| ▲ | overfeed 14 hours ago | |
> I guess there should be an ability to do this farther from the population centers though. Maybe Texas is far enough? The [l]one-star state has laissez-faire regulations, and may be more to author's speed. | ||
| ▲ | autoexec 14 hours ago | parent [-] | |
It's always hilarious when a bunch of people in Texas who hate government and government regulations get screwed so hard by the corporations that move in that they start incorporating to form governments so that they can pass government regulation to stop those corporations. See for example Webberville or the efforts to create Mitchell Bend in Hood County. Some people have to learn the hard way. Some never do. Texas got so sick of Texans trying to protect themselves by creating regulations that they created the Texas Regulatory Consistency Act. It took away the ability of local communities to protect themselves and instead protected the profits of some the state's biggest industry buddies. | ||