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Do you know why inner cities are hot? Because they have fewer trees. Do you know why they have fewer trees? Racism. So says Christopher Schell, Assistant Professor at the University Of Washington, Tacoma, whose specialty is urban ecology.

Schell (and seven co-authors) published a paper that looked at the correlation between rising temperatures and inner-city minority neighborhoods. “Where the buildings are, where the impervious surfaces were essentially that hardcover, right, the concrete, where the trees are, that’s all influenced by the policies that say where stuff is going to be and those policies themselves are racist,” Schell said.

> Do you know why inner cities are hot? Because they have fewer trees. Do you know why they have fewer trees? Racism. So says Christopher Schell, Assistant Professor at the University Of Washington, Tacoma, whose specialty is urban ecology. > Schell (and seven co-authors) published a paper that looked at the correlation between rising temperatures and inner-city minority neighborhoods. “Where the buildings are, where the impervious surfaces were essentially that hardcover, right, the concrete, where the trees are, that’s all influenced by the policies that say where stuff is going to be and those policies themselves are racist,” Schell said.

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yeah, you're an idiot.

trees don't die unless they're cut down by lumberjacks.

[–] 0 pt

I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic here. I'm going to assume you are.

Trees die all the time, especially in areas where they're strangled by small growth spaces like sidewalk cutouts. I seem to remember from my civil engineering years ago that trees in that type of environment have a very limited lifespan and planning needs to take the financial costs and logistics of replacement into account when planting them. Putting a tree in a pot is even worse.

lol, yeah I was 100% being sarcastic, hence the lumberjack quip

[–] 0 pt

I figured as much, it's just getting very hard to tell anymore.