Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Dion

Maybe. The first part is just kind of scattered and reads as if you aren't serious. It took until the annotated aerial photos that I realized you had a plausible theory and that this was an effort-post

2 weeks ago 1 0 0 0

I read it this morning and thought it was an April Fools Joke for the first ten paragraphs

2 weeks ago 0 0 1 0
Preview
What is The Birth of a Capital? This post is decades in the making. Since high school, I have been interested in a particular part of my childhood that neighbors discussed uneasily, or apologetically, if at all. The big park up the ...

Routinely, I am asked, "Why is DC *like that*?"

And I know exactly what they mean, and you know exactly what they mean, because DC really is *like that.*

And I am such a humanitarian, I will answer this question for you, if you subscribe to my newsletter.

1 month ago 40 15 2 6

Man every day I wonder if I shouldn’t just delete my account on here maybe. Opening Bluesky makes me want to actually walk in front of a truck. I don’t think people on here understand how crazy they’ve gotten

2 months ago 447 20 112 25
Preview
Kansas City developers halt sale of warehouse for ICE detention center as public pressure mounts Federal officials first toured the building in January, sparking speculation over whether the owners had sold the building to the U.S. government. Media reports suggested the sale was part of a push to use warehouses across the country as immigration detention centers.

BREAKING: Platform Ventures, the development company that owns a south Kansas City warehouse that federal agents toured last month to consider for an immigrant detention center, announced today that it is not moving forward with the sale.

2 months ago 782 158 12 26

100%

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

Gonna go ahead and pour cold water on calls for rail transit. It's an almost always idle structure 20 miles from the center of the region partially through under- and undeveloped land that was leapfrogged to build a mall by the freeway.

Ain't happening.

3 months ago 10 1 3 0
Advertisement

Hannah Arendt said 'The death of human empathy is one of the earliest & most telling signs of a culture about to fall into barbarism'

We saw the recent cruelty of MAGA denying empathy to Melissa Hortman

Empathy for Kirk—not because he ever acted like a decent human—but because we are decent humans

7 months ago 4662 972 352 109

The people of Kansas City should be furious about what the Republicans are trying to do to them. Breaking up KC for more political power to Trump is outrageous. And wrong. KC is a crown jewel of MO and the Rs are treating it like dirt.

7 months ago 263 56 14 3
Preview
Where could the House GOP redistrict next? The redistricting wars are ramping up. Here are the top places to watch.

Missouri republicans want to redraw the congressional map to eliminate KC's D+12 district

Punchbowl calls it "perhaps the easiest place for the GOP to gain a seat"

punchbowl.news/article/camp...

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

I want inclusionary zoning for (only) bigfoot single family homes, the least affordable and sustainable building form. Like, want to build over 2,000 sqft? Then you gotta make a contribution to the affordable housing fund.

9 months ago 20 1 1 1

John Oliver said “Reagan talking points from a Whole Foods crowd” — I think that is in reference to homelessness but it works here too.

9 months ago 19 1 0 0
Post image

4. Finally, the old Redemptorist building was reopened in 2006 as a Cristo Rey HS, serving the fastest growing Catholic demographic in the region: upwardly mobile Latinos

9 months ago 1 0 0 0
Post image

You can see the shift outward on this map. JaCo's middle class families have now moved on from both the inner city and the first ring of suburbs (Raytown, South KC, Independence). Both LS and Blue Springs are growing sources of St Michaels enrollment.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0
Post image

3. Four decades later, the center of gravity of Catholic HS students had shifted again, as Raytown's aging housing stock lost favor with middle class families.

O'Hara was replaced in 2017 by St Michaels in Lees Summit, the next ring of suburbs.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
Advertisement
Post image

2. By 1965, freeway and mortgage-access-driven suburbanization and neighborhood demographic change were taking a bite out of school enrollment. The archdiocese built a new school, O'Hara, on the border with the fast-growing suburb of Raytown.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

A brief history of Catholic geography in Kansas City, explained through four high schools.

1. Redemptorist High School opened in Midtown in 1926 in the midst of a five-decade boom that took KC from a backwater to (when combined with KCK) the 14th largest city in the country.

9 months ago 4 0 1 0

I wish they broke out ebooks from other online resources. Curious if this is an indication that people are reading less

10 months ago 1 0 0 0
Post image

Surprising chart: library visits are still down 35% since the pandemic began, and book checkouts are down 30%. Does anyone have a theory that explains this?

10 months ago 5 1 3 0

The real problem with this platform isn't that it's politics posters are annoying scolds. It's that no normies have moved over. If you're on social media to see fun things (sports, pop culture, dumb humor), this platform sucks.

10 months ago 1 0 0 0

I'd love to see opinion polling on this idea. "we're not going after you, just reckless psychos" could really work

10 months ago 2 0 0 0

The average restaurant here is not as good as the average DC restaurant (though that may be a cultural divide as much as a quality divide—I have unusual tastes) but the very best are very, very good

10 months ago 0 0 0 0

Every midsized plus metro is like this. For example: I have been extremely pleasantly surprised by KC’s food scene.

10 months ago 0 0 1 0

There's still so much vacant land in greater midtown Kansas City

10 months ago 2 0 0 0
Advertisement
Map of Kansas City area highlighting selected roadways in the KC area with more than 18k vehicles per day. They include southwest trafficway, ward parkway, state line near I-435, metcalf Ave, Burlington/route 9, 135th, Shawnee mission parkway, and blue parkway

Map of Kansas City area highlighting selected roadways in the KC area with more than 18k vehicles per day. They include southwest trafficway, ward parkway, state line near I-435, metcalf Ave, Burlington/route 9, 135th, Shawnee mission parkway, and blue parkway

22,000 vehicles per day is generally considered the upper limit for a 3-lane road diet. Under 18k is a no-brainer.

According to Replica, here are the non-expressway roadways with more than 18k cars per day (bidirectional traffic, or 9k for a directional segment). Our streets are so over-built.

11 months ago 14 3 1 1
Post image

That's offset by the small number of people in that geographic area though. If you draw a simple 500km circle around KC we come in 34th of the 40 largest metros for population.

11 months ago 2 0 1 0
Preview
In the Center but All Alone We’re in the center of the country. But everything is far away.  The Center of the Country Recently I told a friend I moved to Kansas City and he said “Oh that’s not bad, you’re smack dab in t…

new post on my blog: we're in the center of the country. So why does Kansas City feel so isolated? kcisms.wordpress.com/2025/05/17/i...

11 months ago 7 0 2 0

A useful reminder that population growth is not guaranteed: St Louis lost more than 3,000 additional people last year

11 months ago 0 0 0 0