Re: Another Side of Eminent Domain
Survey, you are simply espousing a simplistic point of view that has no purchase in reality. Ever since there was private ownership of property there have been restrictions on the use to which that property can be put and what types of structures can be built thereon.
Initially there was only one authority, one land owner, only the power of eminent domain; everything belonged to the king(s). That power became institutionalized and restricted as more sophisticated land use practices and ownerships became the norm. You don't need to think too long and deeply to see that if your "every man for himself" approach were actually practiced, there would be large cities full of slums and factories and adjacent fortified enclaves of the very rich. There would be no Oklahoma City as we know it today without zoning, eminent domain authority, land use regulations and statutes, such as the OKC Historic Preservation Ordinance, that spell out even more precisely what can and what cannot take place on private properties in particular neighborhoods. There would be no Charleston; no Savannah, no Times Square, no Heritage Hills, no Edmond, no Oklahoma State Capitol Complex, no University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, no turnpike from OKC to Tulsa, very few roads and highways at all, etc. etc. etc.
How many times would Chicago and San Francisco have burned down without building codes . . . do you want to throw building codes in there as well . . . same deal, government telling someone how to build something on their property, imposing restrictions on individuals.
All of these freedom trampling laws, as you perceive them, simply add sanity to an otherwise frantic out of control landscape, which we all, individually and collectively, call our home.
The Old Downtown Guy
It will take decades for Oklahoma City's
downtown core to regain its lost gritty,
dynamic urban character, but it's exciting
to observe and participate in the transformation.
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