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danielkayhertz.bsky.social
Personal account. Housing Director at Impact for Equity, a law and policy center in Chicago. Former policy director, Chicago Department of Housing. Book "The Battle of Lincoln Park" on the origins of gentrification in Chicago. 🍝& 🚌
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But not with an adverb phrase (“street-running tram” but “frequently running tram”)
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Oy, what neighborhoods?
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Agents just took a young woman, early 20s. She was with her attorney. Agents took her, crying, into a side room to separate her from her attorney. When the attorney tried to speak with her from the hallway, agents told her she was “interfering with law enforcement.”
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Does the project have 1:1 or greater parking?
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Ah, I can’t count
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It’s in the middle of nowhere Transit and walkability wise though, no?
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Embrace it
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Your Fault is a crank magnum opus, imo, in that I think the core of crankhood is the loss of ability to see your own perspective as one of many possible perspectives
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Ladies Who Lunch is a crank cri de coeur, and the main character's struggle is, imo, about a certain kind of romantic crankhood
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I'm talking like I'm some sort of connoisseur, I'm not, I'm really just thinking of Company and Into the Woods
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I don't know that Sondheim fandom is the path to anticrank, but I think that Sondheim characters are often trying to avoid crankhood, or reeling from not having avoided it
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I feel like a lot of Sondheim is about middle age and the struggle against crankhood, and that's why I like it so much
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"Innumerable number" it's happening right under my nose
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I could absolutely make hating overly bright headlights my entire personality
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i guess what im saying is if you've had, say, 15 years of staring at online metrics...you can get extremely cynical about what people say they want and what they will read. i think news orgs should strive to be above that always but it doesn't change that the dynamic is there
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For one thing, it dealt a so far permanent blow to the state university system
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Logan Square (Blue Line -> 2 bus, or Blue Line -> Red Line -> 59 or 63 buses)
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Same
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People thought it was ugly, and maybe still do, but I think it’s just a feature of the landscape now (it’s over a decade old at this point)
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chi.streetsblog.org/2013/02/21/y...
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wkarch.com/87/take-a-cl...
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I believe 2013–the first TOD ordinance was essentially written for it?