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As societies get richer, people move from communal front-porch living to private backyards, enabled by amenities like air conditioning. This physical shift reflects a broader societal trend of sacrificing the 'emotional wealth' gained from strong community ties for the comfort and isolation of privacy.

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Instead of upgrading her lifestyle after financial success, behavioral economist Kristen Berman bought the apartments surrounding her own. She then rented them below market rate to friends, intentionally engineering a close-knit micro-community. This is a powerful, data-backed strategy for increasing happiness that counters the typical "bigger house" path.

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Being confined to environments composed entirely of synthetic materials and sealed windows, with no access to nature, can create a form of psychological distress termed "societal claustrophobia." This highlights a deep-seated human need for connection to the natural world, which, when denied, feels like a form of imprisonment.

A 1969 UC Berkeley study by Donald Appleyard revealed a direct correlation between car traffic and social isolation. Residents on streets with heavy traffic reported almost no interaction with neighbors, while those on light-traffic streets had significantly more friends and acquaintances, quantifying how cars erode community.

For generations, increasing wealth allowed Western society to discard essential cultural norms like social trust and shared values. Now that economic growth is faltering, the catastrophic consequences of this "death of culture" are becoming fully visible.

The super-rich lose empathy not necessarily because they are bad people, but because their lifestyle systematically isolates them from common experiences. With private airports, healthcare, and schools, they no longer participate in or understand the struggles of mainstream society. This segregation creates a fundamental disconnect that impacts their worldview and political influence.

Extreme wealth inequality creates a fundamental risk beyond social unrest. When the most powerful citizens extricate themselves from public systems—schools, security, healthcare, transport—they lose empathy and any incentive to invest in the nation's core infrastructure. This decay of shared experience and investment leads to societal fragility.

A home’s value for longevity is deeply tied to its micro-community. The ability to walk to get fresh food, see friends, or enjoy entertainment draws people outside, fostering the natural activity and social connection that are critical for health but often overlooked.

Significant wealth gaps strain long-term friendships more than new ones. Friendships formed later in life often exist within a similar socioeconomic "weight class," making wealth less salient. With older friends, the disparity can become an uncomfortable focal point when there's less shared current experience.

Data analysis across health, wealth, safety, and longevity reveals that regions prioritizing communal well-being consistently achieve better outcomes than those prioritizing radical individual liberty, challenging a core American political narrative.

Increasing Wealth Drives People to Architect Lives for Privacy, Sacrificing Community | RiffOn