Number nine of Karl Marx’s ten-point program reads, “Combination of agriculture with manufacturing industries, gradual abolition of the distinction between town and country by a more equable distribution of the population over the country.” It is obvious that the population is not evenly distributed in any country, especially America. It does not make sense why the population in America should be distributed. It would be impossible to raise a herd of cattle, which people will rely on for food, in the backyard of an apartment building in New York City. Just like livestock needs room, not everyone in America can be farmers. “The great urban centers—New York, Chicago, and Detroit, for example—seemed to promise the most exciting and most lucrative job opportunities, whether for stockbrokers, business entrepreneurs, factory workers, automobile salesmen, department-store clerks, or secretaries and receptionists. Cities offered a rich cultural life.” Urban areas offer more diverse opportunities and abilities that rural areas cannot. By trying to evenly distribute the population among these two types of lifestyles, they will become
Number nine of Karl Marx’s ten-point program reads, “Combination of agriculture with manufacturing industries, gradual abolition of the distinction between town and country by a more equable distribution of the population over the country.” It is obvious that the population is not evenly distributed in any country, especially America. It does not make sense why the population in America should be distributed. It would be impossible to raise a herd of cattle, which people will rely on for food, in the backyard of an apartment building in New York City. Just like livestock needs room, not everyone in America can be farmers. “The great urban centers—New York, Chicago, and Detroit, for example—seemed to promise the most exciting and most lucrative job opportunities, whether for stockbrokers, business entrepreneurs, factory workers, automobile salesmen, department-store clerks, or secretaries and receptionists. Cities offered a rich cultural life.” Urban areas offer more diverse opportunities and abilities that rural areas cannot. By trying to evenly distribute the population among these two types of lifestyles, they will become