wolfewood
Active Member
Actually I think China should do more to help the poor - not excessively like Canada does, such as not working but collecting $1500 every month from the government, but something to improve their life.
That being said, it is wrong to say the Chinese have no freedom of movement. Shanghai and Beijing are full of immigrants from all sorts of backwater towns. Since about 10 years, nothing prevents them from moving to larger cities any more, which is why large cities got more and more congested. I moved there, my brother moved there. My retired parents moved there too. Really, nothing prevents people from moving anywhere in the country any more. It is not the 1980s.
That's beyond the point though. The point about this particular project is that the subsidized low income population will continue to be "helped" by the government, just not in central city any more, because market situation determined better use of previous downtown land. I am not sure what "displaced" means - they don't own those properties, and are living there on taxpayers' expense, now they get to decide their preferred location? Sorry, I don't get it. What would you have to complain if your landlord decides to sell his house and asks you to move? Is that unfair? For them, it is like receiving free food from charity but says "no, I don't like chicken, give me AAA beef please". Social housing should still be provided, just in different places, maybe a bit farther away from Yonge/Dundas. I honestly don't see any unfairness in that arrangement. If I were someone on social aid, I wouldn't complain and would still be grateful knowing nobody in the world owes me anything.
Man you're moving from infuriating to just a pathetic train wreck.