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Raymond's avatar

I would probably fall under your haute precariat categorization. I studied economics & math in undergrad with a plan of pursuing a PhD, but I chickened out of that path my senior year. After college I was accepted into a prestigious teaching fellowship, which paid for my graduate education at a well known relatively elite institution. After a few years of teaching, I realized it wasn't for me, and I've spent the past few years oscillating between unemployment and working lousy jobs in hospitality or office work.

I've moved back and forth between NYC and my parents' homes in FL. My dad who recently passed was a renter and not very financially secure, but my brother and I stand to inherit my mother's house when she passes. I'm currently pursuing self-study in programming to ideally move back to NYC with more solid career prospects. I'm currently 33.

I'm a DSA member and left-YIMBY and I've spent a lot of time arguing housing with my comrades, and I'm thoroughly convinced that for the vast majority of them their position on housing is matter of ideology & ignorance rather than perverse incentives. Most folks I know in NYC from middle class backgrounds have parents who live elsewhere. There's no incentive to push for NIMBY policies in NYC where you currently rent because you stand to inherit property in MN or FL in 30 years.

The truth is that young leftists are skeptical of arguments about supply and demand and simply buy into the narrative that construction of new "luxury" housing drives up rents and pushing out existing residents. Developers are pursuing profits so they must be bad. YIMBYs are all nerdy, basic bro, (neo)liberal white guys who work in tech so they must be wrong. Racial justice groups tell us development causes gentrification, and they're the good guys so they must be right.

The bright side is, it should be easier to change bad ideas than bad interests. Leftists genuinely aren't interested in seeing home values soar, and they resent their suburban upbringings. They want to have an affordable life in the city, and genuinely think that's what they're fighting for. They believe in a massive expansion of public housing if not full decommodification. They just don't get that opposing private development not only makes that more difficult, it really is a form of accelerationism that stands to harm many folks (themselves included!) in the process.

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Ross Chehayeb's avatar

This is a really interesting post. The NIMBY-ism among the left is certainly disconcerting. I think your first hypothesis explaining it is more accurate than inheritance. It doesn't seem to me that anybody is considering an inheritance 30 years away when advocating against rezoning projects. It seems much more ideological to me.

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