▲ | pjc50 14 days ago | |||||||
Funny, because the high costs of energy and transport are .. due to lack of investment. A vicious circle. Blocking green energy investment is the biggest area of frustration. You cannot demand to never see a pylon and then turn round and complain about your electricity bills. The press/public are fundamentally unserious about this. I got mildly radicalized when I read that someone was trying to block an offshore connection using the presence of "grade 2 listed concrete anti-tank cubes" on the beach. Edit: example of listed cubes https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1... | ||||||||
▲ | arp242 14 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
IMO the way Britain deals with listed buildings is excessively over-protective in general; sometimes it seems like every other building is a listed building. That alone wouldn't be so bad, but the number of restrictions that are placed are then often too much: preventing things like double glazing or other common sense modern improvements. I'm not against protecting historical heritage, of course, but society should serve the people currently living there. Just because something is over a few decades old doesn't mean it's worth bending over backwards to protect 100% intact without any changes. Would it really be so bad if a building from 1910 gets some double glazing, changing the appearance slightly? I'd say it's not. | ||||||||
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▲ | diordiderot 14 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Beyond parody |