it's to get away from the bustle and crowds but still be in the city area, yeah--that impulse is much older than cars are
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Replying to @380kmh
Modern suburb layout only appeared post-WW2 as living dreamscape scenario of ultimate security to raise a family
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Replying to @MAGApupper @380kmh
"bustle and crowds" are loved by young people and most women, what people are escaping is the 800%+ crime rate and ruined schools
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Replying to @MAGApupper
"security" for raising family, wildly high crime rates, ruined schools--you're only talking about America here, t. diversity
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Replying to @380kmh @MAGApupper
the suburban dynamic in USA is wildly exaggerated by the demographics of the country--compare w Japanese suburbs
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Replying to @380kmh @MAGApupper
Japanese people still want to live away from the city, have some peace & quiet and more space, etc...
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Replying to @380kmh
true but "sprawl" on a narrow mountainous island is laughable in scope compared to the great suburban wasteland flats of US
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Replying to @MAGApupper
have u been to any Japanese suburbs? they're a lot like ours except with narrower streets, outdoor stairs for the hills, etc...
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Replying to @380kmh
Typical denisovan admixture culture with rapidly aging population - urbanizing fast, small towns left to elderly as living monuments
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Replying to @MAGApupper
parts of Japan are urbanizing fast--other parts (most of Hokkaido, for instance) stagnating and depopulating
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suburbanization is (obv) most prevalent where urbanization is prevalent
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