this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2023
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[–] Saraphim@lemmy.world 8 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Riiiiight. Because elites will totally build something that is beneficial for everyone. Nah, they’d build those walls with actual cancer if it meant getting 5 extra minutes of labour out of the people who are going to work there. Maybe elites need to stop making the decisions about what’s best before we all die a horrible burning, drowning, nuclear winter death, or drop dead from being worked like a machine until the actual machines rise.

The concept sounds great - I doubt they have any intention of making it actually great.

[–] Jaded@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 years ago

I'm all for the first proper walkable city built from the ground up. Elites already own everything anyways, they run the government. Last generation of elites gave us nothing but gridlock and car fumes, I welcome the change.

[–] autotldr@lemmings.world 3 points 2 years ago

This is the best summary I could come up with:


The Silicon Valley elites who have been quietly buying up northern California farmland for several years have gone public with their vision for the utopian city they hope to build from scratch on 55,000 acres in Solano county.

This week the group behind the effort, Flannery Associates, launched a website for the initiative and released a series of sunny renderings showing Mediterranean-style homes and walkable and bikeable neighborhoods.

Last week, the New York Times revealed that Flannery Associates was backed by a group of prominent Silicon Valley investors and aimed to build a new city, operated using clean energy, that would create thousands of jobs while offering residents reliable public transportation and urban living.

The group of backers includes Reid Hoffman, the LinkedIn co-founder; venture capitalist Michael Moritz; Laurene Powell Jobs, the founder of the philanthropic group Emerson Collective and wife of the late Steve Jobs; Marc Andreessen, the investor and software developer; Patrick and John Collison, the sibling co-founders of the payment processor Stripe; and the entrepreneurs Daniel Gross and Nat Friedman, the Times reported.

“People in my district are understandably alarmed at a shadowy investment group buying up large tracts of farmland, purportedly to build a new city,” Bill Dodd, a state senator, said in a statement.

“We are grateful to our elected officials for allowing us the chance to discuss our vision to deliver good-paying jobs, affordable housing, walkable communities, clean energy, sustainable infrastructure, open space, and a healthy environment,” said Brian Brokaw on behalf of California Forever.


The original article contains 952 words, the summary contains 251 words. Saved 74%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

[–] lnxtx@feddit.nl 2 points 2 years ago

Interesting. No stroads? No suburbs?

When the land is limited, the capitalists prefer 15-minute cities.

Imagine the land value tax in the real cities.