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wombatarama's avatar

this is a really important point! Change absolutely does bring loss, and dismissing people's feeling about that is no way to win them over. And this extends to more than just nostalgia for the look of the past. I live along the Purple Line construction in Maryland, which required the cutting down of numerous huge mature trees along a street I have to walk along to get almost anywhere. Along with the aesthetic loss, especially with climate change it's now a huge hit to my quality of life to have lost the benefit of their shade.

But at one point I saw an advocate (who I otherwise am usually 100% in agreement with) seem to kind of poo-poo this loss and it made me very angry. The project has to plant saplings in some other neighborhood entirely to compensate for the trees, apparently? But how on earth does this address MY loss of shade and all the other known benefits of street trees? It does not, and it's dismissive to imply that it makes up for the fact that my life has gotten objectively worse on this point. I absolutely understand that sometimes the good of the many has to outweigh the good of the few, but I think it's vital to acknowledge when some people actually are making a sacrifice for the good of the many.

Lee Nellis's avatar

This is a great question to raise. And maybe, somewhere, for some people, grieving is an answer. My experience, though, is that nostalgia can at least sometimes be overcome by demonstrating sufficient respect for the past in the way change is designed and managed. In communities that have history (which some suburbs don't, and that's a problem), you can even remind people that the past was, in fact, one of very different living arrangements.

But in many places, the NIMBY position is fraught with moral judgement that is hidden behind the nostalgia. I will add that the YIMBY position is also, at root, a moral one. And when different moral visions collide, change can only come through force (the application of power), or the difficult work of trying to change how people view the world. Unless we want to sow bitterness, as Alex points out in his comment, through the use of force (and more to the points, ignore the universal law that what goes around eventually comes around, that the force you apply to others will be applied to you) that means we need strong moral leadership.

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