Text Brit Dawson.

over £100. So what does that mean for city life, so truncated these past few months? Overburdened transit systems will, blissfully, be less like sardine cans.

Britain that’s fighting for one by joining the 501 club. Certainly, the fear of pestilence is already causing us to shun subways, thereby hurting a crucial mechanism that allows cities to thrive.

tell truth to power. Slightly less gentrification and slightly cleaner air might be worth a bit of economic harm, though as ever, the challenge will be ensuring the poor don’t take the hit. For staff, it will mean eased childcare concerns and a higher quality of life.

The truth is that with governments still terrified to stop spending money, we’re still in phase one. Isn’t Life Great is a dark tale that sees the US divided by strictly enforced Red (Patriot) and Blue (Loyalist) neighbourhoods, an invasion of Iran and a war with China that ends with “enlightenment.”. The world’s densest cities – Hong Kong, Seoul, Tokyo, Singapore – have handled the virus spectacularly well. N Lee Wood follows an email exchange between friends Michelle in New Zealand and Carrie in the US, the latter with cancer in a failed healthcare system in a failed state. J Crew, Nieman Marcus, JC Penney and Hertz are just the start, the American businesses that went bankrupt even while the US government was still drenching them with the money hose. an owner of the paper too by buying shares in the society. Paradoxically, he said, this would actually mean more personal attention for patients, as doctors would be freed for the most urgent cases. No philosophy, just rock-steady acknowledgements that the end is nigh. The young writer is routinely compared to Margaret Atwood but her new feminist dystopia is far more impressionistic. Those who cannot – people barely making ends meet on state benefits, or working service jobs that require them to be in place – will be forced to stay. has an equal say. Printing Press Society. What does seem likely is that the pandemic will prove to be a much-needed corrective to cities that, though thriving in one sense, were becoming almost unlivable for anyone who didn’t earn in the top 10% income bracket. If I come across more, i'll add them to this page. California has seceded, the nation’s a war zone and there’s a mass flight towards the Canadian border. (I’m not sure the return of WeWork qualifies as utopian, but on we go.). you, our readers and friends.

Some union branches have taken out shares of over £500 and individuals Fighting Fund, we can continue to thumb our noses at the fat cats and We’ll all get lonelier and more depressed as a result, with lower productivity and fewer of the “weak ties” that social scientists say make cities productive. The old Victorian prejudice that urban density is a hive of disease and immorality will reign once again. She talks to Annabel Nugent about why mothers are the ultimate survivalists.

It’s a given that restaurants, which already have notoriously thin profit margins, will outright collapse in record numbers. Or, like my friend’s experience suggests, is the pandemic an opening, an invitation to do things differently, in all facets of urban life? Even the fear of transit may abate, as we learn from the cases of Japan or France where it hasn’t generally spread the virus at all. And if some people, mostly older because of their higher vulnerability to Covid-19, move to the countryside – well what of it?

We're a reader-owned co-operative, which means you can become part of the paper too by buying shares in the People’s Press Printing Society. Great story! Restaurants will suffer, yes, but faced with the prospect of having no tenants at all, landlords will negotiate on lower rents – further loosening the vice grip of rentier capitalism that Thomas Piketty argues has led to vast inequality. 12 October 2020.

(My father, who runs a restaurant in Toronto, has already decided he’s not even going to bother to try reopening, and is selling the building.) Now that we’ve discovered with our own lungs the benefits of less air pollution – Los Angeles has enjoyed its longest streak of “good” air quality days since 1995 – we’ll demand better emissions standards, congestion pricing and more car-free streets. Visit Novel Recommendations.

dystopia. Dystopia: hold on to your hat. paper thriving. Britain that’s fighting for one by become a member of the People’s It tells the mawkish tale of Indian Anna Varghese, recruited as a “taper” at construction sites in Abu Dhabi. You can’t buy a revolution, but you can help the only daily paper in Then coronavirus struck, the entire medical profession adopted his ideas en masse, and my friend’s clinic is now considered cutting-edge. When the faucet squeaks off, our streets will become dried out husks of boarded-up storefronts.
In The Elites, Stephanie Feldman tells the two-pronged tale of an “intercultural” family breakdown caused by the policies of Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. Cities like New York (which, if it weren’t for Central Park, would have one of the worst green-space ratios of any metropolis on Earth) will at last invest in parks, pedestrians and public spaces. New York has 550m sq metres of office space; even a 10% drop would set off a shockwave. The rich don’t like us, and they don’t advertise with us, so we rely on Britain that’s fighting for one by donating to the Fighting Fund. As with the post-war “white flight” to the suburbs, the city centres will be abandoned by those with money, leaving them to crumble and reversing several decades of urban renewal. If there is a single defining characteristic of dystopian literature, it is the eradication of all individuality. Given the way things were going, that can’t be entirely a bad thing. Yet voters keep electing them to state and national office. This is the last article you can read this month You can read more article this month You can read more articles this month Sorry your limit is up for this month .

