i got this meme from @internetsavedme2 on instagram

    • TehPers
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      141 year ago

      That terrain looks perfect for it too! The adjacency bonuses you can stack up are huge, assuming there’s a nearby river.

  • @M500@lemmy.ml
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    321 year ago

    I get that life is safer, cleaner, and more comfortable for almost everyone on earth.

    But, I wish I could decide to spend a few months not working and living in the mountains or jungle without any serious work or financial repercussions.

    My wife and I are at a place where we have a long term plan to save and buy land away from the city.

    I can’t wait until I’m out in the country side and and can go outside to nature rather than concrete.

    • DeGandalf
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      161 year ago

      without any serious work

      this part sadly only works, if you’ve already worked your ass off beforehand.

    • @avonarret1@programming.dev
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      51 year ago

      That sounds wonderful. I often fantasize about living on a mountain side in a cottage with a porch where I sit with my wife on a crisp morning, just enjoying the sun rise, a coffee and the comfort of being in the moment with my closet ally on earth.

      I wish I had the money to do that someday.

      I congratulate you and your wife to make a dream come true. I believe, if you long so much and can make it happen, it will be worth it and it is something to work for.

      • @M500@lemmy.ml
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        11 year ago

        Sorry to mislead, we are far from the dream. But we have a plan at the very least and we can, for the first time, really see a path to get there. We still have years and years to go.

    • @spauldo@lemmy.ml
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      11 year ago

      That’s exactly right… For now.

      But if there’s coal in that mountain, we can level the whole thing like they do in West Virginia and leave a nice flat spot for an industrial park when we’re done.

    • mommykink
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      11 year ago

      Precisely. Entirely too rough of terrain.

      What this place really needs is some nice rental properties. Pave some roads going all over the mountains and boom, easy $500/night

  • @lntl@lemmy.ml
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    121 year ago

    nah, more like:

    imagine an open pit mine here 😍

    maybe mountaintop removal?

  • @LucyLastic@sh.itjust.works
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    91 year ago

    Urf, one of the candidates for mayor of the region where I live said that if they won they’d make an industrial park to encourage jobs … a third of the municipality is a nature reserve, half of it is a literal mountain, and the remainder is small farms. There are no roads big enough for a full size lorry, and there’s a large industrial estate in the valley below which provides lots of jobs.

    It just made me wonder if they were that corrupt or simply on drugs.

  • @Adalast@lemmy.world
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    61 year ago

    I get the point, but I am also obsessed with automation games, so you it says that and I’m like “oh, I can put the hub over there, and a tower on that mountain so I can get a good look at the factory in the valley. Oh, and I hope there is a good water source over around that bend I can put oil there.”

    There may be something wrong with me.

  • Phoenixz
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    51 year ago

    Colonialists? You mean “locals” don’t have either needs for industries that support human life, or just plain assholes that’ll needlessly destroy nature for profit?

  • @dan1101@lemm.ee
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    51 year ago

    Developers/board members/politicians. It always has to be growth with them until everywhere is the same suburban hell.

  • @HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    William Cronon’s “The Trouble with Wilderness” should be mandatory reading for anyone interested in conservation or environmental science. It’s a great critique of how colonialism has tainted our understanding of what “wilderness” and nature in general is and humanity’s role in them.

    More info: https://blogs.ubc.ca/greenbeansbigdreams/2016/09/10/the-trouble-with-wilderness-a-critique-of-modern-environmentalism-by-william-cronon/

    Read it here: https://faculty.washington.edu/timbillo/Readings and documents/Wilderness/Cronon The trouble with Wilderness.pdf