This tech is going to be important if we ever manage to move into space. This planet is already groaning under our weight and we're not getting much better so the best bet is to start moving off of this rock and I'd rather sacrifices be made to do so sooner rather than later.Broomstick wrote:Probably for the best anyway, since if it's like your other posts it's just more of the same technowanking.Norade wrote:I had a big long post typed up, but my PC crashed and ate it so here's the short version.
That's great. Let me know when it actually becomes safe to walk around unarmed at any time of day in any neighborhood.Crime rate in Detroit has actually been going down over the past few years. Possibly because the gang bangers were too efficient at killing each other. Possibly because there is little left to steal. Possibly for other reasons that aren't clear.I've never lived there and from the sounds of it the city is just a bunch of poor crooks. I'd love to say I have faith that we can, in a reasonable timescale, educate kids that might otherwise go towards gangs enough that they get jobs instead, but I doubt that's realistic.
I'd happily do more than just one city. If I had my way we'd be cutting population numbers and aiming to get to say three billion people by 2050 instead of ten billion as projected. I'd also love to see carbon emissions slashed by passing laws that force carpooling and ban driving to anyplace under a mile away.In other words, you're saying you'd quite happily obliterate everyone currently living in the city to serve your fucked up techno-fantasies and masturbation?I'd much rather see Detroit used as a testbed city for future technologies and city planning so that other worthwhile places can benefit. Frankly though I know that others think of the people that are suffering in Detroit and care, I don't.
You DO realize you're talking about human beings, yes?
I'm used to a system that works. In Canada damn near everyone of that third would be on some kind of social assistance dependents or not. It never even occurred to me that the US could have fallen to such lows as to not support those people.No, you ignorant moron - it's 1/3 below the poverty line. You can be below that line and still NOT qualify for welfare. In fact, welfare barely exists anymore in this country. Only people with dependent children can collect welfare, and that for only five years per child. That's IT. That's lifetime limit. After that you're cut off regardless of your situation. Food stamps are the only benefit that you can get outside of that, but it won't pay your rent, won't even buy toilet paper.Instead I see a city where 1/3 are on welfare and many of those have no hope of upwards mobility
So no, 1/3 of the city of Detroit is NOT on welfare. That is not what that statistic means. Educate yourself, asshat.
Of course I'd like to see welfare numbers decreased here as well, too many people that aren't even looking for work get it. Of course, in a perfect world, you'd need jobs or someway of getting these people education before you could call them too lazy for welfare.
Yeah, I'd flush those cities as well.Based on FBI crime statistics:a city where crime is off the charts,
St. Louis, Missouri actually has a higher violent crime rate per thousand than Detroit.
St. Louis, Missouri and New Orleans, Louisiana both have higher murder rates per thousand than Detroit.
There are 34 cities with higher rates of rape per thousand than Detroit.
5 cities have higher robbery rates than Detroit (Cleveland, Ohio; St. Louis, Missouri; Oakland, California; Cincinnati, Ohio; and Washington, DC)
I could go on, really, but the point here is that while Detroit sucks as a place to live it is NOT, in fact, the most dangerous city in the nation. Unless you're willing to flush St. Louis down the toilet along with Detroit, and maybe New Orleans, a couple cities in Ohio, and so forth your position is unjustified and based on ignorance of the actual facts.
I'm now supposed to care enough to look? The city is a shit hole, most places aren't worth saving. Seems like maybe just razing the entire thing and being able to start from scratch would be even better than shrinking it. That way at least you get a nice easy to expand layout and modern infrastructure.Actually, the core is pretty dead, it's the margins and the east side that are still viable. Again, you display your ignorance.and a city decaying so fast that even the core is likely only marginally worth saving.
You assume I live at home. I'm actually going to college and living with a roomate right now. My Mom does help me more than I'd like her to have to, but at least I'm working towards helping humanity as a whole. You help a person or two, you're a human interest story, you help the race by allowing machines to do more and more hard jobs and you make front page.What are you doing, other than costing your parents the money they spend on food and occupying space in mama's basement?What are these people doing for the rest of the world, and for the future?
That's great 15% of your energy is green. *Golf clap* Call me when you get to BC's level of clean power generation.Because they haven't go the money to do this.Why shouldn't the city start to slowly switch from coal and oil to nuclear power one small plant at a time until the technology gets cheap?
You are also apparently unaware that Detroit (actually, the greater South East Michigan area, also known as "Metro Detroit" encompassing the suburbs) gets 15% of its power from nuclear energy right now, from the Enrico Fermi nuclear power plant located near Monroe, Michigan. In 2008 the facility applied to build a third nuclear generation plant on the site. In other words, they're already doing it, which you'd know if you took ANY trouble to research reality at all.
