owl said:Think about it. Law and society are about control. If you have a problem being controlled, society and culture will try to break you. How you handle that will define you.
Donedirtcheap said:City ordinances and code have evolved over the years not to control people but to provide safety and stability in communities. It would be a free for all if no laws or structure were in place. Those laws usually come into place because too many people basically suck. They have no regard for others property and only think of themselves.
Its also why home owners associations have come to be very common. They help maintain property vales. Its absolutely amazing that people buy a house in one and then complain about the rules. They give you a packet of information with all the rules listed BEFORE you buy the house. If the rules are ridiculous, don't buy. Go buy where there is no hoa and then complain when the goofball next door rolls an old pick up truck over on its roof in the front yard because he's pulling the transmission.
Why should someone who buys a house for $800,00 near the ocean and pays $12,000 a year in property taxes have to put up with the street turning into a used rv lot. Why do business owners have to put up with having someone crapping by their door step or in their alley? Why do people get a cat and then think its ok to let it run wild and urinate around other peoples houses, crap in flower beds and sand boxes, crawl up into engine compartments and cause damage, walk on peoples cars.
so America isn't the land of the free.? your statements is valid but not the issue. if i want to live in a van and work. that is my choice. why should i have to live in a house or flat. you have made a blanket statement. which in my opinion is not fair. but a the same time i value what you have said.Donedirtcheap said:City ordinances and code have evolved over the years not to control people but to provide safety and stability in communities. It would be a free for all if no laws or structure were in place. Those laws usually come into place because too many people basically suck. They have no regard for others property and only think of themselves.
Its also why home owners associations have come to be very common. They help maintain property vales. Its absolutely amazing that people buy a house in one and then complain about the rules. They give you a packet of information with all the rules listed BEFORE you buy the house. If the rules are ridiculous, don't buy. Go buy where there is no hoa and then complain when the goofball next door rolls an old pick up truck over on its roof in the front yard because he's pulling the transmission.
Why should someone who buys a house for $800,00 near the ocean and pays $12,000 a year in property taxes have to put up with the street turning into a used rv lot. Why do business owners have to put up with having someone crapping by their door step or in their alley? Why do people get a cat and then think its ok to let it run wild and urinate around other peoples houses, crap in flower beds and sand boxes, crawl up into engine compartments and cause damage, walk on peoples cars.
Canine said:In the town of 60,000 where I live, I went to the Civic Center in the guise of having a "friend" visit for a couple weeks or so. I asked if "he" could stay in a 16 foot camper trailer during that time within the city limits or if there were any limitations on that. I figured if this fictional scenario had a good outcome, then a van would go over even better. The lady told me no one is allowed to stay in a camper or rv of any kind for any length of time unless it is in an rv park. She went on to inform me that staying in a tent overnight in the backyard is not permitted. Even parents camping out with their kids in their own yard was not permitted, although, she added this is never policed. This is in Montana, a place where we tend to have fewer restrictions than many other places.
I would also like to comment on the "few bad apples" replies. Yes, the "bad apple" excuse is often the cited reason for disallowing camping and similar situations, but that is an abuse of authority. Freedom takes a lot of work. Policing people who vandalize our communities is hard, but necessary to keep the people who contribute to society free to live in smaller, mobile dwellings. I believe living in a small, mobile dwelling is reasonable as long as we don't make the place where we live worse than when we moved in and that we continue to contribute positively to the society we share. Blanket legislation and overly punitive city codes is the result of some entity taking the easy way out. If vandwellers are allowed more freedom to live more integrated within a city, the city will see more vandalism from those "few bad apples". Then law enforcement and others will have to make the effort to police those criminals and the aftermath of their crimes. But that is the price law abiding people have to pay in a populated society. Freedom ain't free.
shella said:so America isn't the land of the free.? your statements is valid but not the issue. if i want to live in a van and work. that is my choice. why should i have to live in a house or flat. you have made a blanket statement. which in my opinion is not fair. but a the same time i value what you have said.Donedirtcheap said:City ordinances and code have evolved over the years not to control people but to provide safety and stability in communities. It would be a free for all if no laws or structure were in place. Those laws usually come into place because too many people basically suck. They have no regard for others property and only think of themselves.
