If a farm is just another business, why is it treated like a forest?
The "green" in Britain’s green belts and the agricultural reserves of the American suburbs often consists of private farms and golf courses instead of wild woods. In this piece from 15 July 2026, mistaking agriculture for nature leads to a housing shortage and a misunderstanding of conservation. By treating every pasture as untouchable ground, policy ends up blocking homes for people while doing little to protect actual wildlife. The logic pushes past the visual charm of a red barn to ask what land is actually for.
Land-use policies in the United Kingdom and United States often treat farms as natural spaces to be protected from development. These protections restrict housing supply and drive up prices in regions like London and Maine, functioning as a barrier to new construction. The text argues that distinguishing between working farms and wilderness is necessary to support housing growth while protecting wildlife habitats.
Read at source: Slow Boring
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