The death of Ancient Rome wasn’t so much a collapse as a slow, interminable decay: between the second and sixth centuries AD, its population declined from a million people to just 30,000. Since then, 15 centuries have passed and thousands of cities have been built. And yet, as Rome’s greatest chronicler Edward Gibbon warned in 1776, a similar fate awaits our modern metropolises. This time, however, their decline will radically alter our perception of what “urbanism” really means.
London, New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Los Angeles — these urban centres epitomised what Jean Gottman described in 1983 as “transactional cities”. Based on finance, high-end business and IT services, they were defined not by production and trade in physical goods, but by intangible products concocted in soaring office towers. For years, academic researchers, both on the Left and Right, envisioned a high-tech economic future dominated by dense urban areas. As The New York Times‘s Neil Irwin observed in 2018: “We’re living in a world where a small number of superstar companies choose to locate in a handful of superstar cities where they have the best chance of recruiting superstar employees.”
Yet even before the current downturn, the data defied the bravado. For decades, the ultra-tall towers that once symbolised urban greatness have been as anachronistic as the cathedrals of the Middle Ages. Office occupancy has been declining since the turn of the century, along with the construction of new space. In 2019, before the pandemic, construction was one-third the rate of 1985 and half that of 2000.
More serious still has been the movement of people. Migration to dense cities started to decline in 2015, when large metropolitan areas began to see an exodus to smaller locales. By 2022, rural areas were also gaining population at the expense of cities. The pandemic clearly accelerated this process, with a devastating rise in crime and lawlessness: notably in London, Paris, Washington, New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Philadelphia and Chicago. In some parts of Chicago and Philadelphia, young men now have a greater chance of being killed by firearms than an American soldier serving during the Afghanistan or Iraq wars.
The fading allure of the big city — further undermined by the post-pandemic shift to remote work in many sectors — is also taking place against the backdrop of an urban economy that has increasingly rewarded the few. Of course, some districts, such as the north side of Chicago, have experienced impressive growth, but they are often surrounded by others suffering from severe deterioration. And for all of gentrification’s wonders, almost a fifth of residents in the 50 largest US cities live below the poverty line.
Contrast this with the historic role of cities as engines of upward mobility. Even the addition last year of a few thousand migrants forced New York Mayor Eric Adams to declare a state of emergency; in other words, New York, a city largely built on the labour of newcomers, now seems too weak to house and employ a substantial number of immigrants. Amid this failure, perhaps it’s unsurprising that migrants and minorities are heading to America’s suburbs, sprawled sunbelt cities and smaller towns.
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SubscribeYes, true enough; Except….
Let us take Soros in USA – he spends Millions of $ to fund elections of city DAs and Prosecutors and Judges, entirely to stop prosecution of crime. His guidance has made the Homeless unable to be run off – instead the decent people must run off and move elsewhere. Stopping prosecuting of shoplifting, public urination – and even robbing, beating, stealing cars, public drug sales and use, keeping crazy people out of asylums to wander the streets, and prisoners released after token sentences, making the streets to scary to go out on after dark…Making life untenable for decent people in the city.
My old parts of London used to be good – now people only walk fast with their heads down if they have to be out after dark.
So much of this – the entirely unsuitable migration encouraged, the making school education in a city almost doing more harm that help to the children. The business model closing small business and favoring the huge monopolies…..This is Intentional.
So, yes, what you say is true. The thing is it is directed, it is being managed for nefarious purposes.
That is the article you need to address – ‘WHY’? And why do we allow it? But then – all you sheep got the insanely bad vax although I saw that and refused because it and the mask were crazy – and you wore masks, and showed proof of vax, and allowed travel bans, and locked up and stayed in, and kept children at home to their Great harm, and let granny die alone with people in space suites ignoring her, and so on –
So I guess the Why is because Evil people would do you harm, and as they own the media and Government you will let them.
Is there any subject you can’t link to a rant about the pandemic?
How about offering us a solution to how you would prevent cities declining, rather than throwing in a load of cliches from 4chan
What are these 4chan cliches to which you refer?
Soros is a bit of a cliche.
Soros is a bit of a cliche.
Not electing Democrats would be the solution. The American cities cited in the article are all being
rundestroyed by that party.Don’t be silly, that’s so simplistic. The republicans don’t offer any solutions, they have no plans, they just point fingers like Mr. Bjorn. That’s easy to do.
Republicans left or are leaving these cities- NYC, Chicago, San Fran – there are diminishing numbers of them left to care. So it seems the Democrats will have to solve the problems their policies have created. Change happens on the local level. Unfortunately, there’s a lot of ‘wrong think’ in the Democrat Party – they tend not to manage as well as Republicans who inherently are budget-wise, support law enforcement etc. It’s not clear what if anything will drag Republicans back into the cities, especially with the high crime rates at the moment.
Republicans left or are leaving these cities- NYC, Chicago, San Fran – there are diminishing numbers of them left to care. So it seems the Democrats will have to solve the problems their policies have created. Change happens on the local level. Unfortunately, there’s a lot of ‘wrong think’ in the Democrat Party – they tend not to manage as well as Republicans who inherently are budget-wise, support law enforcement etc. It’s not clear what if anything will drag Republicans back into the cities, especially with the high crime rates at the moment.
Don’t be silly, that’s so simplistic. The republicans don’t offer any solutions, they have no plans, they just point fingers like Mr. Bjorn. That’s easy to do.
He is not wrong about the COVID era dystopian aspects
He is wrong.
He is wrong.
Simple, the achieving of excellence with regard to skill, duty, courage, honesty and industry. Examples are Rome at it’s peak and the Royal Navy from 1793 to 1815. At Trafalgar Nelson sent the message ” England expects every man to do his duty “. Rome and the RN expected every body to display the highest standards of skill, courage and duty.
Hiring of the incompetent, venal, cowardly and lazy leads to decline and then collapse.
One can only corrupt the cowardly, lazy and venal.
All well and good.
Simple, the achieving of excellence with regard to skill, duty, courage, honesty and industry
How do you make that happen though?
Hiring of the incompetent, venal, cowardly and lazy leads to decline and then collapse.
If you want to talk reasons for a doom collapse scenario that is a rather simplistic explanation.
My two cents. We need to simplify. Everything. Everything has got too damn big, too complicated, to the point the system can’t cope with solving basic problems and everything is so complicated and globally linked and complicated it’s got to be nearly impossible for one person to actually even understand and comprehend the entire global system we now rely on. We need different to the past, old stuff is useful to draw on, but we have a modern system of the likes never seen before, we need a new way. My humble opinion.
Start with a healthy body. Bring back rigour to education system.
Below is a link to the Cambridge Entrance Exam which pupils sat at the age of 17 to 18 years of age.
