http://occupycorporatism.com/agenda-21-mirco-apartments-built-across-america-in-the-name-of-sustainability/
In San Francisco single individuals are rent
their very own 1st generation Agenda 21 two hundred and twenty-two
square foot apartment (if the closet and bathroom are factored into the
allocated living space). The intention of these “shoe box homes” are to
house marginalize the general public and train them to accept less
living space in the name of affordability.
In the South Market neighborhood in San Francisco, Patrick Kennedy, a
UC Berkley-based developer, will reveal his contribution to the move
toward cramped housing with mini-apartments of 300 square foot. Kennedy
explains: “You could obviously build more of them if you don’t have to
do them as large.”
Residents who live alone can expect to be coerced into giving up
extra room for breath-taking views of the Bay area, furniture that comes
out of the walls and beds that convert to couches to maximize living
space.
In essence, these mini-apartments are only a bit bigger than the
average US prison cell, although designed to resemble a hotel room.
Back in July, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced the construction of 275 to 300 square foot micro-apartments
in Kips Bay in a beta-test to coerce New Yorkers into living in
tight-knit, purposefully dense areas to alter the psychological
landscape toward conversation globalist style.
In San Francisco single individuals are rent
their very own 1st generation Agenda 21 two hundred and twenty-two
square foot apartment (if the closet and bathroom are factored into the
allocated living space). The intention of these “shoe box homes” are to
house marginalize the general public and train them to accept less
living space in the name of affordability.
In the South Market neighborhood in San Francisco, Patrick Kennedy, a
UC Berkley-based developer, will reveal his contribution to the move
toward cramped housing with mini-apartments of 300 square foot. Kennedy
explains: “You could obviously build more of them if you don’t have to
do them as large.”
Residents who live alone can expect to be coerced into giving up
extra room for breath-taking views of the Bay area, furniture that comes
out of the walls and beds that convert to couches to maximize living
space.
In essence, these mini-apartments are only a bit bigger than the
average US prison cell, although designed to resemble a hotel room.
Back in July, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced the construction of 275 to 300 square foot micro-apartments
in Kips Bay in a beta-test to coerce New Yorkers into living in
tight-knit, purposefully dense areas to alter the psychological
landscape toward conversation globalist style.