The fact is, we don't know how mild or extreme the change is. We're not sure that if in 100 years the world could be a giant ice sheet (i doubt that) or that we'll just have 10% stronger storms in 100 years time. We don't know. Yet we go on about climate change like its a giant meteor heading towards the earth, set to wipe out all life. Newsflash: it wont.
Not that I'm specifically arguing here, but I love how you go on for two paragraphs that nobody knows anything for sure, while flatly stating your own observations as concrete proof. You don't know any better that anyone, probably less since the flow of the conversation suggests you're neither a climatologist, nor particularly up on developments therein.
Alright, I dragging up PTTG??'s post from a couple days ago, because it stopped me in my e-tracks when I saw it. I couldn't respond when it was posted, because appropriately enough, I was marooned in Rural Village type area just as he described. Or rather, entirely unlike he described.
To establish my cred for my wall of rebuttals, the Rural Village I was trapped in was my father's neighborhood, outside of
Fink, TX. Even Village might be a misnomer, as no one lives in incorporated Fink - it consists of five buildings: a gas station, a u-store-it boat yard, what might have once been a diner, a liquor store, and a water tower.
It makes a rather good model of a rural American town, with it's highschool football, abundance of dangerously bored police officers, and crumbling economy. It's also comparatively well off, with a huge artificial lake providing a lot of tourism money, so the area is a good case study of what you can do with a rural town with more funds than open land would generate.
Rural areas have longer travel times, but are non-centralized, meaning no rush hour as every body moves into commercial areas and back out.
There is absolutely a rush-hour in rural areas, made all the worse because businesses are so far away from homes. The commercial crunch specifically is around the WalMart/Chedder's/ChickFaLay block of Pottsboro's extant consumer economy.
-Neighborhoods and communities do not form as readily; there is an isolating feeling, though this varies significantly depending on the architecture and culture of an area. Rural communities are generally more close knit.
There is a sense of community to be found in rural towns, but only if you can squeeze into the Sarah Palin / Larry the Cable Guy parody they have turned into a badge of honor. Any deviation from that mold brings immediate ostracism. The town despises my father (what few dozen people know of him anyway) for his witchcraft powers of analytical reasoning and technical instruction. He despises them in turn for being slack-jawed hayseeds, even more than he hated our neighbors in suburban Fort Worth.
Lower-density housing in rural areas does not rely on water or heating grids.
I don't know where you got this idea. Rural areas have utility services just like any developed part of America, except the water is filthy and the heating gas is unreliable. Only well-off people have their own wells, and there's barely enough money around for most people to afford the houses. Everything is pretty cheap, compared to in the city, but there's far less money to be made.
-Aesthetics: Rural homes are unique, built with character and growing with families (though I admit the results are sometimes not pretty).
This is complete bollocks. Again, only land-barons and similarly wealthy people can afford to even buy an original-styled house, much less build one. The vast majority of people live in pre-fabs trucked into the area. Just as tacky as McMansions with none of the good qualities.
As that last one shows, this is an objective thing in many ways. I am no expert at modern social organization, and I am certainly bigoted to prefer the rural climate. I would be very interested in hearing from an expert, and I'd like to hear your view.
You got it all right. Educated? No, but with a lot of down home experience. I've lived in rural areas around Michigan, Tennessee, and Texas half of my life. And I can tell you the only reason anyone should ever live in such areas is as a natural outgrowth of the necessary infrastructure to support farms. The yeoman myth of rural life is so full of holes you can dispel it with a single afternoon in Grayson County.
If I had to pick a reason, it'd be complete lack of economic opportunity for anyone not directly involved to producing resources. The natural optimism of situation all people feel turns all the problems associated with this into marks of pride. Lack of exposure to abundant, different people become distrust and outright hatred of the unknown. Solidarity in hardship makes education and healthcare into the devil's work. And all the while, these area's adopt all the ignorant accoutrement of suburbs (evergreen yards, fat camps, and I can find as many rap stations as country stations on the local radio) because they and the rest of the country are constantly told that they're the middle-class heartland of America, from which all norms and values must flow.