← Back to context Comment by rglullis 1 day ago Demand and primary resources go way higher on the list. 20 comments rglullis Reply treis 1 day ago Demand and primary resources are effectively infinite. djeastm 1 day ago >primary resources are effectively infiniteYou just solved economics? kys11 1 day ago We need eugenics to weed these people out of the gene pool. rglullis 1 day ago What?!The primary resource needed to build a home is land. Do we have infinite availability of land in desirable areas to build on? twoodfin 1 day ago In a world where it’s dramatically cheaper to build infrastructure like roads, power, and plumbing, lots more land becomes desirable as a place to live.Take Phoenix, for example, once air conditioning became cheap and pervasive. 13 replies → treis 1 day ago Enough that it's effectively infinite, yes. Especially if we are imagining a world where subways cost 1/20th of what they do today. 1 reply →
treis 1 day ago Demand and primary resources are effectively infinite. djeastm 1 day ago >primary resources are effectively infiniteYou just solved economics? kys11 1 day ago We need eugenics to weed these people out of the gene pool. rglullis 1 day ago What?!The primary resource needed to build a home is land. Do we have infinite availability of land in desirable areas to build on? twoodfin 1 day ago In a world where it’s dramatically cheaper to build infrastructure like roads, power, and plumbing, lots more land becomes desirable as a place to live.Take Phoenix, for example, once air conditioning became cheap and pervasive. 13 replies → treis 1 day ago Enough that it's effectively infinite, yes. Especially if we are imagining a world where subways cost 1/20th of what they do today. 1 reply →
djeastm 1 day ago >primary resources are effectively infiniteYou just solved economics? kys11 1 day ago We need eugenics to weed these people out of the gene pool.
rglullis 1 day ago What?!The primary resource needed to build a home is land. Do we have infinite availability of land in desirable areas to build on? twoodfin 1 day ago In a world where it’s dramatically cheaper to build infrastructure like roads, power, and plumbing, lots more land becomes desirable as a place to live.Take Phoenix, for example, once air conditioning became cheap and pervasive. 13 replies → treis 1 day ago Enough that it's effectively infinite, yes. Especially if we are imagining a world where subways cost 1/20th of what they do today. 1 reply →
twoodfin 1 day ago In a world where it’s dramatically cheaper to build infrastructure like roads, power, and plumbing, lots more land becomes desirable as a place to live.Take Phoenix, for example, once air conditioning became cheap and pervasive. 13 replies →
treis 1 day ago Enough that it's effectively infinite, yes. Especially if we are imagining a world where subways cost 1/20th of what they do today. 1 reply →
Demand and primary resources are effectively infinite.
>primary resources are effectively infinite
You just solved economics?
We need eugenics to weed these people out of the gene pool.
What?!
The primary resource needed to build a home is land. Do we have infinite availability of land in desirable areas to build on?
In a world where it’s dramatically cheaper to build infrastructure like roads, power, and plumbing, lots more land becomes desirable as a place to live.
Take Phoenix, for example, once air conditioning became cheap and pervasive.
13 replies →
Enough that it's effectively infinite, yes. Especially if we are imagining a world where subways cost 1/20th of what they do today.
1 reply →