
Jordan Kohl
6.7K posts

Jordan Kohl
@simpixelated
Self-taught software developer, living in Carmel, IN, riding a cargo bike most of the time. I mostly tweet about urbanism now. Building https://t.co/tmPtkeIxie














That proposed Google data center in SE Indianapolis was supposed to pay $1M in taxes per year. One mixed use building in downtown Carmel, Sophia Square, pays $800K in property taxes and probably more than that in state and local income taxes.


Nonprofit Strong Towns opens Carmel chapter youarecurrent.com/2025/09/25/non…




A June high-speed pursuit initiated by the Carmel Police Department ended in a fatal crash in Indianapolis, raising questions about the department's pursuit policy. The crash killed an Indianapolis man and injured his son. youarecurrent.com/2025/09/05/hig…


You may not realize it, but an empty front yard of perfectly mown grass as a status signal is mostly a cultural psyop from the mid 1940s forward and a relatively new American ideal. “During wartime, popular household magazines such as House Beautiful or Life propagated this image of an idealized version of home. According to these articles, this was the image that American soldiers were dreaming of returning to, so maintaining it became a matter of national duty. Thus, maintaining the home soon turned into keeping the lawn, "a challenge for the fighters at home" as an article in the House Beautiful, March 1942 edition, describes it. The expectation to maintain a green, well-trimmed lawn became a social norm, often tied to notions of responsibility, tidiness, and civic pride. This was no easy task. Articles of the time often depicted the lawn as a site of battle, where weeds, pests, and drought were presented in almost military terms, as enemy combatants to be overtaken. Pests, in particular the Japanese beetle, soon became the default image of this domestic war, with exaggerated parallels drawn between this invasive species and its country of origin.”

Hamilton County is an outlier. Of the Hoosier state’s 10 most populous cities, every city has had a municipal bus service for decades, except for Carmel, Fishers and Noblesville. More here from @John_Tuohy and I: shorturl.at/DCFij

Many people don't include cars in their cost of living calculations. It's just another background tax of living in America.










