quotation-icon.jpgDear Readers of the Brownstoner, I have never read any of your blogs before I saw this article. However, I have been exposed to your opinions and ideas since the day I was born. Most of those ideas have been around long before all of you were born and have lead to the establishment of, among many other things, Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany and ultimately the eradication of more than half the Jewish race. I bring these examples to show the power of your ideas and their ultimate manifestation.

These ideas have also been described…

…in The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. In that novel, America’s architectural and cultural field is filled with buildings which imitate the Roman, Venetian or Colonial style and not a single architect dares design a building which is outside the styles set forth before or during the renaissance period. Being Modern is taboo and an original idea is a sin.

The hero of the book is an architect, Howard Roark, who designs buildings in his own style, a modernist. He does not use useless arches, columns, or anything else, unless the building requires it. He does not care of for breaking a taboo unless the effects of it can be proven.

The antagonist, the community, describes him as being insane and unfit to be an architect. They say that his buildings are atrocious because no one has never used them before and say that his buildings are not structurally safe. They deem his opinions and knowledge to be wrong and their opinion to be right just because their opinion is held by the masses. The masses don’t know architecture but read the opinions of news paper columnists (bloggers) and adopt them as correct because a newspaper wrote it. Property rights and the right to think is a sin.

Roark is trying to improve the lives of the community while the community is trying to destroy him and his work. He is trying to climb up the social ladder while trying to lift it The community is retain their place in it, even if they lower the ladder.

I bring up this book and its theme because it is a perfect corollary for this article. YOU, the readers of the Brownstoner, the community, are the antagonist who refuse to think and wish to destroy those who wish to create, the developer. You wish for every thing to remain the way it is and to never see growth, never see new ideas, never see improvements in your lives. You wish for park slope to remain as all old brownstones. What about all those new business and ideas (like brownstones) which brought life to Park Slope when it was an uninhabitable dump? Worst of all, you wish this to occur at no cost to you and at the cost of someone else.

Well, we the living, the capable, the producers and the achievers disagree with your opinions and the means to your goal. However, we will not interfere with you achieving your goals. If you wish to keep park slope the way it is, you are free to do so, buy all the vacant lots and stop development on YOUR lots. Follow through on your ideas with your work, your blood, your tears, your money and YOUR LIFE. However, you must not interfere with any one else’s rights property, to ideas and to create.

I am not associated with the developer of the project but give him my thanks. He is a hero to be acknowledged and respect. He has his rights and are vigorously defended them against the masses who wish to impose onto those rights and who wish for those rights to not exist (for the minority, they must exist for the masses).

They wish for another man to live solely for his neighbor’s happiness. They wish his neighbor to be his slave, while not calling him that. They wish for the evil which manifested into the holocaust.

To all those who oppose the developer and wish to intrude on his right, If not for the developer what would be at this site? A car repair shop? A Oil Company? An unlicensed garage? Better yet, if not for developers, who would have created your precious park slope, who would have created the house in which you live?

This lot is unique in its characteristics, it is long with a small frontage. A brownstone could not be erected because it was uneconomical, it would require the developer to take a loss. The land is clay and was a swamp. Those are bad for construction and this developer has chosen to take a risk and to build this project and to reap its gains or losses. He has acted based on his judgment of the land and his experience in construction. He has also acted with his own money and his livelihood.

If you are correct and this site will always flood, this project will be a total loss and the developer will be bankrupt. The project will be destroyed and you will have won the argument based by your judgment of the site. However, if the developer was correct, he will reap the benefits of his work and the community will lose nothing.

Of course there is the issue of the project looking bad. I don’t care if the project is going to be the ugliest building in the world (Maybe then it may win some kind of prize). The developer bough the land and is free to develop it according to his judgment. If you are not happy with that, or disagree with his judgment, you are free to impose yours onto the land, as soon as you BUY it.

To all those who wish to impose on your neighbor’s rights remember: First they came for the Christians, no one defended them. Then they came for the Jews, no one defended them. Then they came for the Muslins, no one defended them. Then they came for YOU and there was no one left to defend you.

— by Eddie Skutelsky in Development Watch: Infill at Lake Windsor


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  1. No my friend, a 40 foot high pile of poopie may be impressive for it’s sheer size and scope, but it is the community at large that will be forced to breathe in the air of change in the end.

    Posted by: Legion at December 2, 2009 5:54 PM

    Hear hear.

  2. ok, so let me get this one straight.
    Our friend is here to defend the developer’s right to develop anything he wants, without criticism.

    He alludes to Ayn Rand in comparing the developer to a character from her novels who will assert his superiority over others by constructing his vision or blow it up before being forced to submit plans to a committee or community review for that matter.

    He goes on to compare the community review process to a fascist indictment of the “few”. And by extension, attempts to smear brownstoner commenters as co-conspirators in the persecution of the noble developers.

    While there is much to be said of those with a singular vision and certainly about those that have the courage to follow their convictions, it is a bit of a stretch to go Rambo over those that would seek to preserve that from the past which has been proven to work and, more importantly, to foster a better community.
    Think about the demolition of the architectural masterpiece that was Penn Station in the early sixties, in order to build the mediocre building that sits atop Madison Square Garden. Whose monumental “vision” was that?

    What’s next? Tear down the Parthenon or the Chrysler Building because some developer has a “vision” for a monumental Chuck E Cheese franchise?

    No my friend, a 40 foot high pile of poopie may be impressive for it’s sheer size and scope, but it is the community at large that will be forced to breathe in the air of change in the end.

  3. No way am i reading that, when you invoke the Nazi’s in the third line, aint no way I’m going to wade through another 400 lines of what is clearly drivel.

    So I am nominating BROWNSTONER for (readable) QOTD:

    “Quite right, Joe. We’re the first to applaud a new project that looks attractive and well-built. The problem over the last decade in Brooklyn has been that not many new buildings fit that description.”

    I love the quote, because I love examples of people being totally UN-self-aware.

    1. Brownstoner no offense but what training or experience do you have that could possibly make you think that you can tell the quality of the engineering or construction of a building while standing on the sidewalk looking up? (my hunch – nothing)

    2. What makes you think that YOU are such an arbiter of taste that you can accurately say what is “attractive” and what will and wont be looked at as ground breaking or attractive 100 years from now (my hunch – nothing).

    You are simply a muckraker (and that’s fine) with an opinion and a (good) blog (congratulations) but please dont let your (well earned) successes blind you from the reality that you dont know $hit about construction or architecture and your opinions on attractiveness are no more enlightened than anyone elses.

  4. It’s up to the guvment to provide infrastructure such as water, subways, etc. When new ‘fedders’ buildings appear, those owners are paying taxes. That’s what taxes are for. We could have the opposite problem, like Detroit.

    Posted by: denton at December 2, 2009 5:14 PM

    I’m really not getting the developers as much as the gov’t. Again, it’s divide and conquer. We should be mad at “them: and meanwhile we just fight amongst ourselves. I’m sure new subway lines would be something developers would WANT. Plus, it would probably attract the better architects, etc.

  5. It’s up to the guvment to provide infrastructure such as water, subways, etc. When new ‘fedders’ buildings appear, those owners are paying taxes. That’s what taxes are for. We could have the opposite problem, like Detroit.

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