Its also why home owners associations have come to be very common. They help maintain property vales. Its absolutely amazing that people buy a house in one and then complain about the rules. They give you a packet of information with all the rules listed BEFORE you buy the house. If the rules are ridiculous, don't buy. Go buy where there is no hoa and then complain when the goofball next door rolls an old pick up truck over on its roof in the front yard because he's pulling the transmission.
Why should someone who buys a house for $800,00 near the ocean and pays $12,000 a year in property taxes have to put up with the street turning into a used rv lot. Why do business owners have to put up with having someone crapping by their door step or in their alley? Why do people get a cat and then think its ok to let it run wild and urinate around other peoples houses, crap in flower beds and sand boxes, crawl up into engine compartments and cause damage, walk on peoples cars.
Canine said:Donedirtcheap, building to code is a reasonable and just rule. But when a few people use an extension cord inside a wall, no ban is implemented on building/maintaining ones own home. Codes are seldom enforced partly because policing the rules is inherently difficult. The next owners of the house usually pay the price when they uncover shoddy construction. Sometimes code violations are discovered posthumously.
Vandwellers who violate the law by littering or vandalizing are often not caught because catching the criminals is inherently difficult and convicting someone from out of state is nearly impossible. But just like when law-abiding home owners aren't banned from building when others violate codes, law-abiding vandwellers shouldn't be banned from mobile living when others violate law.
Some rules are more easily enforceable, though. Vehicles over 84 inches parked along a street could be banned because wide vehicles prevent the safe travel of two-way traffic. Sharing a populated area would then be more reasonable, getting away with violating that ordinance would be inherently difficult, and policing would be relatively easy.
I don't want to challenge your analogies for the sake of picking them apart, but to point out certain differences to give readers some points to think about. I'm glad you brought up the housing codes example as it does contribute to the conversation.
I far and away prefer holding individuals accountable for their actions (despite that usually being a lot of work) and the unfortunate consequence of criminals getting away with it most of the time. Outright banning based on the actions of a few should be a last resort.
Most agree a balance should exist somewhere between no government at all and a totalitarian regime. I don't write that to sound sarcastic, but to put in perspective that some rule is needed- but how much? No one in the history of the world has perfectly agreed on that point!
Benjamin Franklin-
“Those who surrender freedom for security will not have, nor do they deserve, either one.”
Canine said:Dirt cheap, now that I'm a bit older, those core issues you mentioned have certainly come to bite me in the butt. I've always been a relatively modest person in regards to living large and having lots of stuff, but the economic factor due to medical reasons is the biggest factor compelling me to live modestly. Being challenged like this has done me a lot of good, though. While things are tougher in many ways, I'm happier with less stuff and am happier being with myself. It is interesting how I had accepted the idea of acquiring stuff to make me feel better. Weird.
I like/dislike having discussions like this. Am still adapting to a different lifestyle and still learning how inflexible and unreasonable laws can be. I can't go 12 months without having some type of legal confrontation despite how incredibly hard I try to be a law abiding citizen. I'm trying not to be a Negative Nelly, but, man, am I getting tired of being jerked around for not doing anything wrong and having to front the cost of to defend myself. I find I'm developing a knee-jerk reaction when anyone mentions "code" or "ordinance". I don't want to be like that.
flying kurbmaster2 said:I think you have hit it on the head by creating a spot or parkup for vandwellers within cities. It could be an empty city street or a municipal parking lot, after a certain time it is open to park there and everyone has to be gone by a certain time or perhaps a limited time site or a van village. Here in NZ they have been talking a lot of about freedom campers dirtying up rest areas and some inner city parks parking spots and have been clamping down on them. If you go back into the bushes there are little bits of toilet paper, diapers etc everywhere which is a problem that could easily be solved by putting in a drop loo or one of those portables, a few garbage cans and servicing it. I am not sure why we always have to take the confrontational approach everyone should have a right to feel safe and live the life they choose if they are not harming anyone else
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