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So how long until an annexation request for Googleopolis combining all these purchased parcels and becoming a city upon itself. That seems like a likely endgame here. Invokes a bit of a mix between a company town a mining operation might have, and a dystopian future.


Or maybe it’s a utopian future. I’d love to see how cities could operate differently if designed from the ground up with lots of funds to get it right. I wouldn’t be too worried for Googles who would choose to live there, since they wouldn’t at all be economically trapped if they didn’t like it.


They'd probably look a lot like Irvine CA.


In general top down master planned design works out quite poorly. https://www.citylab.com/life/2018/06/sleepy-in-songdo-koreas...


Wasn’t that the idea behind EPCOT?


Details about 10 min into this video: https://youtu.be/sLCHg9mUBag


It’s going to be a BlackMirror future: shiny and happy on the outside, soul-less depressing on the inside.


Maybe. But college campuses are quite planned and they’re not all depressing.


Moffet Field is probably the tough part. It's true they operate it but it's a federal air field. Privatizing the ownership may be challenging.


Feudalism has since been destroyed. Generally people want to increase democracy, not the other way around.


Feudalism and democracy are compatible.


I'm not interested in arguing against Feudalism, in the same way, I'm not interested in arguing against flat earth, or child labor. Those things have been put to bed a long time ago. There is nothing left to discuss.


I'm not arguing for or against either.

I'm just saying getting to elect your landlord doesn't necessarily make you any less of a peasant. Feudalism is about property rights of land and democracy is about political representation. They operate on different axes.

Feudalism wouldn't be compatible with capitalism or socialism because they are also about property, so that might be a better choice.


Politics IS about property and how it gets distributed. For example, the largest creation of private property in history was during the first years of the USSR when the revolutionary government created an immense amount of private farms. When Stalin came to power, he then took them away during collectivization.

If that isn't an extreme example of how politics and property are interdependent than I don't know what is. So I think your characterization of politics is wrong.


Interesting thing is, I can't see them needing both this land and the downtown San Jose land. I think the latter is a ruse just to park cash, and they can blame the leftist activism there to shift primary building in Sunnyvale.




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