kdmccormick
kdmccormick t1_jb4zyrc wrote
Reply to comment by TuarezOfTheTuareg in I guess "ugliest" depends on the weather. Looks pretty handsome rn. by oozforashag
Oh, totally agreed!
kdmccormick t1_jb4zcov wrote
Reply to comment by TuarezOfTheTuareg in I guess "ugliest" depends on the weather. Looks pretty handsome rn. by oozforashag
I'm not completely disagreeing with you, but it's not true that destinations have to be non-residential. The North End is a destination and a neighborhood: people live above all those restaurants. The idea that commercial and residential need to be cleanly separated is weird modern one. People lived above businesses for hundreds of years before mid-1900s zoning laws made it largely illegal to build like that in the US.
All that's to say: another neighborhood of four-story townhouses with shops & restaurants on the first floor would be amazing to have in downtown.
kdmccormick t1_j9kk48w wrote
Reply to comment by Bloodsucker_ in Russian President Vladimir Putin unwittingly accelerated the European Union’s green transition with his war in Ukraine, with the 27-nation bloc reducing its dependency on Russian fossil fuels and increasing its renewable energy use over the past year, the EU’s climate czar said Tuesday. by MrGuttFeeling
I think it's purposefully intended to have an autocratic ring to it. Wikipedia:
> Advantages cited for the creation of czar type posts include the ability to go outside of formal channels and find creative solutions for ad hoc problems, and an ability to involve a lot of government players in big issue decision-making, ultimately enabling a huge bureaucracy to begin moving in a new direction.
Maybe something like "Special Climate Overseer" would have the same effect with less historical baggage? Idk. I think in the end what's important is that people listen to them so they can fix things that the existing bureaucracy won't.
kdmccormick t1_jeekx8l wrote
Reply to comment by BatterMyHeart in Watertown Purchasing Dog to Chase Geese From Parks and Fields by Conan776
I would argue that people avoiding public green spaces because they're gross is bad for the environment in a long-term way. If nobody uses the park, then one day it'll become a parking lot or office building.
This is about the most environmentally friendly way to solve the problem.