Sunday, July 6, 2025

Gentrification: What Works? Rage, Reform, or Both?

 ✊ Gentrification: What Works? Rage, Reform, or Both?

Lately, I saw a video that stopped me cold — protesters in Mexico City walking into upscale restaurants, calmly saying “Buenos días”… and then smashing the windows.

They weren’t criminals. They were angry citizens.

Their message?

“We’re being pushed out. You’re not welcome if you’re displacing us.”

It was a protest against gentrification — a phenomenon we know all too well here in Vancouver, though we react to it very differently.


🌆 Vancouver vs. Mexico City: Two Worlds, One Problem

In Vancouver, gentrification creeps in quietly. Cafés, yoga studios, and condos replace co-ops, low-income housing, and corner stores.
We hold peaceful rallies, sign petitions, and speak at city council — if anyone even listens.

In Mexico City, frustration spilled over. Residents, especially in Condesa and Roma, are watching their rents double or triple because of Airbnbs and remote workers from abroad.
They didn’t wait. They acted.


💭 So What Actually Works?

Let’s get real: gentrification is a global force — driven by investment capital, tourism, and policies that favour developers over people.

So what strategy is more effective at stopping it?


🔥 Direct Action (like Mexico City)

  • Grabs media and political attention
  • Shocks the public out of complacency
  • Builds solidarity through shared urgency
  • Forces leaders to address the crisis

But it’s risky. Protesters can be arrested, vilified, or ignored — and without follow-up, the system often stays the same.


🧾 Formal Advocacy (like Vancouver)

  • Works within laws and policies
  • Wins incremental legal gains
  • Builds long-term coalitions

But it’s slow. It often lacks urgency. And let’s face it — developers are always 10 steps ahead.


✅ So What’s Most Effective?

The answer:

Both. Together. Coordinated. Relentless. Human.

The most successful housing movements mix disruption with reform:

  • Barcelona elected a former housing activist as mayor.
  • Berlin passed a vote to reclaim 240,000 corporate-owned apartments.
  • New York tenant unions combined protests with legal support to freeze rent increases.

What do these movements have in common?
They didn’t play nice, but they didn’t go it alone either.


📣 Vancouver, Wake Up

We can’t politely beg our way out of a housing crisis.

It’s time to raise our voices, organize at the grassroots, and support those who take risks to demand justice.

We need:

  • Tenant organizing
  • Community land trusts
  • Airbnb regulation enforcement
  • More housing taken OFF the market

And yes, we might need more noise — the kind that wakes people up before it’s too late.


📝 Final Thought

Gentrification doesn’t just erase buildings — it erases communities, culture, and connection.

Let’s not lose who we are while pretending it’s all just the market at work.

Sometimes change needs a hammer. Sometimes it needs a pen.

But it always starts with people refusing to stay quiet.



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