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posted by martyb on Thursday May 28 2020, @06:50PM   Printer-friendly
from the For-the-Big-Sky dept.

Phys.org:

Research has shown that, while people in their 20s often leave rural communities, a higher percentage of young adults in their 30s choose rural communities, Schmitt-Wilson said. Still, most of the research on migration of young adults to rural communities focuses on "returners," or those choosing to move home to the community they were raised in, she added.

[...] The researchers found that while study participants were candid about challenges associated with life in rural areas of Montana—such as a lack of amenities and geographic and social isolation—they also highlighted a number of benefits.

"Those benefits included the quality of life they experience in their rural communities, including family-centered environments, low cost of living, unconditional support provided by community members, intergenerational friendships, increased sociability and unique opportunities for personal and professional growth available for young adults in rural communities," Schmitt-Wilson said.

If urban centers are in lockdown and their amenities are gone, would young people still choose city life or would places like rural Montana do?


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  • (Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 28 2020, @08:43PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 28 2020, @08:43PM (#1000273)

    > relying on a bit of robot farming too.
    Robots aren't grown, they're manufactured!

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  • (Score: 4, Funny) by aristarchus on Friday May 29 2020, @07:03AM (1 child)

    by aristarchus (2645) on Friday May 29 2020, @07:03AM (#1000442) Journal

    Back in the beginning of the Great Depression, the "Dust Bowl Days", we called them, I planted eighty acres of robots. Just when the sprouted, a late spring deep frost killed them all. Has more seed, so planted a late robot crop. They came up looking mighty fine, till the bugs, locusts mostly, but some early Unix worms, killed all those. We only managed to grow one robot, in a sand-boxed greenhouse, to keep it from the harsh realities of nature, and blue screens of death. We named it "Bender". The rest is, as the say, history.

    • (Score: 2, Touché) by khallow on Friday May 29 2020, @09:41AM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 29 2020, @09:41AM (#1000468) Journal
      Shoulda planted robotic backhoes instead. Tsk.