted by lewyn at 3:07 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, 6 July 2006 3:53 PM EDT
well put

“there is so much bad in the best of us, and so much good in the worst of us, that it hardly pays for any of us to talk about the rest of us.”

From Arnold Goodman, one of my former rabbis


Posted by lewyn at 3:05 PM EDT
Tuesday, 27 June 2006
busyness and sprawl and crime

(Cross-posted to property professors' blog, see Barros blog in list of blogs to left) 

In my experience, most people who discuss the relationship between urban decay and crime treat the relationship as a one-way street: city crime causes people to leave cities, period.

But in Nicole Garnett's review of Bruegmann's and Joel Kotkin's new books (posted on SSRN, and referred to in a post on this blog a few days ago) she suggests that lower urban densities might induce crime by making cities less "busy" and more deserted- and thus that (to oversimplify the point into a sound bite) that sprawl might even cause crime in a sense.

I'm not sure there's any way to prove or disprove the theory- but if the argument is verifiable, it certainly leads to some interesting results.

Let's go back to the 1930s, when the FHA started to bribe people to move to suburbs with mortgage subsidies and all levels of government were beginning to make suburban commutes easier through road-building.  A few people leave the (now safe) cities.  Over the next few decades, a few city neighborhoods here and there become less busy and thus more dangerous, and the most risk-averse people start to trickle out.  This causes neighborhoods to become even less busy and more dangerous which cause even more people start to trickle out, and eventually we have a vicious circle on our hands- a vicious circle that spirals out of control in the 60s (when for reasons unrelated to urban policy, crime increases everywhere in the United States).

And depopulation causes other problems that independently might increase crime.  A city without a large middle and upper class might support more lenient policing policies which in turn might lead to more crime - another respect in which sprawl (or more accurately, the type of sprawl that depopulates cities, as opposed to sprawl in growing regions where there is enough population growth to build up city and suburb alike) might increase urban crime.

Two caveats:

1.  All of this is pretty speculative.

2.  I think it is easy (but mistaken) to assume that crime is a problem that can be resolved solely through more enlightened city government.  Even if you assume for the sake of argument that the criminal justice system has a major effect on crime (as opposed to, say, liberal morality, economic inequality, or family breakdown), criminal justice is more of a federal and state responsibility than a local responsibility.  Cities may hire police, but states decide whether to build enough prisons to house the people arrested by city police, and both federal and state courts set the rules that decide how crowded those prisons can be and how easy it is to convict people arrested by the city police.   


Posted by lewyn at 3:19 PM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 27 June 2006 3:20 PM EDT
Monday, 26 June 2006
more on Bruegmann- the universality of sprawl

(Cross-posted to property professors' blog, see Barros blog in list of blogs to left)

After a few weeks of being out of town, I got back to Bruegmann. One of his most widely publicized points is the universality of sprawl- the idea that because some rich people had country estates one or two or twenty centuries ago, the status quo is just fine. This argument rests on the assumption that if some sprawl is OK, lots of sprawl is even better.

But this kind of argument overlooks
important differences of degree: every city may have some sprawling development, but not all cities are identical.

In the most
sprawl-bound cities and metropolitan areas, most residents will be unable to get to
classes, jobs or shops without driving, and carless residents are thus virtually helpless. For example, in Oklahoma City, a city with over
500,000 people, buses do not run at night or on Sundays, and thus the 8.2% of households without cars are essentially frozen out of jobs that require evening work.

And in cities planned around the automobile, streets are often so wide, and traffic moves so
quickly, that the basic human act of walking outdoors becomes dangerous. Even
residential streets are often dangerous for pedestrians due to the absence of sidewalks.

In such cities, most people need a car to function.

By contrast, less sprawling regions give residents a variety of transportation options. For example, the majority of New York City residents get to work via public transit, and the city has prosperous neighborhoods where most households own no cars. In metropolitan New York, transportation choice is not limited to city residents: New York City has some highly automobile-dependent suburbs, but also has two suburbs where a majority of commuters use public transit regularly. In other words, New York, to a greater extent than other American cities, accommodates both consumer preferences for automobile-dependent sprawl and consumer preferences for less automobile-dependent lives.

So how much sprawl is too much? And how do you define "too much" sprawl?

It seems to me that if you need a car to live in a place, that place has too much sprawl- because at that point sprawl becomes not a result of consumer choice but a burden on consumer choice, freezing people who (for one reason or another) can't drive out of civic life, and imposing huge costs on people who can. In essence, the costs of car ownership in a place like Oklahoma City are a tax just like the sales or income tax (at least to the extent those costs are a result of government policy which encourages car depedence, an issue that I have discussed in numerous articles, some of which can be found here.)


