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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 31, 2023

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This isn't true either. I look at an inner-ring suburb of Pittsburgh like Dormont. It's about as walkable as one can reasonably expect. It has 2 nice main drags with lots of amenities, and it's affordable; less than a decade ago you could get a 3 bedroom house for under 100k. There was a time when people called it "Dirtmont" because it was kind of dumpy and working-class, but it was never dangerous, and no one would ever look down on anyone who lived there the way they'd even look down on someone living in a similarly white working-class area like Carrick. But now, people seem to like it. But not enough that people are banging down the doors to get in. There are a ton of areas like that around Pittsburgh, a lot of them in the city proper, but only trendy areas like Lawrenceville seem to be getting unaffordable (at least by Pittsburgh standards). I can't speak to other cities, but I doubt this is a unique situation.