Middle America's 'doom loop'; Work from home is crushing Midwestern downtowns; interesting story I wanted to share as the fraud pandemic like the 911 attack, has changed our lives forever, all for BAD
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Interesting article. Just a few days ago, my sister and I took a tour of our downtown. I’ve got to say I was literally gobsmacked at what I saw. All those empty office buildings are not going to waste and my conspiracy theorist radar was screaming 🙀. These buildings are being converted into 15 minute, “Stack-n-Shacks!
With a whopping 290 square foot living spaces!
If you think for a second this as not planned, your living on another planet.
What’s even scarier, is that they are hiding nothing. It’s blatant in your face.
Downsizing and making the local community/extended neighborhood strong is a plan for surviving the crisis we find ourselves seeking ways to manage.
The ideas expressed by some of the 'experts' is the cities in the MidWest need to make themselves more attractive. Attractive for whom? The 'glitter and glitz' is all superficial. The small towns, to my understanding, made the MidWest a place capable of self-sustaining behavior. People in 'big cities' are isolated, not really knowing their neighbors and depending on a fragile supply chain to keep the city from devolving into chaos.
Interesting article. Just a few days ago, my sister and I took a tour of our downtown. I’ve got to say I was literally gobsmacked at what I saw. All those empty office buildings are not going to waste and my conspiracy theorist radar was screaming 🙀. These buildings are being converted into 15 minute, “Stack-n-Shacks!
With a whopping 290 square foot living spaces!
If you think for a second this as not planned, your living on another planet.
What’s even scarier, is that they are hiding nothing. It’s blatant in your face.
It’s time to wake up!
I followed the link and did a quick read.
What need is being met by these 'big' cities?
Downsizing and making the local community/extended neighborhood strong is a plan for surviving the crisis we find ourselves seeking ways to manage.
The ideas expressed by some of the 'experts' is the cities in the MidWest need to make themselves more attractive. Attractive for whom? The 'glitter and glitz' is all superficial. The small towns, to my understanding, made the MidWest a place capable of self-sustaining behavior. People in 'big cities' are isolated, not really knowing their neighbors and depending on a fragile supply chain to keep the city from devolving into chaos.