Posted by lewyn at 5:13 PM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 27 June 2006 3:21 PM EDT
Friday, 9 June 2006
The common pro-sprawl argument that Europe is "just like us"
I am starting to draft a book review of Robert Bruegmann's book on sprawl, and I notice that he's relying on one argument that I've seen before but haven't really researched in the past: the idea that Europe is sprawling just like us, so therefore sprawl must be inevitable and universal.

This argument is not completely without factual support: to be fair, auto ownership and use has grown in Europe, and auto commutes as a percentage of all trips has increased.

But reality is more complex than this simple picture suggests.

First of all, between 1991 and 2002 (the last date for which I could find figures) the automobile share of transportation has increased- but only modestly, from 83.4% to 84.9%. In some countries, the auto market share has held steady or decreased. In Great Britian, the auto market share held steady at about 88%. In Denmark, the auto market share decreased from 82.3% to 80.3%. In Austria, the auto market share decreased from 79.5% to 76.3%.

Moreover, transit ridership has increased. Between 1995 and 2003, regional streetcar and subway ridership increased by 12.5% and bus ridership by 3.7%. (See Table 3.3.2 of This European Union report. )

What about central city decline, another index of sprawl? In Europe, as in America, many cities lost population in the late 20th century. But in Europe, as in America, many core cities are rebounding. According to this report, about half of European cities regained population in the late 1990s.

If "sprawl" means the existence of some development everywhere that resembles American sprawl, yes, sprawl exists everywhere. But if sprawl means the fate of Detroit or Cleveland in the 1ate 20th century- nosediving transit ridership, dying inner cores, the whole ball of wax, sprawl isn't universal at all.

Posted by lewyn at 2:27 PM EDT
Updated: Friday, 9 June 2006 3:01 PM EDT
Tuesday, 16 May 2006
Site






Posted by lewyn at 11:43 AM EDT
Friday, 12 May 2006
One of my old speeches reposted (given at National Building Museum in 2001)
On sprawl as a conservative issue.

Posted by lewyn at 12:56 PM EDT
Blogging from EDRA conference
Last week, I attended the EDRA conference in Atlanta and heard a lot of interesting presentations. To name a few:

*Ryan Gravel, of the Atlanta Belt Line project, discussed the Belt Line: a light rail line which will encircle the city. It will be more like a trolley (stopping every half mile or so) than like a subway- less expensive, less elaborate stations. He thinks the first station will be built by 2015 or so. After listening to him, I thought that coming home to Atlanta didn't seem like such a bad idea. One reason it is likely to happen is that this sort of small project is much easier to finance than a subway: the city could, through the miracle of tax increment financing, take property tax revenue from the areas served by the Belt Line and use that revenue on the Belt Line.

*A bunch of architectural professors talked about crime and the built environment- specifically addressing issues like whether cul-de-sacs or grid streets affect crime, etc. Bottom line: studies conflict. Linda Nubani of the American University in Dubai suggested that more "connected" areas were just as safe as they were stable, homeowner-oriented areas, but NOT if they were marginal, renter-dominated areas. So maybe cul-de-sacs reduce crime in slums but not in suburbs- an inversion of the actual urban landscape.

*Jim Durrett (formerly of ULI, now of the Livable Communities Coalition) spoke about the growth of New Urbanist communities in metro Atlanta, and discussed how zoning impedes their growth. For example, in Forsyth County a zoning variance is necessary to put trees, rather than a lawn, in front of a house.

*Robert Bullard of Clark Atlanta spoke about environmental justice, and pointed out how the poor suffer from the absence of decent supermarkets in urban areas. (Though of course, when Wal-Mart wants to build something in a poor area, the unions are up in arms, claiming that everyone is better off if the poor are limited to mom-and-pop convenience stores).

*Jude LeBlanc and Michael Gamble of Georgia Tech spoke about how to remodel Buford Highway, a heavily immigrant-oriented street in Atlanta that is notoriously hostile to pedestrians. Even though the street has some of Atlanta's most interesting restaurants (esp. Asian restaurants) it is seven lanes wide and often has no sidewalks. (A few photos of Buford Highway are on my Atlanta photo site.

