Alex Perry, 55, who has lived in Neatham for 11 years, says the plans would ruin his back garden views of the rolling chalk downs.
The dad-of-three said: 'They are going to destroy some of the most beautiful countryside in southern England.
'There has been no attempt to do any of the accompanying infrastructure. We have already got sewage spills and month long waits just to get an appointment at doctors' surgeries.
'It is the land that informed Jane Austen who she was. If you read her books, it is full of descriptions of this landscape.
'This land is our identity. It is the essence of who we are, and they are planning to concrete it. That is why people are so upset.'
Alas, no space to tell us what Mr Perry does for a living. What's the betting it's not something closely connected to the land? Was his house there when Jane Austen was about?
A nice sighting of "they haven't put any infrastructure in" too. That wouldn't make a lot of sense seeing there's no immediate prospect of new houses. Like you'd expect a Post Office and Primary School to be sat there waiting or something.
I'm calling nonsense on the "takes a month to get a doctor's appointment too". I bet you can fill in a triage form every morning, and in most cases get seen or phoned back.