Cambridge Entrance Examination – Mathematics for Natural
Sciences (1981) | In the Dark (wordpress.com)
Why should not this be the standard entrance requirement for all universities? The Laws of the Universe do not vary whether one lives in slum or a palace. School have lessons from 8.30 am to 3.30 pm and then 1.5 hours of sport. If one is so exhausted one can barely walk off the pitch, one will not have the energy to cause trouble in the evening.1.5 Hours of prep every night.
Subjects:- maths, physics, chemistry, biology, geology, history, latin, greek, drawing( especially perspective) and music. Craft options of cooking, woodwork or dress making.
Boxing, rugby and cricket for all boys,gymnastic, hockey, ballet and tennis for all girls. Fit in body, fit in mind.
Decide on essential requirements for local government and sack the rest. Police to have the same academic abilities as Senior NCOs in the technical branches of navy or airforce and fitness of airborne/USMC.
Use those who created the Renaissance and Industrial Revolutions as examples of self- improvement, James Brindley and George Stephenson being good examples.
James Brindley – Wikipedia.
George Stephenson – Wikipedia
Set up Mechanics Institutes to provide training for worthwhile jobs.
Mechanics’ institute – Wikipedia
The execution of Admiral Byng improved standards of the officers of the Royal Navy.
John Byng – Wikipedia
Orde Wingate took the broken spirited and turned them into the extra-ordinary through rigorous training. Train hard, fight easy.
Orde Wingate – Wikipedia
Quality not quantity. Punish the corrupt, sack the incompetent, recruit and promote on ability. Give people three years to improve their standards, gain qualification or get another job. Instead of watching a screen, train their minds and bodies. l
We need a Renaissance of the spirit which founds all civilisations .
The decline in the spirit leads to physical, mental and moral corruption and hence the creation of a dystopian reality for many living within the inner cities. Florence gave us the Renaissance, why?
Blimey I didn’t know there was a test, I thought the renaissance was because we got excited about the classics again?
Hasn’t there always been mental and moral corruption?
‘ The Laws of the Universe do not vary whether one lives in slum or a palace. School have lessons from 8.30 am to 3.30 pm and then 1.5 hours of sport. If one is so exhausted one can barely walk off the pitch, one will not have the energy to cause trouble in the evening.1.5 Hours of prep every night. ‘
All well and good. You are assuming everyone leads nice tidy, routine, together lives that allow for that though. You sound like a prep school kid tbh. That’s a private school curriculum, I think it has benefits though that shouldn’t be dismissed but it’s a different world Mr Hedges. Yes I understand what you are saying, why not bring back all those sports etc. Mechanics institutes are fine, but what about the global trade we need to sell stuff? What about changing supply chains and inflation? What about high corporation taxes putting people off from setting up engineering companies? The engineering companies we deal with around here are struggling for a certain grade of steel that normally comes from ukraine. What about that.
I think education does need something major, but I feel like yours is not really a practical solution to saving cities as such. I feel you’ve more gone down the seeing everyone as morally bankrupt road and we just need to pull our socks up route….
I have been educated in both private and state schools, good and bad. One of the reasons Roman Catholic schools even in run down crime ridden areas produce well educated people is that they offer rigorous academic learning, high level of sports training in a disciplined, safe and secure envronment. Criminal activity outside of the school is not used as an excuse for it to occur inside.
Read James Burke’s The Day The Universe Changed. The Dissenting Academies educated those who created the Industrial Revolution. The dominant language in the Near East from Alexander to Mohammed was Greek.
Persian and Hindi are Indo-Aryan Languages which is why those who knew Greek which from the same root were able to learn them.
The Mechnaics Institutes were set up to train craftsmen at night school in the maths, science and drawing which would enble them to enter then professional classes which is why they were supported by the Methodists who largely created the Labour Party.
The slums of Industrial Britain which grew in the 19th century were far worse than anything in America today. Bradford went from 6000 in 1800 to about 120,000 in 1850 and the Factory Inspector’s Report. The Evangelical Christians and Dissenters whose actions led to the banning of slavery then concentrated their efforts on improving the slums. Lord Shaftesbury said ” Now we have banned slavery we must improve the lives of those who live in the slums”. The founding members of the Lbour Party such as Keir Hardies said ” S Smiles book ” Self Help” is a manual for soclialism “. Up to WW2 the dominant force in the Labour Party was Methodism which preached that people were responsible for their conduct, self help, self discipline, moral rectitude, thrift, pursuit of education and skills, cleanliness, hard work, etc.
The combination of evangelical Christianity within the Tory Party, Methodism within the Liberal and Labour Party and creation of the Salvation Army meant the horrific squalid slums of 19th and early 20 th century Britain meant conditions were improved sufficiently quickly to prevent civil war. Another aspect was the recognition that those who fought in the war of 1793 to 1815 had earned a better life.
Many Labour leaders were Dissenting preachers and teachers, Hardie, E Bevin and J Callaghan being examples.A Bevan towards the end of his life was concerned that the Welfare State would result in the working class losing their resilience.
It comes down to duty. People have the duty to lead productive honest lives and the duty to offer help to others but noone is entitled to live on the honest hardwork of others. This was the creed of the pioneers of the USA.
Talking of collapse scenarios SVB looks bad.
You have just written a short history of England from the 1700s.
You have not said how you would make this new education system of yours work, how it would be funded and how such things as dress making and wood turning can achieved in a class with forty children in a school already short on classrooms.
Yes I see your benefits of a good roman Catholic school etc. But you still have to actually implement it in society and make it work.
The slums you are talking about arguably were the product of the industrial revolution? So another time where we had massive changes to society and economy, where the upheaval caused the negative effects as well as the positive I guess I’m trying to say. Everything became more complicated back then too, arguably a bit like the tech revolution we are going through now.
. Up to WW2 the dominant force in the Labour Party was Methodism which preached that people were responsible for their conduct, self help, self discipline, moral rectitude, thrift, pursuit of education and skills, cleanliness, hard work
OK but you are kind of saying people wouldn’t be like that without that input. I dispute that, look at all the great ancient empires, inventions and art. What I’m trying to say is regardless of any cultures religion, people by nature normally are inclined to work and make things and be reasonably clean and tidy look after themselves etc. Otherwise we wouldn’t have lasted long as a species and civilisations would not exist as they do. People by nature like to organise. To learn. To explore. I suppose I see that stuff to an extent as part of human nature rather than something that necessarily has to be instilled using religious or political dogma.
From my time on construction sites what I perceived was that many men from blue collar/working class backgrounds appreciate knowledge which is practical and relevant to their life but most of the education system is run by people who have no industrial or business experience. So I would insist alll teachers and those running education departments work on construction sited and factories. Those running Dissenting Academies were practical people. In places like Sri Lanka classes of 50 pupils are not common but there is discipline and a desire to learn. Look at Switzerland, Singapore and South Korea for an education and training systems.
Look at the rise and fall of Rome. In a Greek Play Zeus said ” Humans will need gods as long as they are cowardly, lazy and venal.” Once 10% to 20% of the population feel they are entitled to live on the labour of others and the middle and upper class are not prepared to die defending the country, collapse can be very quick- Rome post 350 AD.
