You people are hopelesstragabigzanda wrote:Hey this is goodB wrote:
The Homelessness Crisis
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
RM's resident disinformation expert.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
I don’t feel like watching. Why can’t they be built?
Clouuuuds Rolll byyy...BANG BANG BANG BANG
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Zoning and racismE.H. Ruddock wrote:I don’t feel like watching. Why can’t they be built?
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Ironically, many of the folks now demanding affordable high-density urban housing are the same that called the projects a form of de-facto segregation 50 years ago.blueviper wrote:Zoning and racismE.H. Ruddock wrote:I don’t feel like watching. Why can’t they be built?
"The fatal flaw of all revolutionaries is that they know how to tear things down but don't have a f**king clue about how to build anything."
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Ok … grandma finally moves into a nursing home and the family sells her house. It’s a decades old rambler. A tear down. It sells for a ton of money because it’s in a desirable neighborhood with very little building space available. The buyer can make money one of two ways:tragabigzanda wrote:Here's the real problem with high-density housing: You don't make any money building it, so no one wants to build it. Unless it's government subsidized, in which case, see Bi_3's response right above mine.
1) Build the largest house possible. Like 5,000+ sqft and get it as close to the lot lines as possible.
2) You don’t think they can make as much money by building three 1700 sqft 3-bedroom townhomes?
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:54 pm, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
It's supply yes, but also demand. It would be ridiculous to deny that allowing millions of people across the southern border in the last few years hasn't impacted housing. Over the last four years alone the population equivalent of of Massachusetts has crossed the southern border, but we have not built a Massachusetts' worthy of housing to support them.

Building the wall would dramatically reduce, but not eliminate, this piece of the problem. The wall would impact, but not eliminate, Fentanyl supplies as well which contributes to housing insecurity everywhere.

Building the wall would dramatically reduce, but not eliminate, this piece of the problem. The wall would impact, but not eliminate, Fentanyl supplies as well which contributes to housing insecurity everywhere.
"The fatal flaw of all revolutionaries is that they know how to tear things down but don't have a f**king clue about how to build anything."
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Good point. I’mma ask a developer about this. Part of me thinks ok the house would sell for like $3.5m but could each of the townhomes sell for $1.5m and how does the profit look on that.tragabigzanda wrote:3x HVACBammer wrote:Ok … grandma finally moves into a nursing home and the family sells her house. It’s a decades old rambler. A tear down. It sells for a ton of money because it’s in a desirable neighborhood with very little building space available. The buyer can make money one of two ways:tragabigzanda wrote:Here's the real problem with high-density housing: You don't make any money building it, so no one wants to build it. Unless it's government subsidized, in which case, see Bi_3's response right above mine.
1) Build the largest house possible. Like 5,000+ sqft and get it as close to the lot lines as possible.
2) You don’t think they can make as much money by building three 1700 sqft 3-bedroom townhomes?
3x hot water heaters
3x kitchen appliances
3x W/D
3x countertops
3x bathroom fixtures
3x P&E costs
All paid for by interest-saddled construction loans.
Encumbered square footage is the value add, from the developer’s perspective
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
I’m curious how many of them are making their way to Seattle. I have not heard this discussed locally when it comes to supply/demand for housing here.Bi_3 wrote:It's supply yes, but also demand. It would be ridiculous to deny that allowing millions of people across the southern border in the last few years hasn't impacted housing. Over the last four years alone the population equivalent of of Massachusetts has crossed the southern border, but we have not built a Massachusetts' worthy of housing to support them.
Building the wall would dramatically reduce, but not eliminate, this piece of the problem. The wall would impact, but not eliminate, Fentanyl supplies as well which contributes to housing insecurity everywhere.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Nice highest and best use analysis, boys.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Everything's perfectly all right now. We're fine. We're all fine here, now, thank you. How are you?
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
B wrote:
Anything else happen in Minneapolis in 2020 that may have affected housing prices?
"The fatal flaw of all revolutionaries is that they know how to tear things down but don't have a f**king clue about how to build anything."
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
If they get the variance to split the lot into 3 smaller ones, you’d probably have upset neighbors with adding 3 more families in a spot that only had oneBammer wrote:Good point. I’mma ask a developer about this. Part of me thinks ok the house would sell for like $3.5m but could each of the townhomes sell for $1.5m and how does the profit look on that.tragabigzanda wrote:3x HVACBammer wrote:Ok … grandma finally moves into a nursing home and the family sells her house. It’s a decades old rambler. A tear down. It sells for a ton of money because it’s in a desirable neighborhood with very little building space available. The buyer can make money one of two ways:tragabigzanda wrote:Here's the real problem with high-density housing: You don't make any money building it, so no one wants to build it. Unless it's government subsidized, in which case, see Bi_3's response right above mine.
1) Build the largest house possible. Like 5,000+ sqft and get it as close to the lot lines as possible.
2) You don’t think they can make as much money by building three 1700 sqft 3-bedroom townhomes?
3x hot water heaters
3x kitchen appliances
3x W/D
3x countertops
3x bathroom fixtures
3x P&E costs
All paid for by interest-saddled construction loans.
Encumbered square footage is the value add, from the developer’s perspective
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Setting Bi’s joke about drug overdoses aside, you might notice the inverse relationship between the two graphs.
Also blueviper is a confirmed NIMBY
Also blueviper is a confirmed NIMBY
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
I work for a city and someone is trying to split a lot into two and neighbors are emailing the city and mayor complaining.
Also, depending on the scenario, I could be nimbyish
Also, depending on the scenario, I could be nimbyish
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
That's kinda the point.Bammer wrote:Setting Bi’s joke about drug overdoses aside, you might notice the inverse relationship between the two graphs.
I'm pretty confident that cops murdered Blacks in all of those cities.Bi_3 wrote:B wrote:Anything else happen in Minneapolis in 2020 that may have affected housing prices?
Everything's perfectly all right now. We're fine. We're all fine here, now, thank you. How are you?
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
What are you suggesting here ? George Floyd caused rents to decrease?Bi_3 wrote:B wrote:
Anything else happen in Minneapolis in 2020 that may have affected housing prices?
Housing prices haven't declined in mpls. Sales declined but prices have generally not declined at all. By all accounts rents have not declined either. Point is, that graph can go fuck itself too
