Imagine apartments built into what used to be department stores, (Oh, you’re JC Penny 203? I’m at Sears 106). Get those old arcades up and running. Set up meal stations at the food court. Once people actually live there, stores will start to move back in.

If I’m unable to finish my life in my own home, that doesn’t sound like a terrible option.

  • @[email protected]
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    74 months ago

    Yes, that’s what Europeans don’t understand about America. When we go to, say, Wal Mart, there’s only one. We have to go to Bentonville, AR. Not so bad for us here in the Midwest, but the residents of Alaska have it particularly tough. And since you go to Wal Mart to pick up milk, we can’t go by public transport. It has to be by car, or better yet, drive the Canyonero. (No train schedule can predict when the milk runs out!)

    The country is so big, and we have so much empty land, there’s just simply no room to build more stores near where people live. What kind of madness would that be?!

    • @[email protected]
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      44 months ago

      (No train schedule can predict when the milk runs out!)

      How about YOU predicting when milk runs out? I’m not asking you to do five-year plan, but it’s easy to know when milk will run our.

      The country is so big, and we have so much empty land

      Russia is bigger and has more empty land. Despite Putin’s idiocy with invading other country.

      • @[email protected]
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        54 months ago

        Ha, I thought that the blatant contradiction about having too much space and therefore not enough space would make the joke obvious, but I guess not.

        Also, a Canyonero isn’t a real vehicle. It was a joke from The Simpsons.

        • mbfalzar
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          54 months ago

          The joke was obvious, and you even doubled down by suggesting people intentionally go to Bentonville. I appreciated it