redditr/collapsecommenthomeownerScore: 0
A lot of people fail to make this connection. Things are gonna get real bad in these climate affected zones, but it's not like it's gonna happen all at once and the people there just get wiped out in some horrific catastrophe. It's gonna be a slow (ish) burn and it's going to create internal refugeeism. Florida and Louisiana for example, we know they're gonna be under water so where are the people going? Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama? Are those places prepared to take on the populations of at risk states? No of course but. It's gonna cause issues there which will result in economic turmoil for states that aren't receiving disaster relief from the Republic. It's gonna eget messy real fast. It's going to trigger major demographic migrations. And none of this takes into account all of the smaller at risk climate zones, like the beach communities all along the rest coast. As people are flooding out of Florida there will also be a trickle of folks exiting these smaller regions that have become unsustainable. The I-95 corridor is going to get so congested. We're already seeing rural areas massively increasing population as folks are fleeing the cities following pandemic lockdowns and these communities are struggling to keep up with the infrastructural needs. There's no plan in place to mitigate any of this. There's no way to predict trajectories. All we can do is watch and learn to swim
- Post Date
- 3/30/2024, 2:49:48 PM
- Scraped At
- 3/15/2026, 12:26:39 AM
- Thread ID
- 1br8w7q
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