Sidewalks are already being built on Buford Highway. But LeBlanc and Gamble suggested a lot more, including: (a) medians so pedestrians could have a refuge if they could not cross all seven lanes in time, (b) eliminating setback and parking requirements so buildings could front the desk and pedestrians would not have to trudge through both parking lots and the seven lanes, (c) allowing long, narrow buildings and arcades to bridge the gap between sidewalks and existing shops. Also, if sidewalks and medians were wider, the street could be reduced to the four or five lanes that are typical of most Atlanta arterials. (The reason Buford Highway is so wide is that it was apparently built before I-85 and was thus expected to be the region's major site for northeast-bound traffic).

*A speech about Serenbe, an attempt to adapt some New Urbanist principles to a rural setting. Serenbe's developers are creating four mini-towns (about 100 houses each, I think) all within walking distance of each other and of small-scale shopping- kind of the opposite end of the size spectrum from gigantic projects like Atlantic Station (which I saw on an EDRA tour of New Urbanism in Atlanta, as well as the much smaller Glenwood Park project).

And I gave a speech myself, about This article. (to be published in modified form in the Quinnipiac Law Review).


Posted by lewyn at 12:20 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 13 May 2006 11:00 PM EDT
Thursday, 16 March 2006
I won the (Latke-Hamantash) debate
A description of the Latke-Hamantash debate (which at least a couple of people seem to think I won, if you scroll down to the bottom!)

Posted by lewyn at 4:39 PM EST
Monday, 13 March 2006
My latest op-ed
At Planetizen:

A Libertarian Smart Growth Agenda

"Smart Growth" is often a dirty word among supporters of smaller government. For example, the Heritage Foundation's Edwin Feulner titled a recent article: "Protecting Your Property From Stupid 'Smart Growth' Socialists."

But if "smart growth" means support for more walkable, less vehicle-dependent communities, smart growth supporters and the property rights movement share a common cause on many issues relating to land use and transportation.

In particular, both movements have excellent reason to oppose numerous elements of American zoning law.

For example, both sprawl critics and libertarians should oppose government regulations that create a separate zone for every human activity: apartments only in zone A, shops only in zone B, offices only in zone C. Under this system of "single-use zoning", many Americans cannot live within walking distance of shops or offices.

Single-use zoning limits a landowner's right to choose how his or her land is developed, and requires landowners to get government permission every time they wish to shift their land from one use to another. Thus, single-use zoning both spreads sprawl and restricts property rights.

Given the widespread view that single-family homes are incompatible with other land uses, a complete elimination of zoning may not be politically practical or even desirable. But both landowners and pedestrians would have more freedom if landowners were allowed to mix rental housing, commerce and retail "by right" (i.e. without having to ask government for a rezoning).

Conventional zoning also requires homes and apartments to gobble up large amounts of land. These "minimum lot size" requirements effectively choke off the supply not just of walkable neighborhoods, but of all housing, because if each residence consumes large amounts of land, fewer residences can be placed within walking distance of shops, jobs, transit stops, or anything else. A smart zoning policy would deregulate density and thus give Americans more choices for places to live.

Property rights advocates should also support deregulating density, because density restrictions limit a landowner's right to use and profit from land as he/she sees fit.

Of course, the most thoughtful libertarians are already aware of the harm done by single-use restrictions and anti-density zoning. But even more obscure government regulations such as parking and street design rules also restrict the options of both home seekers and property owners.

Municipal governments often require owners of apartments and commercial buildings to provide renters, employees, and visitors with huge amounts of parking. For example, the city of Houston requires apartment buildings to require 1.25 parking spaces for each studio apartment -- even though 17 percent of Houston’s rental households do not own a single car!

The impact of minimum parking requirements upon property rights is obvious: if a landowner must devote X feet of land to parking, that landowner cannot use those X feet of land for more profitable purposes such as apartments or offices. So supporters of limited government have an excellent motive to support parking deregulation.

The quality of life implications of parking regulations are less obvious. However, minimum parking requirements actually make cities more car-dependent by:

reducing the amount of housing that can be built on a given parcel of land, thus reducing the number of people who can walk to nearby destinations.
encouraging landowners to place parking lots in front of the street, thus creating a "strip mall" effect. This means that to reach shops, offices, and apartments, pedestrians must walk through and past visually unappealing parking lots. And when pedestrians are surrounded by seas of parking, they have less to look at and feel more isolated.
forcing landowners to create an artificial glut of parking, thus bringing the price of parking down to zero. Government-mandated free parking encourages people to drive, thus increasing the very traffic congestion that parking requirements were designed to prevent.
Street design regulations may also seem noncontroversial at first glance -- and yet reduce both walkability and property rights. Over the years, American cities have tended to require bigger and wider streets on longer blocks. Wider streets are unpleasant and perhaps even dangerous for pedestrians, because they increase the amount of time a pedestrian must spend walking through fast traffic. Moreover, every foot of land used for streets is a foot that cannot be used for housing or commerce. Thus, wide streets also reduce density and thus reduce walkability as well.

