Francesca R
Girl
Why don't you move somewhere else if things are too crowded for you?
Why don't you move somewhere else if things are too crowded for you?
Not state owned. You know as well as I do that HAs are in the private sector, and that the new term "social rented sector" has been coined to accommodate them as non profit seeking entities.You want to tie more and more people into dependence on state owned housing with no prospect of exit.
See how that works?
Not a smart debate tactic at all.
It's not so frightening here in Glasgow South Side. http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk/news/32m-bid-to-end-slum-hell-in-glasgows-govanhill-144324n.22824353You want to tie more and more people into dependence on state owned housing with no prospect of exit.
See how that works?
Not a smart debate tactic at all.
Probably because they're already owned privately. Probably because the Conservatives support business, enterprise, and market economies.
Is that really your response to people identifying problems? Suppose, to take an example, I object to pollution of air and water in the UK? I must simply go somewhere else: I have no right to stay here and demand that political leaders do something about it?Why don't you move somewhere else if things are too crowded for you?
Is that really your response to people identifying problems? Suppose, to take an example, I object to pollution of air and water in the UK? I must simply go somewhere else: I have no right to stay here and demand that political leaders do something about it?
Given the extremely reactionary nature of the generality of your views, I have been wondering why you favour immigration (I have no objection to it either, by the way) Is it because it keeps wages down or something?
By this argument, there is nothing wrong with building over the entire country until we reach 100% concrete and 0% green space. We could aim for a population of 2-3 billion and be a super power again.Francesca R said:Very little.What is wrong with building more roads, housing, schools and so on?
It's not so frightening here in Glasgow South Side. http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk/news/32m-bid-to-end-slum-hell-in-glasgows-govanhill-144324n.22824353
http://news.stv.tv/west-central/309...t-in-bid-to-address-glasgow-housing-problems/
That means you did not read the article, I.E.No, not being wrong doesn't matter but whether it's 2% or 10% (your two guesstimates) doesn't matter if, in the region in which I live, it is vastly higher.
If the percentage were, say, 50%, in the SE but 1% everywhere else, it would be no answer to someone in the SE complaining of overcrowding to say, 'don't worry about another 10% in your area because the rest of the country will still be 1%!'
Obviously, I have simplified for the purpose of exposition so please don't start hacking away at the above with literalism.
ETA and now I've seen your link I see not worrying about being wrong is an affliction to which you had succumbed when you announced the coverage was 2%![]()
...snip....
In England, "78.6% of urban areas is designated as natural rather than built". Since urban only covers a tenth of the country, this means that the proportion of England's landscape which is built on is…
Paved garden of a terraced house
Scotland and the North-East embrace paving
… 2.27%.
Yes. According to the most detailed analysis ever conducted, almost 98% of England is, in their word, natural...snip....
If you want to know my opinion perhaps you could try asking me rather than fantasising what they may be?It's a bizarre position to take, to be sure. As it happens, I did move out of London in 1997 very largely because the quality of life there had diminished beyond a point I considered tolerable. Travelling anywhere in the overcrowded city became a recurring source of aggravation. Things have not improved since then. On the contrary.
Darat and Francesca R seem to think there is no such thing as over-crowding at all and that, being crammed onto a stuffy, clapped out, commuter train to stand crushed up against someone else's unfragrant armpit for an hour or two is somehow ameliorated by the knowledge that there are some nice mountains up in Scotland or Wales to even out the density percentage.
If you want to know my opinion perhaps you could try asking me rather than fantasising what they may be?
That means you did not read the article, I.E.
Seems my recollection of 2% was pretty much spot on.
We are too crowded in some places, and we need more homes and the solution to that is to build more homes. It really is a social problem that has a simple solution.Who says I want to know it? I may be just fine extrapolating it from what you say hereBut OK. What is your opinion?
You seem to be confused, it's not my research, it seems to have been a well received piece of research.So your 2% and 10% were about different things - one counting gardens and one not, roughly speaking. Sorry if I didn't pick that up. No doubt you carefully explained it and I lazily didn't read what you said. So, where I might count the whole of a housing estate when working out the percentage you would want to omit all the gardens and grass verges, ponds and such. Fair enough. I consider my approach the more apt but it does;t matter. 10% is already way too much even if evened out across the entire country. IMO. Your turn.
Forgive me, but this will not quite do. Allow me to recap.We are too crowded in some places, and we need more homes and the solution to that is to build more homes. It really is a social problem that has a simple solution.
Never said it was.You seem to be confused, it's not my research, it seems to have been a well received piece of research.
Mass housing has always suffered from that,
.........And I certainly don't think your (nor mine) subjective aesthetic desires should be blocking millions of people having a home.
If you are wrong it doesn't matter.I find that astonishing. If you would like some evidence for the figures I've been recalling from memory - good overview starts with this article: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-18623096 looks like my memory wasn't too bad in this case, makes a change.