James
Kunstler
These were educated people, for the most part, but they were members of a culture that had long ceased to value place except as a sales gimmick, and they had no vocabulary with which to think about it. Whatever they took from the experience of walking around Woodstock on a fine fall day was not apt to make their hometowns better places.
The Geography of Nowhere: The Rise and Decline of America’s Man-Made Landscape. p. 244