Property rights advocates also have good reason to favor skinnier streets, because every foot a city takes to build a new street is a foot taken from property owners. Even if just compensation is paid, a property owner has still lost land to government that he or she would not have lost if a narrower street had been built. How skinny can streets be? The SmartCode (a walkability-oriented model zoning code) proposes streets with as few as 10 feet of pavement in residential areas and as few as 16 feet in mixed-use areas; by contrast, modern residential streets are often over 30 feet wide, and arterial streets are sometimes over 70 feet wide.

Government spending also causes problems for libertarians and smart growthers alike. Every year, government at all levels spends over $100 billion on highways -- highways that, by facilitating development on the suburban fringe, shifts development away from older, often more walkable, communities. Every dollar spent on new and wider highways is a dollar taken from taxpayers, and every inch of right-of-way that Big Brother takes is an inch taken from landowners. So advocates of limited government have excellent reasons to favor limited highway spending.

In sum, there is good reason why property rights advocates should oppose the anti-pedestrian zoning, minimum parking requirements, and wider streets and highways that smart growth advocates already deplore. In these situations, increased government regulation on land use, which libertarians rally against, also leads to less environmentally and pedestrian friendly community design. Admittedly, sprawl critics and libertarians may have to agree to disagree about whether government should do anything to restrict new development in outer suburbs, and about the extent to which government should support public transit.

But anti-pedestrian zoning is far more common than anti-sprawl zoning: A 2001 Urban Land Institute study revealed that 85.4% of developers agree that the supply of alternatives to conventional, low-density, automobile-oriented, suburban development was inadequate to meet market demand, and 78.2% of developers identified government regulation as a significant barrier to such development. What do these statistics mean? That more often than not, the same land use policies that can increase Americans' land use, housing, and transportation choices will also expand their property rights.


Posted by lewyn at 4:58 PM EST
Tuesday, 7 March 2006
speech
I spoke at a local Latke-Hamantash debate tonight. Here's a transcript of my speech (minus the props and the ad-libs, so of course not as funny as my real speech):

I would like to suggest that hamantashen are better for one simple reason: hamantashen taste good. Hamantashen are sweet. They taste like sugar or jelly or whatever the heck is in them. Latkes typically taste like potatoes, which is to say they taste like nothing at all. Latkes are one of these foods you eat because it is a holiday, and that’s pretty much it. Tonight, I would like to convince you that the sweet jellyishness goodness of Hamantashen is precisely what makes them the superior food, both from a Jewish standpoint and from the standpoint of American patriotism.

Let's study some Torah. Psalm 34:9 (according to the JPS translation) says “Taste and see how good Hashem is.” In other words, God tastes good.

So let's examine the facts: hamantashen taste good. God tastes good. Do I need to connect the dots?

By contrast, latkes are potatos- bland, boring. Where in the Torah is it said that God is boring? Where in the Torah or the Tanach is it said that God is bland? Nowhere!

And later traditions reinforce the importance of sweetness and tastiness. At Rosh Hashanah, we pray for a good and sweet new year- not for a bland and potatolike new year.

But what about Hanukah? What about the glorious tradition of Latkes? Let’s examine the facts. In Israel, Eretz Yisrael, the Holy Land, the custom is not to eat latkes. The custom is to eat sweet things - jelly donuts, if you must know, just fried hamtashen. This latkes stuff comes from the potato-infested culture of eastern Europe, part of the Tzar’s evil conspiracies to make Jews assimilate into the potato-infested soil of Mother Russia.

So to endorse latkes over hamantashen is to endorse the exile over Israel, and by implication an attack not just on Zionism, but on the Messianic dream of ultimate redemption in the Holy Land- a dream so enshrined in Halacha that Rambam lists it as one of this 13 principles. It logically follows, then, that to endorse latkes, the snack of the exile, over sweets is to oppose Israel and to support the anti-Zionist agenda of Hamas and bin Laden.

In fact there are rumors (or if there weren’t before, there are now) that our gallant soliders in Iraq have discovered, while rifling through the files of al Qaeda terrorists in Iraq, that suicide bombers are promised 72 potatoes if they blow up a Jew. So whose side are you on: Israel’s or bin Laden’s? Sweets or potatos? Now is a time of choosing.