All civilisations had a sense of duty, as this declines so do they.
Ibn Khaldun said dynasties last 140 years , while John Glubb say Empires last 250 years.
Amazon.co.uk : john glubb fate of empires
So I would insist alll teachers and those running education departments work on construction sited and factories
That is ambitious and not really practical.
Look at Switzerland, Singapore and South Korea for an education and training systems.
Honestly I know nothing about their systems. Can we afford it?
Thanks for the link, I will check it out, I understand what you are saying. Personally, on the gods and duty etc. I think we have a big clash between science and world religions. Both are confused making people confused. One contradicts the other to an extent. Then within their own disciplines there are contradictions. Everyone is confused and dazzled by the modern world we have built. No one is quite sure what it means or what to do with it or what the point of it all should be….where are we going with all this? Do we follow God or Science? Both? I have no idea.
Confused not reaally, just ignore Frankfurt Cultural Marxism and Post Modernism and read G Orwells 4 volumes of essays.
We can do both. Being a sceintist does not mean one cannot believe in God, Prof Martin Bott FRS, Geophysicist being an example.
Basic engineeering: if it loods good, it works well, Spitfire being a good example. Someone who has a slapdash, could not care less, near enough is good enough cannot be trained as a craftsman or engineer as they lack self discipline. Cost has very little to do with excellence of training. Most pre tertiary ducation can be done cheaply. Have you read the exam papers for Cambridge? One can teach in a pre-fabricated school room to a class of 50 if people are self disciplined. Look at schools in countries such as Sri Lanka, the classroom is beneath a tree and the teacher rides a bike between villages carrying a blackboard. The vast majority of art degrees are a waste of time. Shakespeare, Austen, Dickens, Brontes, GK Elliot, Kipling, Conrad, Orwell, all left school by the age of 18 years but they had been taught English to a very high level plus other languages.
Michelangelo, D Vinci, Raphael never went to university but were apprenticed to Masters. Bring back apprenticeships.
Send children to work to undertake apprenticeships and then attend night school to study University of London Extra Mural Exams ( Barnes Wallis ) or study for Chartership Mitchell- Spitfire, Camm- Hurricane, Chadwick- Lancaster, de Havilland – Mosquito.
None of the above is difficult and would be cheaper tha the present system. Basically since late 1940s the USA and Then Britain has created a post 16 years of age education which is dominated by low grade arts subjects. Two hundred years ago any fourteen year old boy attending a good school in the USA, Britain or Northern Europe could have translated Caesar from Latin and Xenophon from Greek into their native languages.
Quality is always cheaper in the long run than quantity. Much of the time and money are wasted studying irrelevant subjects and those which are needed, are not taught to high enough standards or rigorously tested enough. They are in East Asia.
As Cicero said ” Cui Bono ?”. The massive expansion of education dominated by low grade arts subjects has provided pleasant sinecures for lack lustre middle class arts graduates.
Well you said you thought people lacked a sense of duty and I took it you implied you thought that was because of a decline in religion.
I have read all of Orwell. All the books. All the essays. Everything. I do like a bit of Mr Orwell.
I have not read about Marx or any of that to be honest. Sounds like you don’t recommend it, I have to say it’s not really the kind of thing I would seek out.
Quality is always cheaper in the long run than quantity. Much of the time and money are wasted studying irrelevant subjects and those which are needed, are not taught to high enough standards or rigorously tested enough
Yes I think there is a lot of crap in the curriculum we could cut in favour of teaching essentials to a higher standard, fair enough.
Two hundred years ago any fourteen year old boy attending a good school in the USA, Britain or Northern Europe could have translated Caesar from Latin and Xenophon from Greek into their native languages
Not sure that is true, my nan went to a small village school in the 1930s, I don’t think she can do that. She described it as basic English, maths, etc. She left school at 14. I thought we only introduced state education during the industrial revolution? I’m a bit rusty but I’m not sure state education in its current form is 200 years old? I may be wrong. Please feel free to correct the ignorant.
I think we should bring back apprenticeships, basic engineering skills, yes, I like that and at the time teach basic business skills.
Pre 1540 education was largely provided by monasteries up to the age of 17 years of age and then The Church and wealthy sent people to universities. Grammar Schools were largely set up in the mid 16 th century. The major problem was the growth of urban Britain from 1800 onwards which meant a lack of all facilities , including education. Britain went from a population of 10M , 80% rural to 40M, 80% urban in 1900, hence vast numbers of social problems. A good school, I meant grammar or public as the syllabus was basically the Classics.
Yes bring back apprenticeships but alo night school where one can study for Chartership of Institutions of Engineering , Civil, Mechnical, Electrical, etc where Part 1 was HND and Part 2, degree level. Also provide degree course in Physics, Chemistry, Law Accountancy, Surveying, Commercial Art which is what Polytechnics offered up to the early 1960s. Study three hours , Monday to Thursday, 46 weeks per year plus laboratory weeks, say two per year. 212 hours per year. Most of practical work done during employment, so evening study is largely lectures and going through calculation.Engineers previously mentioned took this root.
At an exhibition on Battle of Trafalgar what was noticeable was how many Commanders and Captains had risen from the ranks.
Pre 1540 education was largely provided by monasteries up to the age of 17 years of age and then The Church and wealthy sent people to universities. Grammar Schools were largely set up in the mid 16 th century. The major problem was the growth of urban Britain from 1800 onwards which meant a lack of all facilities , including education. Britain went from a population of 10M , 80% rural to 40M, 80% urban in 1900, hence vast numbers of social problems. A good school, I meant grammar or public as the syllabus was basically the Classics.
Yes bring back apprenticeships but alo night school where one can study for Chartership of Institutions of Engineering , Civil, Mechnical, Electrical, etc where Part 1 was HND and Part 2, degree level. Also provide degree course in Physics, Chemistry, Law Accountancy, Surveying, Commercial Art which is what Polytechnics offered up to the early 1960s. Study three hours , Monday to Thursday, 46 weeks per year plus laboratory weeks, say two per year. 212 hours per year. Most of practical work done during employment, so evening study is largely lectures and going through calculation.Engineers previously mentioned took this root.
At an exhibition on Battle of Trafalgar what was noticeable was how many Commanders and Captains had risen from the ranks.
Well you said you thought people lacked a sense of duty and I took it you implied you thought that was because of a decline in religion.
I have read all of Orwell. All the books. All the essays. Everything. I do like a bit of Mr Orwell.
I have not read about Marx or any of that to be honest. Sounds like you don’t recommend it, I have to say it’s not really the kind of thing I would seek out.
Quality is always cheaper in the long run than quantity. Much of the time and money are wasted studying irrelevant subjects and those which are needed, are not taught to high enough standards or rigorously tested enough
Yes I think there is a lot of crap in the curriculum we could cut in favour of teaching essentials to a higher standard, fair enough.