Hope you enjoy some of these dystopian stories. Density, far from being the bugbear of cities, will remain their great appeal. Some data suggest cities are still attractive, such as a study by City Observatory researcher Joe Cortright that property searches for cities went up in April year on year; others show increases in searches for smaller towns and country properties. Features. In the opening story Sneakers, two male Canadians attempt to cross the border into the US to buy quality trainers cheaply, only to be detained for questioning for no other reason than the fascist border guard is in love with Trump’s immigration vision so much it eludes him that the men aren’t trying to immigrate. Politics News. Health, both physical and mental, will improve.

You can’t buy a revolution, but you can help the only daily paper in With a regular donation to our monthly Ultra-low emission zones like London’s will grow stronger until the only cars that remain are electric; we’ll all be able to join Copenhagen’s pledge to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2025, thereby at least partly mitigating the true danger from which Covid-19 has distracted us: the climate emergency. Sophie Mackintosh talks genre, gender and flouting the boundaries. The utopians, however, look at the same apocalypse and see a lot fewer zombies. In any event, many urban industries will never recover. Comments.

If this destitution leads to less funding for social services and therefore a rise in crime, we might see more aggressive policing in black and brown communities, of the kind that has led to the recent protests. Want an ad-free experience?Subscribe to Independent Premium. But how many times have we heeded them, asks David Barnett, and how many times have we ended up in the very nightmarish visions they have predicted? All we know for certain is that cities have been thrown into an experiment we would never otherwise have tried. Shares are £1 each — though unlike capitalist firms, each shareholder Those who can will either work remotely from … “The virus forced a real-life experiment that achieved in a month what I’d struggled to argue for 10 years,” he said. We’ll all drive everywhere, terrified, alone, worsening congestion and poisoning the air as we go. The Great GOP Dystopian Experiment Is Working Exactly as Planned in Florida Republicans have run the place into the ground. Welcome to Dystopia is published by O/R Books, £16. The culture secretary has been forced to distance himself from a poster suggesting a ballet dancer retrain, as thousands criticise parliament’s continual belittling of the arts. A modest correction to the housing market, which unfairly enriched the boomer generation at the expense of millennials, will finally defang the great cobra of the urban 21st century: gentrification, at last, will have met its match. £25 to the £501 jackpot. Looking for Dystopian Novels? More independent businesses may be able to afford storefront space. As soon as we’ve grown accustomed to wearing masks, as the Japanese do (and maybe even started bowing instead of shaking hands), we’ll find that cities remain the safest places to live: better access to hospitals and community services mean if you do contract Covid-19 you’re in the best hands. The 45 stories are no erudite or academic exorcisms but plain-speaking, often funny, splendid reads. City governments, without the property tax base, will go bankrupt. Sophie Mackintosh talks genre, gender and flouting the boundaries. Cities, they say, badly needed a change of course. Everyone who can will buy a bike – in fact they already are – as cities from Paris to Bogotá free up car lanes for cycleways. joining! The Morning Star is a readers’ co-operative, which means you can become Privateer's failure hits as Liverpool's hospital beds fill up, Welsh police could use number-plate recognition to catch travellers from Covid hotspots, Far-right thugs harassing asylum-seekers whenever they leave MoD site in Kent where they are being held, campaigners tell the Star, Migrant groups to protest nationwide against Britain's ‘brutal’ immigration system, Editorial Johnson blusters as he continues to squander Brexit’s potential. Varghese writes of their “final” thoughts: “When workers fell, severing limbs, the pain was acute, but borne. Many companies, for their part, will save cash on office space, freeing up money to invest in productivity. Yet what truly stung was the loneliness and anxiety of falling that weighed on their minds.”.

A friend of mine who is a doctor in Ontario, one of the Canadian provinces most affected by coronavirus, told me a fascinating story about what Covid-19 has meant for his work. No hospitals are allowed — the workers cannot leave the site. You can’t buy a revolution, but you can help the only daily paper in

He had long been an advocate for treating patients remotely, arguing that a single group video session on, say, diabetes, could replace dozens of one-on-one consultations; and nurse practitioners could be empowered to handle routine medical interventions. Donate today and make a regular contribution.


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