YIMBY movement: Difference between revisions

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Suburban Action Institute was a pro-integration, proto-YIMBY group active on the East Coast in the early 1970s:
 
[http://www.nytimes.com/1971/11/07/archives/the-suburbs-have-to-open-their-gates-the-suburbs-have-to-open-their.html http://www.nytimes.com/1971/11/07/archives/the-suburbs-have-to-open-their-gates-the-suburbs-have-to-open-their.html]
 
"As long as the costs of educating suburban children are borne by the local real property tax, a community will try to enhance its tax base by luring industry, and will try to keep out housing developments that attract families with children. A radical restructuring of the tax system for financing education is needed, both to end exclusion and to assure every child, whether born in a rich or a poor community, equal educational opportunity.
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Stone, Casie. "[https://socialistworker.org/2017/07/20/the-yimbys-push-unaffordable-housing The YIMBYs push unaffordable housing]." ("Casie Stone analyzes the platform put forward by a range of 'Yes In My Backyard'&nbsp;organizations--whose arguments fit nicely with the interests of real estate developers.").&nbsp;''Socialist Worker,&nbsp;''July 20, 2017.<br/> [https://socialistworker.org/2017/07/20/the-yimbys-push-unaffordable-housing https://socialistworker.org/2017/07/20/the-yimbys-push-unaffordable-housing].<br/> &nbsp;
 
Becky O'Malley. "Why is a YIMBY like Sebastian Gorka?" Berkeley Daily Planet, Friday July 14, 2017.<br/> http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2017-07-14/article/45873?headline=Why-is-a-YIMBY-like-Sebastian-Gorka---Becky-O-Malley.&nbsp;
 
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