Now I realize there is a counterargument: that hamantashen are somehow un-Jewish because they have three corners: just like the three cornered hat of Haman, just like the Holy Trinity of Christianity. But I meet that trinity with our own trinity- God, Torah and Israel. Besides, we’re eating the trinity not worshipping it; eating Haman, not appeasing him.

Which brings me to another Trinity that even the non-Jews in this audience can endorse: the Red, White and Blue of the United States of America. Americans are notorious for their love of serious sweet things: hershey bars, ice cream, and yes- hamantashen. By contrast, the British are notorious for their love of bland food like potatoes - and the British, as you may recall, is what this country revolted from and got away from. To quote John Adams in the movie 1776,

No more potatos tasting like mittens
We say to hell with Great Britain!
Hamantashen belong to us!

And its not just the red, white and blue that implicate hamantashen, but the color of our most unique characteristic, our most serious problem: race. Just as America is a mix of white and black and other colors, hamantashen are a mix of vaguely whitish flour and black and other colors (depending on which filling you put in them). Latkes seek to deny our diversity- they are a kind of sickly orange that doesn’t resemble any American, except maybe Strom Thurmond’s hair in its declining years. Hamantashen embrace it, coming in a variety of colors. I believe Martin Luther King put it best when he said:
I have a dream that one day, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of hamantashen.

Hamantash embody the diversity and sweetness of the American experience. Latkes are just nothingness- all one big potato, no diversity, no sweetness. Living with latkes is like living in the gray tyranny of communism, which incidentally began in the potato-infested culture of Russia. In response to this totalitarian challenge I say:

From the black of poppy seeds
To the red of strawberry,
And all the Purim parties
to sea to shining sea,
from the joy of hamantashen, even
apricots and almond paste,
There’s pride in every American heart
and its time we stand and say:

I’m proud to be American
where at least I know I’m free
And I won’t forget Mordecai and Esther
for giving us pastries,
And I’ll gladly stand up
next to you

and eat hamantashen today
Because that’s what makes me love this land
God bless the USA




Posted by lewyn at 9:45 PM EST
Tuesday, 7 February 2006
Dvar Torah- Beshalach
"Phaorah's chariots and army He threw in the sea" (Exodus 15:4)

“Israel is laid waste, its seed is not.”
Merneptah stele (Merneptah may have been the Pharoah of the Exodus).

How to explain the inconsistency:*

(Merneptah, king of Egypt, with soldiers)

Soldier: We got a lot of dead Egyptians in the water, and the slaves escaped. Your majesty, how are we going to explain this to the folks back home?

Merneptah: O ye of little faith! As far as the folks back home were concerned, this will be a glorious victory!

Soldier: How so?

Merneptah: Do you see any Hebrew slaves?

Soldiers: Um, no.

Merneptah: Do you think anyone back home will see any Hebrew slaves?

Soldiers: Um, no.

Merneptah: So as far as they are concerned, the slaves might as well be dead. So we can just say they are dead!

Soldier: After all, there are not going to be any Hebrews around to contradict us!

Another soldier: OK, we lost a few more men than we expected, but this happens in war all the time.

Merneptah: So this is our story: the slaves had the bad manners to fight back, so we had to kill them. We lost a few of ours, but ultimately we laid waste to Israel. Hurrah for victory!

Soldiers: Hurrah!

(Indirect thanks to George Aiken.)

*Rabbi Hertz, author of the Hertz Chumash, has an alternative explanation: the stele refers to "Jezreel" rather than "Israel."

And Cecil B. DeMille says that Ramses II, Merneptah's father, was the Pharoah of the Exodus, in which case the Merneptah stele is obviously unrelated to the Exodus even if it discusses a battle against Israel.

Posted by lewyn at 9:59 AM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 7 February 2006 10:00 AM EST
Saturday, 21 January 2006
Art imitates Torah
Proverbs 31:

A Woman of Valor, who can find? She is more precious than corals.
Her husband places his trust in her and profits only thereby.
She brings him good, not harm, all the days of her life.
She seeks out wool and flax and cheerfully does the work of her hands.

She is like the trading ships, bringing food from afar.
She gets up while it is still night to provide food for her household, and a fair share for her staff.
She considers a field and purchases it, and plants a vineyard with the fruit of her labors.
She invests herself with strength and makes her arms powerful.

She senses that her trade is profitable; her light does not go out at night.
She stretches out her hands to the distaff and her palms hold the spindle.
She opens her hands to the poor and reaches out her hands to the needy.
She has no fear of the snow for her household, for all her household is dressed in fine clothing.

