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I disagree. No planning has lead to many ghettos. The planning we've done here has avoided ghettos. I think the data is very clear on that.
> When it comes to housing construction and tax incentives, what they need to do is (1) set tax incentives to discourage egregious misuse and encourage density, and (2) get out of the way.
Except as I've been saying, if you encourage too much density your cities become unlivable for families, and you encourage urban sprawl and all of it's subsequent problems.
> the idea that we need to carefully control the mix of 1bdr apartments vs 3bdr apartments is... risible?
Who said anything about "carefully controlling" anything? Certainly not me.