No it isn't. You assume MOST people won't have to do that. International travel isn't an issue anyway, the majority of international travel is done through mass transit links. Industry isn't an issue either, since having a factory in the middle of nowhere is just stupid, you have industrial centres where lots of industry is concentrated - with easy transport links. If there are lots of people in a given area mass transit can work brilliantly, farming is the only exception due to the area needed, but farmers represent a tiny, tiny percentage of Americans, so that isn't an issue either.FEOS wrote:
That's only if you assume people don't ever have to travel anywhere except between population centers. And you don't have farmers. Or industry. Or international travel. Or private land. Or...Bertster7 wrote:
Yes it can. In Europe far more people live in cities where it is practical to use mass transit systems. In the US people are scattered. LA for example is bigger than London and has a population many times lower. That's the second largest city in the US (by population) after NY (which also has a lower population than London, but is smaller too).FEOS wrote:
When the US was colonized, it was a tenth the size that it is now. If the US were only the size of the original 13 colonies, our consumption would certainly be much less. Organization can't overcome geographic distance.
Organisation could totally overcome that problem by having higher density population centres with efficient transport systems and efficient transport links between the population centres. Not that I'm suggesting that should be done, but it's a perfect example of how better organisation can overcome geographic distance.
Travel by car wouldn't be eliminated anyway, it'd still be there. There would just be far less of it, so it wouldn't be such an issue.