She makes her own bedspreads; her clothing is of fine linen and luxurious cloth.
Her husband is known at the gates, where he sits with the elders of the land.
She makes and sells linens; she supplies the merchants with sashes.
She is robed in strength and dignity, and she smiles at the future.

She opens her mouth with wisdom and a lesson of kindness is on her tongue.
She looks after the conduct of her household and never tastes the bread of laziness.
Her children rise up and make her happy; her husband praises her:
"Many women have excelled, but you excell them all!"


From Hello, Dolly:


Vandergelder
It takes a woman all powdered and pink
To joyously clean out the drain in the sink
And it takes an angel with long golden lashes
And soft dresden fingers
For dumping the ashes

Cornelius, Barnaby, & 2 customers
Yes it takes a woman
A dainty woman
A sweetheart, a mistress, a wife
O yes it takes a woman
A fragile woman
To bring you the sweet things in life

Vandergelder
The frail young maiden who's constantly there
For washing and blueing and shoeing the mare
And it takes a female for setting the table
And weaving the Guernsey
And cleaning the stable

All
O yes it takes a woman
A dainty woman
A sweetheart, a mistress, a wife
O yes it takes a woman
A fragile woman
To bring you the sweet things in life
And so she'll work until infinity
Three cheers for femininity
Rah Rah Rah...Rah Rah Rah
F. E. M. - I. T. Y

Vandergelder
F. E. M. I. T. Y?
Get out of here!
And in the winter she'll shovel the ice
And lovingly set out the traps for the mice
She's a joy and treasure for practically speaking
To whom can you turn when the plumbing is leaking?

Vandergelder, Cornelius, & Barnaby
To That dainty woman
That fragile woman
That sweetheart, that mistress, that wife
O yes it takes a woman

Vandergelder
A husky woman
Vandergelder, Cornelius, & Barnaby
To bring you the sweet things in life!

All
O Yes it takes a woman
A dainty woman
A sweetheart, a mistress, a wife
O yes it takes a woman, a fragile woman
To bring you the sweet things in life.

Posted by lewyn at 8:48 PM EST
Wednesday, 18 January 2006
Kotkin beats up on cities again
The War Against Suburbia

"Suburbia, the preferred way of life across the advanced capitalist world, is under an unprecedented attack -- one that seeks to replace single-family residences and shopping centers with an "anti-sprawl" model beloved of planners and environmental activists.

Response: "Unprecedented attack?" "Replacing" single-family homes? Kotkin implies, without saying so, that Big Brother is going to tear down your house to build high rises.

"The latest battleground is Los Angeles, which gave birth to the suburban metropolis. Many in the political, planning and media elites are itching to use the regulatory process to turn L.A. from a sprawling collection of low-rise communities into a dense, multistory metropolis on the order of New York or Chicago. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has outlined this vision, and it does not conform to the way that most Angelenos prefer to live: "This old concept that all of us are going to live in a three-bedroom home, you know this 2,500 square feet, with a big frontyard and a big backyard -- well, that's an old concept."

My response: It may be an "old concept" but Kotkin fails to show exactly how Villaraigosa can possibly "use the regulatory process" to impose this vision.

If developers don't want to build "dense, multistory" dwellings, there's nothing Villaraigosa can do to make them do so. All he can do is unshackle the private sector to do so if it likes.


"This kind of imposed "vision" is proliferating in major metropolitan regions around the world. From Australia to Great Britain (and points in between), there is a drive to use the public purse to expand often underused train systems, downtown condominiums, hotels, convention centers, sports stadia and "star-chitect"-designed art museums, often at the expense of smaller business, single-family neighborhoods and local shopping areas."

Government has been subsidizing public works such as art museums and convention centers for decades- and the beneficiaries (and often leading supporters) of such public works are often the people who live in the single-family neighborhoods. The notion that, say, an art museum is somehow part of a "war" on the suburbanites who use it is simply twisted.

I think Kotkin is trying to say that the relationship between downtown and suburbs is a zero-sum game: in his world, anything that could possibly benefit downtown is an assault on the rest of the city.

"All this reflects a widespread prejudice endemic at planning departments in universities, within city bureaucracies, and in much of the media. Across a broad spectrum of planning schools and practitioners, suburbs and single-family neighborhoods are linked to everything from obesity, rampant consumerism, environmental degradation, the current energy crisis -- and even the predominance of conservative political tendencies."

Acolytes of such worldviews in our City Halls are now working overtime to find ways to snuff out "sprawl" in favor of high-density living. Portland's "urban growth boundary" and the "smart growth" policies promoted by former Maryland Governor Parris Glendening, for example, epitomize the preference of planners to cram populations into ever denser, expensive housing by choking off new land to development."

