Are the global elites trying to get us used to the idea of living in extremely small spaces and without books?
I am open to the idea of tiny homes except there's no room for the written word.
Are the global elites trying to get us used to the idea of living in extremely small spaces and without books?
I am open to the idea of tiny homes except there's no room for the written word.
It's part of the urbanization plan. Think of it this way, anyone living in a rural area likely has a whole shed of timber, propane tanks, oil tanks and the ability to heat their home (and food) using store able fuel. Anyone living in a bigger city needs electricity from the centralized grid.
If you live in a rural place you likely has a truck and some machines running on pure dinosaur, these machinery also has a generator which allows you to generate electricity, even if the government decides you're a domestic terrorist and shuts you off the grid.
If you live in a rural place you probably have some guns for self defense as well as for hunting. If you live in a city you probably don't understand why anyone need guns.
If you live in a rural place you may have additional buildings on your property with the sole purpose to store shit that might be useful some day, if you live in a small apartment you have no place to store useful shit and depends fully on the government and the big box companies to have everything you need in stock.
Unless you really need to sleep with your propane and oil tanks, build a shed.
There are some exceptions, but most of these tiny houses are on tiny urban lots - there's no place to build a shed.
I agree that Urban living isn't ideal if you want to keep a collection of 55 gallon waste oil drums and a few cords of wood, but it seems like that isn't a problem with the home but the property.
It actually seems like tiny homes are the solution to space restrictions. I've seen plenty of suburban areas with houses almost as large as the properties they sit on. A tiny home would leave you more space for all the non functioning cars your heart desires.
I wasn't talking about keeping a junkyard. Just having space for tools to fix problems as they occur.
I have seen tiny homes on tiny lots most of the time. I've also seen tiny homes stuck into corners of other people's lots or on city property (for the homeless or as cheap rentals). I have also seen a few people buy big tracts of land in the wilderness and build a tiny home off-grid, usually so they can live with a small eco-footprint.
What I'm not seeing is people building tiny homes on lots sized for standard homes in urban or suburban areas. Most urban and suburban areas have building codes, HOAs, and/or deed restrictions on residential lots that effectively prevent tiny homes. They want to "preserve the character of the neighborhood", which really means keep up property values.
Tiny homes on standard lots with a shed on back is an idea that appeals to very few people, so they don't keep up property values in a neighborhood.