Quote:
Originally Posted by ranchlandsselling
Sure - if reparations were paid by said closer citizens for the monies that were equivalently spent placing, upgrading and maintaining their infrastructure from back in their day. Inflated to 2012 dollars and all additional costs like the examples provided above were board by said citizens living close by.
Or, have the city purchase all housing from the entire population for current market values. Create new taxation system and start the auction and see where everyone lands and how the like said location*.
*I have no idea if that makes sense or is relevant but it popped into my head and sounds fun and dramatic so I'm going to leave it without editing or thinking about it 
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Hahaha, okay.

My only concern with your post is in the first paragraph - why would inner city residents have to pay reparations on things that were built and paid for along time ago? That's the beauty of living inner city - the existing majority of the infrastructure is re-used by multiple generations.