Response: "Ever denser?" "More expensive." Portland is less dense than Kotkin's beloved Los Angeles, and less expensive too. (As Kotkin's source Wendell Cox has pointed out. And Baltimore is cheaper still.

"More recently, this notion even has spread to areas where single family homes and suburbs are de rigueur. Planners in Albuquerque have suggested banning backyards -- despised as wasteful and "anti-social" by new urbanists and environmentalists, although it is near-impossible to find a family that doesn't want one. Even the mayor of Boise, Idaho, advocates tilting city development away from private homes, which now dominate the market, toward apartments."

Response: Given Kotkin's failure to use actual quotes from actual human beings, I am not sure whether his descriptions of these "facts" are quite correct. I did a WESTLAW search for "albuquerque /20 backyards" and found nothing faintly resembling Kotkin's claim. Similarly, my search under "mayor /20 boise /20 apartments" also turned up zero.

"Perhaps the best-known case of anti-sprawl legislation has been the "urban growth boundary," adopted in the late '70s to restrict development to areas closer to established urban areas. To slow the spread of suburban, single-family-home growth, the Portland region adopted a "grow up, not out" planning regime, which stressed dense, multistory development. Mass transit was given priority over road construction, which was deemed to be sprawl-inducing.

Experts differ on the impact of these regulations, but it certainly has not created the new urbanist nirvana widely promoted by Portland's boosters. Strict growth limits have driven population and job growth further out, in part by raising the price of land within the growth boundary, to communities across the Columbia River in Washington state and to distant places in Oregon. Suburbia has not been crushed, but simply pushed farther away. Portland's dispersing trend appears to have intensified since 2000: The city's population growth has slowed considerably, and 95% of regional population increase has taken place outside the city limits."

Response: Misses a few key facts. First, between 1980 and 2000, Portland's experiment did very well indeed. Portland grew from 368,000 people to 529,000 people, an increase of over 40%. By contrast, comparable regional cities like Denver and Seattle experienced growth rates in the 10-15% range). (A more detailed discussion of the "Portland miracle" can be found in one of my scholarly pieces, which also points out that housing prices in Portland have grown no faster than in Seattle or Denver.) Admittedly, the 2004 Census estimates were not kind to Portland; the city's growth was much slower than in the 1990s. But these estimates are just estimates: the Census Department often underestimated city growth in the mid-Census estimates between 1990 and 2000, and might do so again.

"This experience may soon be repeated elsewhere as planners and self-proclaimed visionaries run up against people's aspirations for a single-family home and low-to-moderate-density environment. Such desires may constitute, as late Robert Moses once noted, "details too intimate" to merit the attention of the university-trained. Even around cities like Paris, London, Toronto and Tokyo -- all places with a strong tradition of central planning -- growth continues to follow the preference of citizens to look for lower-density communities. High energy prices and convenient transit have not stopped most of these cities from continuing to lose population to their ever-expanding suburban rings.

But nowhere is this commitment to low-density living greater than in the U.S."

Response: So let me get this straight: in Europe cities lose population, and Americans are even more committed to suburbia. So how come so many American cities keep gaining population? How come Portland's population grew by over 40% between 1980 and 1990? How come New York's population grew for the past two decades? And Los Angeles's? And Seattle's? And Denver's?


"Roughly 51% of Americans, according to recent polls, prefer to live in the suburbs, while only 13% opt for life in a dense urban place. A third would go for an even more low-density existence in the countryside."

Response: "Recent polls"? You mean there's more than one with exactly the same result? I doubt that, given how often poll results vary with question wording. Here's a poll you won't see Kotkin quoting:

"Would you personally prefer to live in a suburban setting with larger lots and houses and a longer drive to work and most other places, or in a more central urban setting with smaller homes on smaller lots, and be able to take transit or walk to work and other places?"

55 percent chose the more "central urban setting" and 37 percent chose the more "suburban setting." (Source: Question 10 in this survey.) And this was in Houston- Bush the Elder's hometown!


"The preference for suburban-style living continues to be particularly strong among younger families. Market trends parallel these opinions. Despite widespread media exposure about a massive "return to the city," demographic data suggest that the tide continues to go out toward suburbia, which now accounts for two-thirds of the population in our large metropolitan areas. Since 2000, suburbs have accounted for 85% of all growth in these areas. And much of the growth credited to "cities" has actually taken place in the totally suburb-like fringes of places like Phoenix, Orlando and Las Vegas."

