Originally posted by Seshat
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A lot of our land may look arable, but it is not farmable. One of the biggest problems we have in the west is water shortages. In fact, I personally believe that Phoenix AZ and Las Vegas NV will have to be abandoned within the next 200 hundred years or so. Those two cities and Los Angeles all get the majority of their water from the Colorado river system, and it is slowly being drained dry. Los Angeles is on the sea, so if they can get a good seawater reclamation system going, they'll be all right when it finally runs out. The other two, however, are SOL.
Phoenix, especially, has problems. Arizona is a very conservative state; their Republicans are usually in control, and condequently Phoenix has absolutely no water restrictions rules in place. (Water restrictions are seen as a whiny-environmental-liberal thing to do.) The city 1) has some of the worst public transportation of any major city in the US. You cannot survive without a vehicle there. and 2) they have golf courses everywhere. In the desert. With lots of water fountains and such, at the golf courses and at many of the fancy hotels in Scottsdale. And because the tax laws in Phoenix are favorable to businesses, the place is growing like crazy.
This is not even touching on the fighting that goes on between urban areas and farming areas over water. The central California valley has this problem---there's lots of farming there, Napa Valley, etc, and on the coast, lots of cities that use a lot of water. They constantly fight over the set amount of water available.
The multi-million dollar stadiums you see are a use of excess wealth---but it's excess wealth the richest 10% of our population holds. Entertainment is probably the biggest business in America; a wealthy man can build a stadium, and rent it out to be used for sports events, religious gatherings, music concerts, big conventions, all sorts of things and make millions more off of it. Cities will borrow money to build these stadiums, but most of the profits goes back to the guy who lent the money in th efirst place, not the city.
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