I intend to check out the 2024 US solar eclipse, but I'm not sure exactly where I want to try to view it, probably somewhere to the East or South of Dallas as close to the centerline as possible. According to one map areas in South Texas will have the longest durations of totality in the US. As I said earlier, I'm really hoping for good weather. Spring storm season nonsense or just plain cloudy weather could really screw up the viewing opportunities.
Notarealsignguy said:
Really though, this is happening all over. It makes for a very sterile looking and boring place to live. I think people are so stuck in some alternate reality of internet perfection that they are not able to even see what gives places a unique character anymore (good and bad). As someone who grew up in South Florida, I way prefer to ride around and see the random crackhead dancing on the sidewalk then a bunch of walled off developments and chain restaurants.
We still have some random crack-heads walking around parts of Lawton. But, yeah, there is a creepy same-ness to many of these "perfect" suburban areas. The commercial districts look identical.
And more of them are subject to very restrictive anti-signs codes. The residential subdivisions have to suffer the tyranny of Home Owner Associations. I'm glad my old neighborhood isn't "governed" by any of that crap.
I believe the Internet and social media has made people more fickle. The "meet market" is tougher now, thanks in part to people
evaluating each other based on the content of their Instagram page or other parts of their
online presence. If a would-be significant other doesn't appear to be living large enough then its
swipe left.
And then the
news-as-entertainment industry is conditioning the general public to not want to leave the house at all via all the horror stories they broadcast. I guess at least some people are getting out of the house more often, since cases of sexually transmitted disease are on the rise.