| ▲ | jacquesm 2 hours ago | |||||||
> But it will require paying a price. I don't doubt that it requires paying a price. The only relevant question is whether that price is substantially lower or substantially higher than continuing on our current track. I'm open to be convinced that it is higher but I strongly believe that it is lower because with increased fragility you're playing the dice and one day they'll come up in a way that hurts you. The more people there will be in those baskets that harder it will hurt. As for the future of cities: the internet has given us one thing: independence from having to go to cities to work. Combine that with the ridiculous energy expense on commuting and it seems like a complete no-brainer that we should just stop doing that. COVID has already shown us that this is far more possible than we ever thought it was. | ||||||||
| ▲ | JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> relevant question is whether that price is substantially lower or substantially higher than continuing on our current track It's higher than prevailing prices. And it gets higher the more autarkic and decentralised the system needs to be. > with increased fragility you're playing the dice and one day they'll come up in a way that hurts you Agree. It looks like insurance pricing. How much extra are your citizens willing to pay every year to reduce supply disruptions? | ||||||||
| ||||||||