..... Or old men in 20 room town-homes for themselves and their cachet of 
trophy wives ..... :)

More seriously, 

In piggybacking on the San Francisco discussion, gentrification has always been 
a salient issue endemic to San Francisco - since I arrived 20 yrs ago.  My 
understanding is that its legacy recedes far back into the city's logarithmic 
history, as well as that of other metropolises the most obvious being NYC.  
This only becomes exacerbated in those sited on limited geographic land masses. 
 

This is not to dismiss the importance of your statement below, it is merely to 
state that this is a looping scenario in the annals of recent histories.  Most 
unfortunately, it is one that never seems to advance beyond a v. limited 
debate....and it dearly needs to ... and requires us all to actively 
participate.  We need to ask ourselves why we continue to allow scenarios such 
as what you describe below ( which are not uncommon to those of us living in 
the urban centers,) to take place unabated.  Clearly, our complicity is no 
longer acceptable....but what options can we not only envision but, perhaps 
more importantly right now, actualize?


Chris


> Gentrification has always been an issue to the people that suffer its
> consequences, namely people from the lower classes, not old ladies
> with eight-room apartments for herself and her cats. 

On May 18, 2014, at 8:20 AM, Alexandre Carvalho wrote:

> Dear all;
>
> Gentrification has always been an issue to the people that suffer its
> consequences, namely people from the lower classes, not old ladies
> with eight-room apartments for herself and her cats. in Sao Paulo
> this is very clear in the neighborhood of Belenzinho, East of the
> city, where huge condos are rising up and driving people out of their
> homes. i am a physician working with homeless populations in this
> area, and i can tell you that even the shelters are closing up thanks
> to the massive power of the real estate industry there. there is even
> one avenue, Celso Garcia, where on one side you see the forces of
> capital pumping the condos, and on the other side the old buildings
> and favelas.
 <...>


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