Response: By stating that suburbs "have accounted for 85% of all growth", Kotkin is implicitly admitting that cities are growing. This fact would seem to contradict his statement that cities are
"continuing to lose population to their ever-expanding suburban rings."


"These facts do not seem to penetrate the consciousness of the great metropolitan newspapers anymore than the minds of their favored interlocutors in the planning profession and academia."

Response: Then how come "great metropolitan newspapers" such as the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal publish anything you write? On the one hand, Kotkin attacks the elitist press and on the other, he takes their money.

"Newspapers from Boston and San Francisco to Los Angeles are routinely filled with anecdotal accounts of former suburbanites streaking into hip lofts and high-rises in the central core. Typical was a risible story that ran in last Sunday's New York Times, titled "Goodbye, Suburbia." The piece tracked the hegira back to the city by sophisticated urbanites who left their McMansions to return to Tribeca (rhymes with "Mecca"). Suburbia, one returnee sniffed, is "just a giant echoing space."

Such reports confirm the cognoscente's notion that the cure for the single-family house lies in the requisite lifting of consciousness, not to mention a couple of spare million in the bank."

Response: Gee, why is "a couple of spare million in the bank" relevant? Could it be that these "hip lofts and high-rises" are actually expensive? And if they are expensive, could it be that people actually want to live in them? Well, I guess that blows up the thesis that hardly anyone wants cities any more.

"Yet demographic data suggest the vast majority of all growth in greater New York comes not from migration from the suburbs, but from abroad. Among domestic migrants, far more leave for the "giant echoing spaces" than come back to the city."

Response: In his article about Portland a month or two ago, Kotkin asserted that Portland was a failure because it didn't have enough immigrants. Now he is dissing NYC for having too many. I don't see how he can be right both times.

"As a whole, greater New York -- easily the most alluring traditional urban center -- is steadily becoming more, not less, suburban. Since 2000, notes analyst Wendell Cox, New York City has gained less than 95,000 people while the suburban rings have added over 270,000. Growth in "deathlike" places like Suffolk County, in Long Island, Orange County, N.Y., and Morris County, N.J., has been well over three times faster than the city."

Response: Again, note the admission that New York City is gaining population, buried in the midst of Kotkin's rhetoric. (And as I said before, I think any statistics based on the 2000 Census are a bit dubious).

"So as he unfolds the details of his new urban "vision," Mr. Villaraigosa might do well to consider such sobering statistics. Californians, too, like single-family homes. According to a 2002 poll, 84% prefer them to apartments."

Response: Question wording, please? As I noted before, polls can have all kinds of meanings depending on how they are worded.

"Instead of dismissing the suburban single-family neighborhood as "an old concept," L.A.'s mayor might look to how to capitalize on the success of such sections of his city as the San Fernando Valley, where a large percentage of the housing stock is made up of owner-occupied houses and low-rise condominiums. The increasingly multi-ethnic valley already boasts both the city's largest base of homeowners, as well as its strongest economy, including roughly two-thirds of the employment in the critical entertainment industry.

It is time politicians recognized how their constituents actually want to live. If not, they will only hurt their communities, and force aspiring middle-class families to migrate ever further out to the periphery for the privacy, personal space and ownership that constitutes the basis of their common dreams."

Response: And how exactly can L.A.'s mayor cram his city with more single-family homes? Is there undeveloped space where he can do this? Perhaps Villaraigosa is making a virtue out of necessity.


Posted by lewyn at 11:00 PM EST
Updated: Wednesday, 18 January 2006 11:01 PM EST
Tuesday, 17 January 2006
Dvar Torah (Exodus)- or, Egyptians, Hyksos, Dems and Reps
In this week's Torah portion, the Hebrews are enslaved by an Egyptian king who "did not know Joseph" (Exodus 1:8).

Why was the new king so hostile to the Jews? The Hertz Chumash suggests that the pro-Joseph king was part of the Hyksos, a Semitic group that took over Egypt for a couple of hundred years. Perhaps when the native Egyptians drove the Hyksos out of power, they turned on the Hyksos' Hebrew allies.

This scenario holds some lessons for us today. The Hebrews had made friends with the Hyksos, but were perhaps unable to get along so well with the natives. So when the natives took over, they enslaved the Hebrews. Lesson: Jews should have friends with all political factions.

So I am profoundly thankful that in America, Jews are represented among Democrats and Republicans, on the Left and on the Right. Because as long as we have friends in all camps, our liberties are at least somewhat secure.

Posted by lewyn at 9:34 AM EST

Newer | Latest | Older