Two hundred years ago any fourteen year old boy attending a good school in the USA, Britain or Northern Europe could have translated Caesar from Latin and Xenophon from Greek into their native languages
Not sure that is true, my nan went to a small village school in the 1930s, I don’t think she can do that. She described it as basic English, maths, etc. She left school at 14. I thought we only introduced state education during the industrial revolution? I’m a bit rusty but I’m not sure state education in its current form is 200 years old? I may be wrong. Please feel free to correct the ignorant.
I think we should bring back apprenticeships, basic engineering skills, yes, I like that and at the time teach basic business skills.
Confused not reaally, just ignore Frankfurt Cultural Marxism and Post Modernism and read G Orwells 4 volumes of essays.
We can do both. Being a sceintist does not mean one cannot believe in God, Prof Martin Bott FRS, Geophysicist being an example.
Basic engineeering: if it loods good, it works well, Spitfire being a good example. Someone who has a slapdash, could not care less, near enough is good enough cannot be trained as a craftsman or engineer as they lack self discipline. Cost has very little to do with excellence of training. Most pre tertiary ducation can be done cheaply. Have you read the exam papers for Cambridge? One can teach in a pre-fabricated school room to a class of 50 if people are self disciplined. Look at schools in countries such as Sri Lanka, the classroom is beneath a tree and the teacher rides a bike between villages carrying a blackboard. The vast majority of art degrees are a waste of time. Shakespeare, Austen, Dickens, Brontes, GK Elliot, Kipling, Conrad, Orwell, all left school by the age of 18 years but they had been taught English to a very high level plus other languages.
Michelangelo, D Vinci, Raphael never went to university but were apprenticed to Masters. Bring back apprenticeships.
Send children to work to undertake apprenticeships and then attend night school to study University of London Extra Mural Exams ( Barnes Wallis ) or study for Chartership Mitchell- Spitfire, Camm- Hurricane, Chadwick- Lancaster, de Havilland – Mosquito.
None of the above is difficult and would be cheaper tha the present system. Basically since late 1940s the USA and Then Britain has created a post 16 years of age education which is dominated by low grade arts subjects. Two hundred years ago any fourteen year old boy attending a good school in the USA, Britain or Northern Europe could have translated Caesar from Latin and Xenophon from Greek into their native languages.
Quality is always cheaper in the long run than quantity. Much of the time and money are wasted studying irrelevant subjects and those which are needed, are not taught to high enough standards or rigorously tested enough. They are in East Asia.
As Cicero said ” Cui Bono ?”. The massive expansion of education dominated by low grade arts subjects has provided pleasant sinecures for lack lustre middle class arts graduates.
So I would insist alll teachers and those running education departments work on construction sited and factories
That is ambitious and not really practical.
Look at Switzerland, Singapore and South Korea for an education and training systems.
Honestly I know nothing about their systems. Can we afford it?
Thanks for the link, I will check it out, I understand what you are saying. Personally, on the gods and duty etc. I think we have a big clash between science and world religions. Both are confused making people confused. One contradicts the other to an extent. Then within their own disciplines there are contradictions. Everyone is confused and dazzled by the modern world we have built. No one is quite sure what it means or what to do with it or what the point of it all should be….where are we going with all this? Do we follow God or Science? Both? I have no idea.
From my time on construction sites what I perceived was that many men from blue collar/working class backgrounds appreciate knowledge which is practical and relevant to their life but most of the education system is run by people who have no industrial or business experience. So I would insist alll teachers and those running education departments work on construction sited and factories. Those running Dissenting Academies were practical people. In places like Sri Lanka classes of 50 pupils are not common but there is discipline and a desire to learn. Look at Switzerland, Singapore and South Korea for an education and training systems.
Look at the rise and fall of Rome. In a Greek Play Zeus said ” Humans will need gods as long as they are cowardly, lazy and venal.” Once 10% to 20% of the population feel they are entitled to live on the labour of others and the middle and upper class are not prepared to die defending the country, collapse can be very quick- Rome post 350 AD.
All civilisations had a sense of duty, as this declines so do they.
Ibn Khaldun said dynasties last 140 years , while John Glubb say Empires last 250 years.
Amazon.co.uk : john glubb fate of empires
Talking of collapse scenarios SVB looks bad.
You have just written a short history of England from the 1700s.
You have not said how you would make this new education system of yours work, how it would be funded and how such things as dress making and wood turning can achieved in a class with forty children in a school already short on classrooms.
Yes I see your benefits of a good roman Catholic school etc. But you still have to actually implement it in society and make it work.
The slums you are talking about arguably were the product of the industrial revolution? So another time where we had massive changes to society and economy, where the upheaval caused the negative effects as well as the positive I guess I’m trying to say. Everything became more complicated back then too, arguably a bit like the tech revolution we are going through now.
. Up to WW2 the dominant force in the Labour Party was Methodism which preached that people were responsible for their conduct, self help, self discipline, moral rectitude, thrift, pursuit of education and skills, cleanliness, hard work
OK but you are kind of saying people wouldn’t be like that without that input. I dispute that, look at all the great ancient empires, inventions and art. What I’m trying to say is regardless of any cultures religion, people by nature normally are inclined to work and make things and be reasonably clean and tidy look after themselves etc. Otherwise we wouldn’t have lasted long as a species and civilisations would not exist as they do. People by nature like to organise. To learn. To explore. I suppose I see that stuff to an extent as part of human nature rather than something that necessarily has to be instilled using religious or political dogma.
I have been educated in both private and state schools, good and bad. One of the reasons Roman Catholic schools even in run down crime ridden areas produce well educated people is that they offer rigorous academic learning, high level of sports training in a disciplined, safe and secure envronment. Criminal activity outside of the school is not used as an excuse for it to occur inside.
Read James Burke’s The Day The Universe Changed. The Dissenting Academies educated those who created the Industrial Revolution. The dominant language in the Near East from Alexander to Mohammed was Greek.
Persian and Hindi are Indo-Aryan Languages which is why those who knew Greek which from the same root were able to learn them.
The Mechnaics Institutes were set up to train craftsmen at night school in the maths, science and drawing which would enble them to enter then professional classes which is why they were supported by the Methodists who largely created the Labour Party.
The slums of Industrial Britain which grew in the 19th century were far worse than anything in America today. Bradford went from 6000 in 1800 to about 120,000 in 1850 and the Factory Inspector’s Report. The Evangelical Christians and Dissenters whose actions led to the banning of slavery then concentrated their efforts on improving the slums. Lord Shaftesbury said ” Now we have banned slavery we must improve the lives of those who live in the slums”. The founding members of the Lbour Party such as Keir Hardies said ” S Smiles book ” Self Help” is a manual for soclialism “. Up to WW2 the dominant force in the Labour Party was Methodism which preached that people were responsible for their conduct, self help, self discipline, moral rectitude, thrift, pursuit of education and skills, cleanliness, hard work, etc.
