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Not true. The city plan had abundant housing for less than wealthy people and areas at higher pricing. However your point about Woodlands having restricted zoning is true, and much higher taxation than other nearby areas to support additional services and arguably better facilities.
New York City Population 18 million
(Metro area 21 million)
Covid-109 cases 40,900 (31 March)
Houston area:
1,266 cases
12 dead
168 recovered
(31 March Fox News 26)
Population 7 million
2020 Estimate 2.4 million for the city proper
The City of Houston does not have zoning but development is governed by codes that address how property can be subdivided. The City codes do not address land use.-- Oct 1, 2018
Planning and Development - City of Houston
https://www.houstontx.gov/planning/De...
Corona Virus Cases Metropolitan Dallas-Ft. Worth
Total Population 7.5 million
Dallas Dallas - 549
North Suburbs Collin - 160
Northwest Suburbs Denton County 191
Fort Worth Tarrant County - 161
Dallas Metro total case: 1061 (31 March)
That all being as it may, a better comparison would be a metropolis of 20 million that does not have zoning laws, if one could be found. Alternately, it would have to be demonstrated that the virus originated in Wuhan (versus Beijing or Shanghai or Hong Kong) because of Wuhan's zoning laws. In fact, the Houston suburb of The Woodlands has strict zoning laws. It was planned by fracking entrepreneur George P. Mitchell to be an ecological haven for the wealthy. It is not so much how many laws you have, but what kind.
As of a couple days ago, NYC represented 30% of all testing done in the U.S. Surprise!
And the intellectual lemmings continue on at breakneck speed for the cliff.....
anyway, that was the first Mardi Gras parade and I was so glad not to be there!
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/...
If you want some scientists to give a range of possible best guesses, the CDC has some of the best epidemiologists who just might be scientists.
Unfortunately, it only has confirmed, deaths, recovered, suspected.
I hope they will be expanding it with more useful data, but it may be designed to keep us from deducing what is really happening.
All that is reported is confirmed cases, deaths, and recoveries.
What % of confirmed are serious enough to need hospitalization?
What % of those are serious enough to require emergency treatment?
What % tested are showing no symptoms?
Is ANYONE being tested that has no symptoms?
What % of the cases have other serious medical issues? How does that effect the outcome?
Where is the direct analysis of patients from detection to resolution?
I can think of lots of questions and I am not an expert.
Why is there no data being released that would make it possible to judge the personal risk?
Is the Trump administration receiving the same useless data that we are seeing?
Haha!!!
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