I'm not sure this audience wants to embark on this tangent, but better here than Poly asshatery for the laughs....
"Gentrification is the colonization of our neighborhoods by powerful developers and affluent consumers who claim to be building something valuable on land that was “empty” and “wasted” before they came. Colonizers invoked the notion of terra nullius–– “the racist legal fiction that declared Indigenous peoples too “primitive” to bear rights to land and sovereignty when they first encountered European powers on the continent, thus rendering their territories legally empty and thus open for colonial settlement and development...Today the land that Latinos, American Indians and Blacks are living on is deemed too valuable to be left to us. But those who celebrate gentrification ignore the violence of eviction, growing poverty and broken communities. The noise of demolition is muffled out by the same colonial mantra of “improvement” and the clanking of wine glasses."
WHAT IS GENTRIFICATION? PART I: THE RENT GAP
This article is the first in a two-part series explaining what gentrification is and how it works. This first part explains what the late urban geographer Neil Smith called the “rent gap,” an essential condition for gentrification to occur. Part 2 will discuss the multiple phases of the gentrification process from disinvestment to displacement.
Imagine a large working-class family, who’ve been renting a home for decades. Its a few rooms too small for them to live comfortably but they try to respect each other’s privacy. The parents work 40 hours a week, sometimes putting in a few hours of overtime, and still they struggle to live a respectable existence, capable of only making ends meet, trying to provide a good life for their children.
Now imagine a developer who is looking to make profit from the same community, a community that has been disinvested from and ignored for decades by landlords and the City of Dallas, as well as the majority of the affluent class–but not by its residents.
So the investor purchases the lot that this family and similar families with similar stories have been living in and decides to demolish their homes to build a luxury apartment complex that the current residents will never be able to afford. Now they have no place to stay or at least afford in the neighborhood they’ve called home, forcing them to move further away from what they know, only to deal with further economic and social obstacles.
This is Gentrification. For the wealthy gentrification may look more like wine glasses, elegant patios, boutique stores and cappuccinos, but for us it is the loss of our cultural spaces, a higher cost of living and eventually eviction by one means or another.
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