The combination of evangelical Christianity within the Tory Party, Methodism within the Liberal and Labour Party and creation of the Salvation Army meant the horrific squalid slums of 19th and early 20 th century Britain meant conditions were improved sufficiently quickly to prevent civil war. Another aspect was the recognition that those who fought in the war of 1793 to 1815 had earned a better life.
Many Labour leaders were Dissenting preachers and teachers, Hardie, E Bevin and J Callaghan being examples.A Bevan towards the end of his life was concerned that the Welfare State would result in the working class losing their resilience.
It comes down to duty. People have the duty to lead productive honest lives and the duty to offer help to others but noone is entitled to live on the honest hardwork of others. This was the creed of the pioneers of the USA.
Blimey I didn’t know there was a test, I thought the renaissance was because we got excited about the classics again?
Hasn’t there always been mental and moral corruption?
‘ The Laws of the Universe do not vary whether one lives in slum or a palace. School have lessons from 8.30 am to 3.30 pm and then 1.5 hours of sport. If one is so exhausted one can barely walk off the pitch, one will not have the energy to cause trouble in the evening.1.5 Hours of prep every night. ‘
All well and good. You are assuming everyone leads nice tidy, routine, together lives that allow for that though. You sound like a prep school kid tbh. That’s a private school curriculum, I think it has benefits though that shouldn’t be dismissed but it’s a different world Mr Hedges. Yes I understand what you are saying, why not bring back all those sports etc. Mechanics institutes are fine, but what about the global trade we need to sell stuff? What about changing supply chains and inflation? What about high corporation taxes putting people off from setting up engineering companies? The engineering companies we deal with around here are struggling for a certain grade of steel that normally comes from ukraine. What about that.
I think education does need something major, but I feel like yours is not really a practical solution to saving cities as such. I feel you’ve more gone down the seeing everyone as morally bankrupt road and we just need to pull our socks up route….
Start with a healthy body. Bring back rigour to education system.
Below is a link to the Cambridge Entrance Exam which pupils sat at the age of 17 to 18 years of age.
Cambridge Entrance Examination – Mathematics for Natural
Sciences (1981) | In the Dark (wordpress.com)
Why should not this be the standard entrance requirement for all universities? The Laws of the Universe do not vary whether one lives in slum or a palace. School have lessons from 8.30 am to 3.30 pm and then 1.5 hours of sport. If one is so exhausted one can barely walk off the pitch, one will not have the energy to cause trouble in the evening.1.5 Hours of prep every night.
Subjects:- maths, physics, chemistry, biology, geology, history, latin, greek, drawing( especially perspective) and music. Craft options of cooking, woodwork or dress making.
Boxing, rugby and cricket for all boys,gymnastic, hockey, ballet and tennis for all girls. Fit in body, fit in mind.
Decide on essential requirements for local government and sack the rest. Police to have the same academic abilities as Senior NCOs in the technical branches of navy or airforce and fitness of airborne/USMC.
Use those who created the Renaissance and Industrial Revolutions as examples of self- improvement, James Brindley and George Stephenson being good examples.
James Brindley – Wikipedia.
George Stephenson – Wikipedia
Set up Mechanics Institutes to provide training for worthwhile jobs.
Mechanics’ institute – Wikipedia
The execution of Admiral Byng improved standards of the officers of the Royal Navy.
John Byng – Wikipedia
Orde Wingate took the broken spirited and turned them into the extra-ordinary through rigorous training. Train hard, fight easy.
Orde Wingate – Wikipedia
Quality not quantity. Punish the corrupt, sack the incompetent, recruit and promote on ability. Give people three years to improve their standards, gain qualification or get another job. Instead of watching a screen, train their minds and bodies. l
We need a Renaissance of the spirit which founds all civilisations .
The decline in the spirit leads to physical, mental and moral corruption and hence the creation of a dystopian reality for many living within the inner cities. Florence gave us the Renaissance, why?
Better to hire them than to leave them unemployed.
All well and good.
Simple, the achieving of excellence with regard to skill, duty, courage, honesty and industry
How do you make that happen though?
Hiring of the incompetent, venal, cowardly and lazy leads to decline and then collapse.
If you want to talk reasons for a doom collapse scenario that is a rather simplistic explanation.
My two cents. We need to simplify. Everything. Everything has got too damn big, too complicated, to the point the system can’t cope with solving basic problems and everything is so complicated and globally linked and complicated it’s got to be nearly impossible for one person to actually even understand and comprehend the entire global system we now rely on. We need different to the past, old stuff is useful to draw on, but we have a modern system of the likes never seen before, we need a new way. My humble opinion.
Better to hire them than to leave them unemployed.
What are these 4chan cliches to which you refer?
Not electing Democrats would be the solution. The American cities cited in the article are all being
rundestroyed by that party.He is not wrong about the COVID era dystopian aspects
Simple, the achieving of excellence with regard to skill, duty, courage, honesty and industry. Examples are Rome at it’s peak and the Royal Navy from 1793 to 1815. At Trafalgar Nelson sent the message ” England expects every man to do his duty “. Rome and the RN expected every body to display the highest standards of skill, courage and duty.
Hiring of the incompetent, venal, cowardly and lazy leads to decline and then collapse.
One can only corrupt the cowardly, lazy and venal.
Isn’t this all rather alarmist? Throughout history cities have come and gone. Rudyard Kipling* put it rather well:-
“Lo, all our pomp of yesterday
Is one with Nineveh and Tyre!
Judge of the Nations, spare us yet,
Lest we forget—lest we forget!”
(* ‘Recessional’ 1897.)
True. Cities experience renewal at varying rates.
True. Cities experience renewal at varying rates.
Not everything is a conspiracy !
Just imagine how busy Soros and co must be organising all this stuff …
Exactly! It’s akin to believing god has a plan for each of us.
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. Then you will call on me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you. You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart. I will be found by you,” declares the LORD, “and I will restore your fortunes.” Jeremiah 29:11-14a.
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. Then you will call on me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you. You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart. I will be found by you,” declares the LORD, “and I will restore your fortunes.” Jeremiah 29:11-14a.
Exactly! It’s akin to believing god has a plan for each of us.
People are not Evil just because they do things that you disagree with or things that are shown to be wrong, or even things that are self-serving. Please leave this term for that which is truely evil; it’s like using the term “racist” all the time, it loses its meaning and its impact.
But Soros is evil, if you don’t know this, its because you don’t understand him
Sorry can’t agree here. As an aside, just how well do you know him?
Exactly. But please don’t apologize, Linda.
Exactly. But please don’t apologize, Linda.
Evil is a meaningless, biblical label. Be specific.
You can’t recognise and identify any things (and people) as evil? I could list a few.
You can’t recognise and identify any things (and people) as evil? I could list a few.
Sorry can’t agree here. As an aside, just how well do you know him?
Evil is a meaningless, biblical label. Be specific.