Paying more taxes =/= to losing everything. Besides, even being penniless, I'll still take my nice city of Kelowna over Detroit.I got a better idea. How about we strip you of money and assets. I mean, if it's THAT important to you won't mind throwing all your resources towards it, right? By the way - Detroits's Eastern Market is about the only place to buy actual food in the city, and they do accept foodstamps. This will be important, since all your money will be going to your scheme and thus you will have no means purchase food other than foodstamps.Because they'll have to tax the already poor and make their lives less than a dollar a month less rich, I'm sorry I just can't bring myself to care.
I'm advocating fucking the already fucked a little more so the rest of us can eventually get off of this rock. Just because you care about the individual doesn't mean I should. I'm looking big picture and want at least some of us living full time off of this rock and I'd prefer it done yesterday.How fucking much carbon do you think they're putting out now?If Detroit pioneers small reactors and hydroponic farms at least they're giving back to the rest of the state and country and putting out a bit less carbon.
And no, they are not "giving back to the rest of the state", by depriving them of what little they still have left via taxing them for a non-viable business scheme what you're really proposing is exploiting the poor to benefit your own petty schemes and interests. You're justifying it by regarding them as less than yourself, and therefore not deserving of what little they have. You're advocating robbing the poor to amuse the rich.
Sorry, but telling me to worry about self sufficiency when my nation is exporting resources and power to the States if a joke right? BC is nearly 100% carbon free power and we're looking to make more so Washington state can stop polluting us and buy our power.On the other hand, if they can feed themselves they also take less. Hell, the might even become self-sufficient. A state you are apparently unacquainted with.If they make a huge mass of farmland for cash crops, or even just for wheat, beef, and corn they add nothing.
For a start on reading about my Province's power generation.
I was saying that more jobs should equal less violence - note lessen not lesson. As to why I hate the American poor, that's easy, they're choosing to be violent idiots that reject education. Look at the bottom third in Canada and see the difference in gang violence. Compare Toronto to any US city in crime rates and living conditions and you'll see why I want US cities put to the torch.I'm not sure how you translate "jobs" into "gang violence" lessons. Perhaps you're just stupid rather than ignorant.Sure a few more people have jobs and gang violence lessens, but what does that do for anybody else and how does it begin to pay for the money dumped into the city that went towards just keeping these people alive?
I'm also sure it escapes your pea brain that if 1/3 of the city is below the poverty line that logically it follows that two thirds of the city is ABOVE the poverty line - in other words, self-sufficient, employed people who are NOT sucking money from anyone else. But, apparently, you are willing to destroy 2/3 of the city to punish the impoverished bottom third because... well, I don't understand why that is necessary. I have never understood the rather vindictive attitudes that exist towards the poor.
Good to hear. I'm actually damn happy to see that and I wish I could follow suit on the gardening end, but a planter will have to do for my apartment. I'll replace my bulbs as they burn out, my old place was all energy saving bulbs, my new apartment isn't and I lack the funds to do a mass swap. Thankfully the apartment's layout means that the living room, kitchen, and dining area can all be lit by a single cluster of bulbs. I tend not to go for used clothes, though I do wear my stuff right through from new so it could be worse.I take mass transit wherever feasible.Now before you ask, what have you done for the world, I'll have you know I keep my carbon footprint low by not driving and using the most energy efficient appliances I can afford and that I'm going into the field of robotics after I'm done school with the goal of replacing construction workers with robots within my lifetime. What are you doing?
When I must drive I use a car that gets 40 mpg in the city and 48 on the freeway, which is the best gas mileage I can obtain at the moment.
I grow a significant portion (1/2 to 3/4) of the vegetable food I eat, rather than depending on commercial produce that requires long distance transportation to reach me. I also have a compost heap for natural fertilizer.
Other than a refrigerator and a stove, and using a commercial laundromat, I pretty much have NO appliances. No dishwasher, for example - washing dishes by hand has a much smaller carbon footprint than any "efficient" dishwasher.
I recycle. In fact, I not only recycle edible kitchen scrap into compost, I also recycle aluminum and steel, usually 20-50 pounds at a time, about every other month.
Replaced all the lightbulbs in the home with CFL's - which, of course, have a small disposal problem (I drop them off at the monthly hazardous home waste collection event held by my county). Next time we need to buy new lights we'll be getting LED's - we've already replace three CFL's with those.
I give my unwanted good clothes to charity. I buy many of my "new" clothes from second-hand stores - because I'm reusing clothes I don't increase resource use. (I do have to buy my shoes new, however, as I just plain wear them out). As a bonus, I save a shitload of money.
That's just off the top of my head.
In all, I'm glad to hear that we're both doing our part to save the Earth.