Unless you’re in the habit of packing your own parachutes without training or taking midnight walks in downtown Detroit, avoidance may be easy but it’s certainly not cheap. The middle-class habit of buying homes in the burbs instead of closer to work is perhaps the most obvious and largest-scale avoidance behavior that I can think of, and it’s enormously costly in both money and time.
The middle-class habit of buying homes in the burbs instead of closer to work is perhaps the most obvious and largest-scale avoidance behavior that I can think of
Nowadays that’s driven more by schools than by crime, but in any case the context is relevant—which training for dealing with danger can you offer as an alternative? :-/
I am also not sure it’s costly in money—the market reflects demand and as demand shifts so do prices. If the limited resource that you want is the one everyone wants, it’s always going to be expensive.
Unless you’re in the habit of packing your own parachutes without training or taking midnight walks in downtown Detroit, avoidance may be easy but it’s certainly not cheap. The middle-class habit of buying homes in the burbs instead of closer to work is perhaps the most obvious and largest-scale avoidance behavior that I can think of, and it’s enormously costly in both money and time.
Nowadays that’s driven more by schools than by crime, but in any case the context is relevant—which training for dealing with danger can you offer as an alternative? :-/
I am also not sure it’s costly in money—the market reflects demand and as demand shifts so do prices. If the limited resource that you want is the one everyone wants, it’s always going to be expensive.