I agree with you, ‘evil’ IS a very strong word to be used with great care. However, particularly in the light of the unfolding Covid saga, I have found myself ascribing ‘evil’ to many aspects of the so-called pandemic and, reluctantly, to several of the characters responsible for some of the catastrophic decisions regarding the interventions made ‘to save lives’. If these were the result of mere ineptitude, however crass, such would be forgivable, but the only rational explanation I can find is that some decisions could only have been made and administered with sinister intend. (e.g. a ‘pandemic’ contrived to enable the global release of an experimental ‘vaccine’ technology, using fear, coercion and manipulation to ensure maximum uptake, in order to eliminate any possibility of a vital and invaluable control group). Evil? Ultimately it is God’s call….
But Soros is evil, if you don’t know this, its because you don’t understand him
I agree with you, ‘evil’ IS a very strong word to be used with great care. However, particularly in the light of the unfolding Covid saga, I have found myself ascribing ‘evil’ to many aspects of the so-called pandemic and, reluctantly, to several of the characters responsible for some of the catastrophic decisions regarding the interventions made ‘to save lives’. If these were the result of mere ineptitude, however crass, such would be forgivable, but the only rational explanation I can find is that some decisions could only have been made and administered with sinister intend. (e.g. a ‘pandemic’ contrived to enable the global release of an experimental ‘vaccine’ technology, using fear, coercion and manipulation to ensure maximum uptake, in order to eliminate any possibility of a vital and invaluable control group). Evil? Ultimately it is God’s call….
The rise of remote work is a less important factor working against the city as the shift from a politics that serves a populace of sovereign, taxpaying, citizens to one in which politicians govern a clientele of dependents. The tipping point has passed, and there are not enough citizens to overcome the power of the dependents and their votes.
But billionaires don’t pay as much taxes as the working class. It would seems more like a system that serves he elites more than “dependents,” whoever they might be.
This trope of ‘billionaires don’t pay as much in taxes’ is just rubbish. Taxation in the USA is highly progressive where something like the top 5% pay over 50% of federal taxes and a disproportionate amount of the myriad other taxes – property, cars, yachts, capital gains, etc. Your misinformation is no way to approach solving the USA’s severe case of overspending.
This trope of ‘billionaires don’t pay as much in taxes’ is just rubbish. Taxation in the USA is highly progressive where something like the top 5% pay over 50% of federal taxes and a disproportionate amount of the myriad other taxes – property, cars, yachts, capital gains, etc. Your misinformation is no way to approach solving the USA’s severe case of overspending.
But billionaires don’t pay as much taxes as the working class. It would seems more like a system that serves he elites more than “dependents,” whoever they might be.
I don’t recognise your London as it is a *vastly* safer & nicer place than it was in 1970s. The absurd Sadiq Khan is doing his best to mess things up but the idea much of London is a fearful place after dark simply isn’t my experience
Vax rant aside, I agree.
The reason people walk around with their heads down in major cities these days is linked to the lack of prosecution of the street urinators. The homeless on drugs…..
How many urinators are we talking about!!!!
In CA? Roughly 125,000 people.
The solution? Build more affordable housing.
In CA? Roughly 125,000 people.
The solution? Build more affordable housing.
How many urinators are we talking about!!!!
Ah yes the old “us or them, good or evil ,decent or indecent, you people” mentality really helps, doesn’t it. You are “you people” so what are YOU doing about it except pointing a finger the other way. What do you suggest as a solution?
Is there any subject you can’t link to a rant about the pandemic?
How about offering us a solution to how you would prevent cities declining, rather than throwing in a load of cliches from 4chan
Isn’t this all rather alarmist? Throughout history cities have come and gone. Rudyard Kipling* put it rather well:-
“Lo, all our pomp of yesterday
Is one with Nineveh and Tyre!
Judge of the Nations, spare us yet,
Lest we forget—lest we forget!”
(* ‘Recessional’ 1897.)
Not everything is a conspiracy !
Just imagine how busy Soros and co must be organising all this stuff …
People are not Evil just because they do things that you disagree with or things that are shown to be wrong, or even things that are self-serving. Please leave this term for that which is truely evil; it’s like using the term “racist” all the time, it loses its meaning and its impact.
The rise of remote work is a less important factor working against the city as the shift from a politics that serves a populace of sovereign, taxpaying, citizens to one in which politicians govern a clientele of dependents. The tipping point has passed, and there are not enough citizens to overcome the power of the dependents and their votes.
I don’t recognise your London as it is a *vastly* safer & nicer place than it was in 1970s. The absurd Sadiq Khan is doing his best to mess things up but the idea much of London is a fearful place after dark simply isn’t my experience
Vax rant aside, I agree.
The reason people walk around with their heads down in major cities these days is linked to the lack of prosecution of the street urinators. The homeless on drugs…..
Ah yes the old “us or them, good or evil ,decent or indecent, you people” mentality really helps, doesn’t it. You are “you people” so what are YOU doing about it except pointing a finger the other way. What do you suggest as a solution?
Yes, true enough; Except….
Let us take Soros in USA – he spends Millions of $ to fund elections of city DAs and Prosecutors and Judges, entirely to stop prosecution of crime. His guidance has made the Homeless unable to be run off – instead the decent people must run off and move elsewhere. Stopping prosecuting of shoplifting, public urination – and even robbing, beating, stealing cars, public drug sales and use, keeping crazy people out of asylums to wander the streets, and prisoners released after token sentences, making the streets to scary to go out on after dark…Making life untenable for decent people in the city.
My old parts of London used to be good – now people only walk fast with their heads down if they have to be out after dark.
So much of this – the entirely unsuitable migration encouraged, the making school education in a city almost doing more harm that help to the children. The business model closing small business and favoring the huge monopolies…..This is Intentional.
So, yes, what you say is true. The thing is it is directed, it is being managed for nefarious purposes.
That is the article you need to address – ‘WHY’? And why do we allow it? But then – all you sheep got the insanely bad vax although I saw that and refused because it and the mask were crazy – and you wore masks, and showed proof of vax, and allowed travel bans, and locked up and stayed in, and kept children at home to their Great harm, and let granny die alone with people in space suites ignoring her, and so on –
So I guess the Why is because Evil people would do you harm, and as they own the media and Government you will let them.
Off course Edward Gibbon places much of the responsibility for the ‘Fall of Rome’ on the rise of the cult of the Nazarene, a pernicious eastern sect, otherwise known as Christianity.
He felt that such ideas as “turn the other cheek” etc were completely incompatible with running the greatest Empire the World has ever seen.
Perhaps the contemporary emergence of the WOKE in Western society is the harbinger of a similar disaster?
Charles, you keep bringing out the long-suppressed and carefully concealed optimist in me.
This woke stuff has just got to burn itself out, hasn’t it ? It’s so obviously full of contradictions and infighting.
I have no doubt that it will, as you so rightly say “burn itself out”.
However before that happens there maybe, perhaps already is, considerable damage to contend with.
I am particularly minded on the 60’s when all sorts of nonsense was being spouted and substantial collateral destruction was the unfortunate result*.
