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Andrew Burleson's avatar

I think people instinctively recognize the old urban forms as the relics of a civilization that no longer exists, whereas the strip mall is contemporary banal. Ie, nobody doubts that a decayed strip mall could be replaced by a “better” strip mall quickly and easily. But the Main Street buildings - even if they are just a brick facade - represents something we don’t make anymore.

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polistra's avatar

Towns, like companies and people, need to have more than one skill. Compare Enid and Ponca. Both about the same size in the same geography and history. Enid had Champlin, Vance Air Force base, Speedstar drilling equipment and Union Equity grain elevators. Ponca had Conoco and nothing else. Champlin and Conoco both moved to Houston in the 80s. Ponca was lost, but Enid could fall back on the other skills. The air force base is the most substantial.

Companies with two or three main lines could survive when one line grew unpopular or over-regulated or exported.

Of course EVERYTHING is offshored now, so the only survivors are defense contractors and stock traders.

Moral: Get a gummint job.

China is succeeding because everything is a gummint job. They don't rely on stock traders.

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