![]() The TCPA persuaded Tony Blair to back new towns, followed by Gordon Brown and David Cameron. In every London borough there is a Milton Keynes lurking unused. The key to low-carbon living is adapting back-lots and bringing upper and empty floors into use. Cities are where journeys are shortest and not by car, while infrastructure is in place and can be more efficiently enhanced and shared. To urbanists such as Harvard’s Edward Glaeser, the “greenest” places in which to live are the biggest cities, such as Manhattan and central London. It is hard to believe that would pass muster today.Įvery doctrine of modern planning screams no. ![]() The most successful, Milton Keynes, was ideally located in the home counties and designed around a grid of roads, Los Angeles-style. Some, such as the brutalist Cumbernauld and Thamesmead, were often disliked and have had to be extensively demolished. The towns were artificial settlements planned by architects, not grown organically from existing communities. The two-dozen postwar new towns were rarely successes, except where they filled with home counties commuters. Spacious estates would cover the landscape and traffic would move freely through them. Champions of new towns since the 19th century, their founder, Ebenezer Howard, dreamed of new garden cities that would one day entirely replace filthy old slums. The reference to new towns came, we are told, from a meeting with the veteran Town and Country Planning Association. Housing policy was to be conducted from Westminster. He later regurgitated what seemed the result of a good lunch with the construction lobby: five Milton Keynes sprawling across the south-east and an end to local democracy in planning. In his speech Starmer dismissed levelling up with a jeer. It discusses the curse of Britain’s geographical inequality, and the significance of Boris Johnson’s “defining mission”, levelling up. Reeves should turn to page 231 and share it with Starmer. ![]() The best bit of gossip out of Liverpool was that the bedside reading of the shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is Paul Johnson’s excellent bestseller, Follow the Money. It sounded ominously like the HS2 of housing. There would be “Labour new towns”, whatever they are, referred to in later briefing as in the south, on the “M1 corridor”, brooking no local opposition and “the equivalent of five Milton Keynes.” Land for them would be purchased compulsorily at a knock-down price. ![]() Then came two words that fell flat: new towns. It was that of an expectant prime minister, of sonorous phrases and few promises. (1) His opinion agrees with Poof who said he believed G/NESARA would not be declared until the New Year.Keir Starmer’s speech to the Labour party conference was good. But in November, he says, we should hear all about it.Īlthough your video may default to Hooktube, in fact Simon’s video did first appear on Youtube. Behind the scenes a great deal is happening. He makes the point that he doesn’t want to do updates when little in the open is happening. I believe he was referring to the EBSs and what follows them. “We should see everything we hope to see” in the next two weeks. The first was President Kennedy’s efforts to end the Federal Reserve and the second was 9/11. Her notes that this is the third time the white hats have attempted to declare the Reval. Simon predicts dramatic changes in the next two weeks but he doesn’t see G/NESARA being declared until February/March the Reval sooner. Simon Parkes points out that his and Charlie Ward’s presence back on Youtube should be taken as a concrete sign that things are happening, that the white hats are either in control of Youtube or have increased influence.
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