Comment by metabagel
17 hours ago
It's a bit more nuanced than what you are saying. Here's what Yoni Appelbaum said:
> I should start by saying this: Jane Jacobs is right about almost everything. She was right about what makes cities vibrant and vital. She was right about the ballet of the sidewalk. She writes brilliantly about needing to treat cities as living things, that if you try to centrally plan them and assign all of their functions, it doesn't work very well. They need to evolve over time. They need a diversity of peoples, of uses.
She was right about all of that, and she sees great menace in the urban renewal schemes of the time, where the experts of her age looked at cities and saw disorderly places that needed rationality. In all of that, she was exactly right, but her solution was to reassert the original right of communities to define their own boundaries.
She said individuals, activists should have the right to veto new developments in their neighborhoods. And so you get the sort of endless processes of community hearings and reviews, and she's quite explicit that the goal of these reviews is not to gauge the actual opinions of the neighborhood or to balance the good of the community, but to empower activists like Jacobs to step in and say “no.”
She wants “right-thinking people” like her to be able to stop the government from doing bad things. It is a revolt against government from the left, and it is amazingly effective. But the new rules don’t just get exercised by right-thinking people, and one of the things about right-thinking people is they're often wrong about the things they're thinking about. And so, she imagines this as the ability to veto lots of destructive changes. But in practice, it emerges as a simple collective veto of almost all change, and it has had tremendous costs for Americans as a whole.
> She said individuals, activists should have the right to veto new developments in their neighborhoods.
That's a big contradiction in her overall message -- NIMBYism is just another kind of central planning.
Stopping the government from doing bad things with other people's property is a worthwhile goal. Enabling the government to stop people from making their own choices with their own property is not, and inhibits the very engine of vitality that Jacobs praised.
@tptacek
Later Jacobs would have been okay with financialization of housing, tho'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systems_of_Survival
It ironic that the further she goes from experience & data, the more she ought to be taken seriously... but isn't