(*Ironically in 1964 Labour’s battle cry was “ Thirteen years of Tory misrule”!)
Let’s not forget “The White Heat of Technology”.
Isn’t this something a johnny-come-lately called Trump might sign up?
Let us not forget how our, or at least my, parents generation were petrified stiff at the sight of the likes of The Rolling Stones, and various other musicians, in their view leading is into a society of anarcho Marxism, with the hippies as their storm troopers, with the moral poison of ” free love” and the Paris Revolution of ’68.
Wind forward a few years… Jagger buys his shoes and shirts at New and Lingwood and lays down pipes of Port for his children, Stevie Winwood farms in Gloucestershire and is one of our top Hound Judges, Eric Clapton is a mad keen shooting man and rescued Cording’s the Picadilly country tailors. I spent 2 weeks in Cap Ferrat late one summer with the ostensible rebel and king of outrageous behaviour, Led Zepplin drummer John Bonham…. mainly chatting about farming, and his life’s fullfilment to go to Harpur Adams agricultural college, which sadly never happened due to his untimely and sad death…..
All may now be not as woke bad as it seems?!!!
Live on a sink council estate and attend a comprehensive which serves it. Friends have taught in the worst primary school in Salford and a comprehensive in Peckham in 2000; the tales they told were grim both about the pupils and their parents. As the saying goes, some houses were so filthy one wiped one’s feet when one left.
A Most pop stars came from Middle Class backgrounds, attended grammar or public schools with Ringo Starr and Roger Daltrey being the exceptions.
No they did not… that is manifestly and factually incorrect.
Genesis- Charterhouse, Jagger and Richards-Dartford Grammar, Lennon- Quarry Bank Grammar, McCartney- Liverpool Institute – Liverpool equivalent to Manchester Grammar School,
Grammar school was based on 11plus not class or wealth.
Grammar schools provided a middle class environment somewhat different to working in scrap metal yard or a contruction site.
And for the girls?
They worked in the mills.
They worked in the mills.
And for the girls?
Grammar schools provided a middle class environment somewhat different to working in scrap metal yard or a contruction site.
Grammar school was based on 11plus not class or wealth.
Genesis- Charterhouse, Jagger and Richards-Dartford Grammar, Lennon- Quarry Bank Grammar, McCartney- Liverpool Institute – Liverpool equivalent to Manchester Grammar School,
Attending grammar school doesn’t mean that one is middle-class; I went to a grammar school and back then was decidedly working class.
Grammar schools provided a route for upward mobility.
Precisely.
Precisely.
Because of the 11plus perhaps?
Yes.
Yes.
Grammar schools provided a route for upward mobility.
Because of the 11plus perhaps?
Honestly, how clean your house is, does not depend on your property value. We have worked in many houses. Some at the the top are just as grim as some at the bottom. It’s just some people don’t seem bothered about it. Normally the big ones that are bad have lots of dogs and cats. Each to their own, I’m not the cleaning police.
Talk to Police in the poorest areas.
What’s your point?
Often poorly maintained untidy homes also comes with all sorts of criminal activity- domestic violence, drug taking/dealing, theft, sexual abuse,poor academic activity, etc. I rememeber listening to a friend who taught in school with pupils from a sink estate ; the children were coming stinking because they and their clothes were unwashed. When the Headteacher telephoned the Mother to raise concerns he was told to F… Off. A Headteacher said if 25 % of a class and the school were troublemakers, then one is not involved in education but riot control.
Often poorly maintained untidy homes also comes with all sorts of criminal activity- domestic violence, drug taking/dealing, theft, sexual abuse,poor academic activity, etc. I rememeber listening to a friend who taught in school with pupils from a sink estate ; the children were coming stinking because they and their clothes were unwashed. When the Headteacher telephoned the Mother to raise concerns he was told to F… Off. A Headteacher said if 25 % of a class and the school were troublemakers, then one is not involved in education but riot control.
Ah you are one of those. My experience of actually working in people’s houses all over the country is not good enough for you.
‘middle class environment somewhat different to working in scrap metal yard or a contruction site’ – is that the problem, mine is the not middle class opinion but that of a person that works on construction sites – not middle class enough for you? You talk to the nice police man. I don’t know anything obviously.
What’s your point?
Ah you are one of those. My experience of actually working in people’s houses all over the country is not good enough for you.
‘middle class environment somewhat different to working in scrap metal yard or a contruction site’ – is that the problem, mine is the not middle class opinion but that of a person that works on construction sites – not middle class enough for you? You talk to the nice police man. I don’t know anything obviously.
Talk to Police in the poorest areas.
No they did not… that is manifestly and factually incorrect.
Attending grammar school doesn’t mean that one is middle-class; I went to a grammar school and back then was decidedly working class.
Honestly, how clean your house is, does not depend on your property value. We have worked in many houses. Some at the the top are just as grim as some at the bottom. It’s just some people don’t seem bothered about it. Normally the big ones that are bad have lots of dogs and cats. Each to their own, I’m not the cleaning police.
Live on a sink council estate and attend a comprehensive which serves it. Friends have taught in the worst primary school in Salford and a comprehensive in Peckham in 2000; the tales they told were grim both about the pupils and their parents. As the saying goes, some houses were so filthy one wiped one’s feet when one left.
A Most pop stars came from Middle Class backgrounds, attended grammar or public schools with Ringo Starr and Roger Daltrey being the exceptions.
Speaking for myself I had a ball in London the 60’s. I’m so sorry you seem to have missed out, Charles.
Too busy ‘elsewhere’, and much more fun, if you get my drift?
Too busy ‘elsewhere’, and much more fun, if you get my drift?
Let’s not forget “The White Heat of Technology”.
Isn’t this something a johnny-come-lately called Trump might sign up?
Let us not forget how our, or at least my, parents generation were petrified stiff at the sight of the likes of The Rolling Stones, and various other musicians, in their view leading is into a society of anarcho Marxism, with the hippies as their storm troopers, with the moral poison of ” free love” and the Paris Revolution of ’68.
Wind forward a few years… Jagger buys his shoes and shirts at New and Lingwood and lays down pipes of Port for his children, Stevie Winwood farms in Gloucestershire and is one of our top Hound Judges, Eric Clapton is a mad keen shooting man and rescued Cording’s the Picadilly country tailors. I spent 2 weeks in Cap Ferrat late one summer with the ostensible rebel and king of outrageous behaviour, Led Zepplin drummer John Bonham…. mainly chatting about farming, and his life’s fullfilment to go to Harpur Adams agricultural college, which sadly never happened due to his untimely and sad death…..
All may now be not as woke bad as it seems?!!!
Speaking for myself I had a ball in London the 60’s. I’m so sorry you seem to have missed out, Charles.
But what “woke” exactly?!!!
I have no doubt that it will, as you so rightly say “burn itself out”.
However before that happens there maybe, perhaps already is, considerable damage to contend with.
