Difference between revisions of "US/NC/Durham/elec/2019/housing bond/opposing sign"

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m (Woozle moved page Election/2019/US/NC/Durham/housing bond/opposing sign to US/NC/Durham/elec/2019/housing bond/opposing sign: I guess this never got included in the reorganizing.)
 
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* a [[Christian evangelical]] group is behind this
 
* a [[Christian evangelical]] group is behind this
 
* the sign is trying to appeal to Christian evangelicals
 
* the sign is trying to appeal to Christian evangelicals
Alternatively, it could be seen as an attempt to create dissent among supporters through "[[just asking questions]]": the fact that it attempts to mimic left-wing aesthetic (the black fist on a rainbow background) with a question that is fairly open (who benefits from affordable housing?) makes it seem like the intent is to get people who are uncertain about voting yes to reconsider. The Christian Fish/ Jesus Fish is a known Evangelical symbol, however: perhaps a way to inform people who already oppose the bond that it's from their side.
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Alternatively, it could be seen as an attempt to create dissent among supporters through "[[just asking questions]]": the fact that it attempts to mimic left-wing aesthetic (the black fist on a rainbow background) with a question that is fairly open (who benefits from affordable housing?) makes it seem like the intent is to get people who are uncertain about voting yes to reconsider. The Christian Fish/ Jesus Fish is a known Evangelical symbol, however: perhaps a way to [[cliquian signalling|inform evangelicals]] that they should take an anti-bond position (regardless of how they might have felt at first).
  
"Affordable for whom?" may be a reference to [https://www.shareable.net/events/affordable-for-whom-convening/ this conference], but since the bond is specifically intended to support the same aims that the conference supports, the logical connection remains unclear.
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"Affordable for whom?" may be a reference to [https://www.shareable.net/events/affordable-for-whom-convening/ this conference]<ref name=AfW />, but since the bond is specifically intended to support the same aims that the conference supports, the logical connection to ''opposing'' the bond remains unclear.
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==Footnote==
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<references>
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<ref name=AfW>See also: [https://righttothecityalliance.salsalabs.org/affordableforwhomconvening/index.html this] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20191023150914/https://righttothecityalliance.salsalabs.org/affordableforwhomconvening/index.html archive.org])</ref>
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</references>

Latest revision as of 21:09, 29 April 2022

Some of the signs have been turned upside-down. Nobody seems to be going around and correcting them, either, suggesting non-local origin.
This particular sign was found in front of Lakewood Shopping Center – the "vote no" sign is across the street, above and to the left of the "YES!" sign in the foreground. The "YES!" signs are far more ubiquitous.

IMG 20191020 125753919.affordable for whom.crop.800pxw.jpg

Text: "AFFORDABLE FOR WHOM?" / "VOTE NO ON THE BOND"

The Jesus-fish in the bottom right-hand corner suggests one or both of the following:

Alternatively, it could be seen as an attempt to create dissent among supporters through "just asking questions": the fact that it attempts to mimic left-wing aesthetic (the black fist on a rainbow background) with a question that is fairly open (who benefits from affordable housing?) makes it seem like the intent is to get people who are uncertain about voting yes to reconsider. The Christian Fish/ Jesus Fish is a known Evangelical symbol, however: perhaps a way to inform evangelicals that they should take an anti-bond position (regardless of how they might have felt at first).

"Affordable for whom?" may be a reference to this conference[1], but since the bond is specifically intended to support the same aims that the conference supports, the logical connection to opposing the bond remains unclear.

Footnote

  1. See also: this (archive.org)