One of the parties being unwilling to compromise. Do get that straight, heh. Chunk of the dem's legislative problems the last decade or two (at least) has been a willingness to compromise... when the other side involved is a bad faith actor that doesn't intend to keep their side of things going at all. You want to bring people together substantially, you're going to have to figure out how to fix that latter bit. Lotta' folks want to compromise, but they start getting prickly when it sequentially buggers them.
The way it's being argued in here makes it sound like there's absolutely no hope for these places and the only fate is to become ghost towns. I know frumple is saying otherwise, but at the same time, possible solutions keep getting shot down.
*shrugs* Maybe those towns just weren't meant to be. There's no rule that says there needs to be a way to solve this problem. Maybe there isn't, at least not for a price we are willing to pay.
Oi, don't get what I'm saying wrong. There's still going to be rural towns, for all sorts of varying reasons. You're still going to have economic enclaves (or whatever they end up being called) based around whatever crap
can operate under the burden of working in those conditions and maintain competitiveness, and there's going to be a fair chunk of folks out there willing to pay the extra costs involved in order to live outside a city. It's just that, yeah, a lot of these places are going to become ghost towns. It's going to take freakishly unlikely shit happening for the rural/lower density populations to be able to maintain quantity and quality of life with the demographics it has now and in the areas they're in now, much less grow in a way it's not functionally dying because it's staying relatively static when everything else
isn't.
Solutions that are going to be able to work are pretty much known, and have been for a while now. You have to retrain, you have to reorganize the economies of the areas (that can manage it) around industries that aren't (as) effected by the economic problems involved (i.e. close to nothing that involves physical goods, little that involves a lot of necessary interpersonal wheeling and dealing, etc., etc.), you have to get the portions of the population that will necessarily be unable to manage that (because there's
going to be less jobs out here, and they're going to be pretty damn different for a lot of folks, too) either some sort of support or the means and willingness to go somewhere that they can support themselves through work they
can manage.
You need education investment, subsidies and government investment (because it's going to take an actor that's
not operating off profit motive to spearhead this, period) in said industries to get them to critical mass and start investing in these areas under their own volition in meaningful amounts, welfare and various sorts of other easement that either makes the movement involved with that tenable for families that currently can't afford it without functionally destroying themselves financially or make the lower income folks stuck in these shitholes not have to live like shit because of it (and so might just be able to start accruing the resources necessary to get out or transition to an industry more able to support them). Way to get low expertise folks to realize and accept that they're not (all, anyway) going to be able to live a good life on that, anymore and particularly out here, and how to live with that. Lot of these areas
are still going to be screwed, because there ain't a single damn thing you can do about that that's going to be particularly sustainable, but that's how you get the
populations in them a path forward. Gonna' be a fair amount of that that paths to somewhere else, location and living style wise, but that's seriously about all we really got that'll work on the scale we need it to.
Problem's getting people to
do that, when it means more government involvement, less pride, a fair bit of pulling up your roots on top of it, and a great deal of personal level uncertainty regardless. The fact that one of our two major political parties has spent the last few generations actively trying to sabotage the country's raw physical ability to deal with stuff like this doesn't exactly help either, heh.