There's part me that appreciates this and there's part of me that thinks this strategy totally isn't defensible against climate change in a cost-feasible way and it's possible we may have to strategic retreat from it in a generation or two's time.
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Thinking about FC makes me wonder if part of the problem is that we haven't reconciled the 'American Dream' idea of single family home ownership in the suburbs with the idea that success (and home ownership) can occur w/ owning an apartment like in NYC.
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Sure, I think a lot of FC (and Bay Area) residents are NIMBYs b/c of traffic & school overcrowding, but I wonder if it's because at a deeper level, density offends a sensibility of success that they (and their communities) represent.
End of conversation
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The Californian system is an old Spanish land grant system, that created large tracts of land, that were later converted to more of a nouveau English system w/ suburbanization,