The financial unsustainability of traditional, car-centric American suburbs, consisting mainly of single-family units, is a critical aspect of the problem of urban sprawl. The design of these suburbs necessitates constant expansion into undeveloped land. This is because the initial infrastructure costs, such as roads, utilities, and public services, are often subsidized by development fees and future property taxes from new construction. However, as these communities age, the costs of maintaining and replacing this infrastructure can significantly exceed the revenue from property taxes, creating a financial shortfall. This is often referred to as a “growth Ponzi scheme” – new development brings in a temporary influx of revenue, which is used to pay for the cost of existing liabilities, but in the process, incurs even more long-term liabilities.

Moreover, the dispersed, low-density nature of these suburbs compounds the issue, leading to inefficient public service delivery and increased per capita costs. The reliance on private vehicles, due to large distances between residences, workplaces, and essential amenities, also places a heavy financial burden on families, particularly those in lower income brackets. Affordable housing options are limited, contributing to socio-economic segregation. Furthermore, the conversion of natural and agricultural land into residential and commercial areas can lead to losses in ecosystem services, the costs of which are often not accounted for. Thus, from both a municipal and a resident perspective, traditional American suburbs present a financially unsustainable model for urban development.

        • Maven (famous)@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I’ll never understand how anyone could say cities are ableist in the slightest. Less cars means you’re more free to just go places, walking or otherwise, so it’s safer for people with vision or hearing disabilities. More public transit means it’s easier for everyone else to get places. If you can’t use your legs, you can’t drive anyway… Now you don’t have to. Plus public transit costs a lot less to the user to do because you don’t need to pay for a whole car and so on which is great for people with limited money options due to having a disability.

          It’s really dumb to say public transit and walkable cities is capitalist stink given that there’s a really long recorded history of capitalist stinks trying to ban cities from being walkable… And it working… It’s a big reason American cities suck so bad now.

        • NotAPenguin@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          The videos look at the facts and sources their claims, like actual budgets and where the money is coming from is shown.
          If you aren’t willing to look at the facts then maybe you shouldn’t be talking about the subject?

          Cities where stuff is close together and there’s public transport is obviously better for disabled people than being stuck far away from everything and having to drive(which many people can’t) to do anything?

        • mightyfoolish@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          But everyone can’t drive. I just don’t see how cities=capitalism? What makes a suburb more socialist than a city?

    • Skyler@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, because remote suburbs are just perfect for disabled people with mobility issues. 👍

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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        1 year ago

        Their comment history pretty much confirms this lol…

        Cars and cities just don’t work, no matter how that turd is polished. Neither does a neighborhood full of single family homes. There is a place for single family homes to exist - but not as the only available alternative to an apartment in the US.

        Good luck walking (or biking) several blocks if you have mobility issues

        Umm… Mobility scooters?

        • Afforded all the benefits you’d get as a wheelchair user
        • User qualifies for free public transport in most places, such as where I live
        • Grocery stores allow driving through aisles, making shopping a breeze
        • Grants available if you can’t afford one - some will even included an adapted minivan with automatic lift to carry the mobility scooter with you

        I’m genuinely convinced that the user isn’t even interested in an open minded conversation about this lol

      • chaogomu@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Usually, the multiple parenthesis are used to dog whistle “Jews”, but this guy was dog whistling “black people”.

        I’m not sure if there’s a way to sarcastic indicate that form of stupidity…

        Anyway, for those who don’t know, “white flight” to the suburbs started almost exactly the same time that segregation was ended. What a coincidence. Particularly the desegregation of schools.

        Speaking of the desegregation of schools, the forced desegregation of certain white only universities was the start of the religious right in politics, not Roe v Wade, which was decided some 7 or so years earlier.

        • kitonthenet@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          He was dogwhistling both I think, “the wealthy urban elites landowners are promoting racemixing tricking good people to move back into the crime filled cities” is pretty explicit even for this type