jason mohammed asks if his city is growing too fast. i was born and bred in this city.he streets where i grew up haven't changed much. you can't say that for the beating heart of the capital. now i know not everyone enjoys hearing a cardiff accent, like, and many people around wales view my city with suspicion. they tell me that almost daily on my radio show. and, in a way, i can see why, because, let's face it, cardiff has benefited just from being our capital city. but fair play to the place, it's taken its chance, reinventing itself against all the odds. i used to come to butetown to go to the mosque. it was the docks back then — derelict and depressed. old, heavy industries were shrinking, as was cardiff's population. but then things began to change. just look at cardiff now. this city has completely transformed itself in around 20 yea rs. the jobs are in government, they're in media, in leisure and also in shopping. it describes itself as europe's youngest capital and it's got even more growing to do. my dad used to be a bus driver and finished up on this very rout