My money's still on synthetic hydrocarbons
Plausible, especially with nuclear power that can power the infrastructure.
nd that's what all of this boils down to: No-one is allowed to escape utopia
There really does seem to be a lot of "I don't know how to be happy so the best I can do is make everyone else equally miserable" in these things, doesn't there?
Rural regions have a reason to exist, and I support their productivity.
Suburbs though -- no reason.
Plow them under and pack the sardines.
Depends on circumstance. A lot of suburbs are a sort of transitional state, either as a small city that exists to provide centralized options for nearby rural regions, or are in the process of going from rural to urban as population grows.
Others? Yeah, a lot of them were planned projects rather than any sort of natural development. And utter shit for that very reason.
Speaking of:
I'd just rather it be done in a controlled and organized fashion instead of at the chaotic whims of the market.
At least the whims can adapt. I'd rather a building be light and flexible so that it can shift without breaking, rather than some soulless concrete monolith that's going to shatter the moment the earth shifts a tiny bit.
I live in Iowa
Every town out here is a decaying ghost of its former self and all the young people are moving away to pack themselves into cities.
I'd offer my condolences, but I actually live somewhere worse. Illinois. And I can tell you the cities here aren't in any way better than the small towns. Worse, by most metrics.
Chicago is where everything that can bring any sort of human happiness goes to
bleed out in the streets.
People are fleeing from this shithole state to go to your shithole state. Or any other neighboring state. Including Alabama.
You know you're fucked when
Alabama is a step up from what you're currently living with.
California? Being abandoned in droves. Mostly in favor of Texas and Florida, but also any of the other states.
I'm sure some people will still live out in the middle of nowhere, but the vast majority are going to be forced to move by the changing economic conditions - economic conditions that are just as much tyrannical as any government forcing them to do the same thing.
Oh, yes,
very young adults move into the cities looking for work. Sometimes. Depends on their work.
Most of the ones with any wherewithal move back out again in, maybe, ten years. Taking whatever experience and technical skills with them as they return to more rural areas for the purposes of actually
living their lives rather than existing only to work and die.
Maybe they don't move back to
Iowa so much- but any of the states that have more tourism than just the adrenaline junkies chasing tornadoes.
Cities are, for anyone who has a choice in the matter, a place to go temporarily to get your 'starter job' before leaving the moment it becomes an option.
Not a permanent place of residence.
For, again, anyone with a choice in the matter.