Retro fitting containers to live in is a much better option for the government than building trailers. The shipping container was built for the purpose of moving, so in a major disaster like Hurricanes or major firestorms/arson (West Cost), you can move a huge amount of living spaces very quickly using rail to the affected region.
When the emergency is over, clean the homes (jobs), and load them back up on rail and move them to the next crisis, or staging areas.
I don't think the measure of someone's house BTW is how big it is, but rather, how the owner keeps what they have. Nothing wrong with living small, and minimalist lifestyle, but just like any other choice it involves tradeoffs. Freedom is in the choice.
Bingo, but this of course assumes they actually wanted to provide basic places to live for people in need, after a disaster. In reality they seem more interested in just locking people up, which is why they build camps instead, with barbed wires on the inside preventing people from escaping.
Retro fitting containers to live in is a much better option for the government than building trailers. The shipping container was built for the purpose of moving, so in a major disaster like Hurricanes or major firestorms/arson (West Cost), you can move a huge amount of living spaces very quickly using rail to the affected region.
When the emergency is over, clean the homes (jobs), and load them back up on rail and move them to the next crisis, or staging areas.
I don't think the measure of someone's house BTW is how big it is, but rather, how the owner keeps what they have. Nothing wrong with living small, and minimalist lifestyle, but just like any other choice it involves tradeoffs. Freedom is in the choice.
Bingo, but this of course assumes they actually wanted to provide basic places to live for people in need, after a disaster. In reality they seem more interested in just locking people up, which is why they build camps instead, with barbed wires on the inside preventing people from escaping.