I am particularly minded on the 60’s when all sorts of nonsense was being spouted and substantial collateral destruction was the unfortunate result*.
(*Ironically in 1964 Labour’s battle cry was “ Thirteen years of Tory misrule”!)
But what “woke” exactly?!!!
What exactly do you mean by “woke”? It seems like a label that gets bandied around as a put down for things the users don’t like. Could you be specific? I’d like to understand
Worthless bed-wetting spastics in short, if you know what I mean, which I am sure you do!
Worthless bed-wetting spastics in short, if you know what I mean, which I am sure you do!
Charles, you keep bringing out the long-suppressed and carefully concealed optimist in me.
This woke stuff has just got to burn itself out, hasn’t it ? It’s so obviously full of contradictions and infighting.
What exactly do you mean by “woke”? It seems like a label that gets bandied around as a put down for things the users don’t like. Could you be specific? I’d like to understand
Off course Edward Gibbon places much of the responsibility for the ‘Fall of Rome’ on the rise of the cult of the Nazarene, a pernicious eastern sect, otherwise known as Christianity.
He felt that such ideas as “turn the other cheek” etc were completely incompatible with running the greatest Empire the World has ever seen.
Perhaps the contemporary emergence of the WOKE in Western society is the harbinger of a similar disaster?
There is massive variation in downtown vitality between cities both within the USA and across the developed world.
Ordinary families have not lived right in the centre of most rich Western cities for a long time – certainly not in the US and UK. Way too expensive (unless its public housing) and a poor environment to bring up children,
I still remember my year living in Dallas in 1989/90 and the shock of seeing a large downtown which was dead and populated only by the poor and homeless after about 6pm. Even San Francisco was similar in parts. Perhaps only New York is different (I haven’t been yet). This is just how the US is – people seem to eat out much earlier and retire home earlier. I still remember trying to find somewhere to eat in San Jose (the centre of Silicon Valley) around 8pm on a weekday evening – a city of 1 million people and no restaurants open. The open stuff is in other districts.
There is huge variation in Europe. Berlin (6 years ago) was clearly still lived in by ordinary families on ordinary incomes. Central Budapest clearly still is (last year). I think Southern Europe and Latin America are similar.
Some of this is historic. Some of it is cultural. Some of it is urban safety and crime (or perceptions of crime).
I much prefer the cities where ordinary people can still afford to live and you can still see children and families. And that are not swamped by tourism.
And some is based on geography. Much of Western Europe can fit inside of the landmass that is Texas.
Absolutely correct.
Europe is so small, land wise, and the countries within it are as well. The US by contrast has very different urban areas. We always struggled with supplying proper public transportation, for example. We are so spread out.
Also, many major cities in Western Europe are swamped by tourism. Budapest’s day is coming. And Latin America, with the exception of Buenos Aires, struggles with a safety image that affects not just tourism, but its own people.
So true for transportation in the US. I’m stuck in a town that has no transportation to the nearest big city, and then driving in that big city would be dangerous. Even my small village in England had train and bus service way back when!
So true for transportation in the US. I’m stuck in a town that has no transportation to the nearest big city, and then driving in that big city would be dangerous. Even my small village in England had train and bus service way back when!
Absolutely correct.
Europe is so small, land wise, and the countries within it are as well. The US by contrast has very different urban areas. We always struggled with supplying proper public transportation, for example. We are so spread out.
Also, many major cities in Western Europe are swamped by tourism. Budapest’s day is coming. And Latin America, with the exception of Buenos Aires, struggles with a safety image that affects not just tourism, but its own people.
The increase in violent crime with the decline in education so that the schools are incapable of teaching children to high enough standards to read STEM Subjects and Law at the top five universities causes flight of the middle classes.
How about using some commas, Charles.
How about using some commas, Charles.
I remember when I was working in New Mexico, It was after 7p.m. and I asked where I could eat, I just got a laugh and someone said “they roll up the side-walks here at 6 o’clock.”. Contrast this with when I was in Avila (in central Spain) a year later and I tried to find somewhere to eat at about 9.45p.m. and I was told that it was a bit early to find anywhere yet – I think things have changed a little now, though.
But New Mexico’s great, isn’t it ? At least around Santa Fe and the mountains in the north west. My favourite part of the US.
It is. I loved Santa Fe and Taos (full of arty-farty people but still a lovely place). The colours in the landscape can be beautiful in the sunset. I always tell friends who are thinking of visiting the USA go to New Mexico and Arizona, they are so different from anything we can see in Europe, even Spain, and they are stunning states.
It is. I loved Santa Fe and Taos (full of arty-farty people but still a lovely place). The colours in the landscape can be beautiful in the sunset. I always tell friends who are thinking of visiting the USA go to New Mexico and Arizona, they are so different from anything we can see in Europe, even Spain, and they are stunning states.
But New Mexico’s great, isn’t it ? At least around Santa Fe and the mountains in the north west. My favourite part of the US.
I’ve gotten mugged in both San Francisco and London. Hard to make generalizations. The quality of life in San Francisco is pretty abysmal now.
I blame the early closings you mention on mothers against drunk driving.
And some is based on geography. Much of Western Europe can fit inside of the landmass that is Texas.
The increase in violent crime with the decline in education so that the schools are incapable of teaching children to high enough standards to read STEM Subjects and Law at the top five universities causes flight of the middle classes.
I remember when I was working in New Mexico, It was after 7p.m. and I asked where I could eat, I just got a laugh and someone said “they roll up the side-walks here at 6 o’clock.”. Contrast this with when I was in Avila (in central Spain) a year later and I tried to find somewhere to eat at about 9.45p.m. and I was told that it was a bit early to find anywhere yet – I think things have changed a little now, though.
I’ve gotten mugged in both San Francisco and London. Hard to make generalizations. The quality of life in San Francisco is pretty abysmal now.
I blame the early closings you mention on mothers against drunk driving.
There is massive variation in downtown vitality between cities both within the USA and across the developed world.
Ordinary families have not lived right in the centre of most rich Western cities for a long time – certainly not in the US and UK. Way too expensive (unless its public housing) and a poor environment to bring up children,
I still remember my year living in Dallas in 1989/90 and the shock of seeing a large downtown which was dead and populated only by the poor and homeless after about 6pm. Even San Francisco was similar in parts. Perhaps only New York is different (I haven’t been yet). This is just how the US is – people seem to eat out much earlier and retire home earlier. I still remember trying to find somewhere to eat in San Jose (the centre of Silicon Valley) around 8pm on a weekday evening – a city of 1 million people and no restaurants open. The open stuff is in other districts.
There is huge variation in Europe. Berlin (6 years ago) was clearly still lived in by ordinary families on ordinary incomes. Central Budapest clearly still is (last year). I think Southern Europe and Latin America are similar.
Some of this is historic. Some of it is cultural. Some of it is urban safety and crime (or perceptions of crime).
I much prefer the cities where ordinary people can still afford to live and you can still see children and families. And that are not swamped by tourism.