Telosa - America's $400 Billion Future City

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Published 2023-01-21
After Saudi Arabia's NEOM Line City, the United States has made a similar announcement: Telosa - a $400 billion future city in the middle of the desert. In this video we explore who is behind Telosa and whether this massive city will actually be built. For more megaproject content be sure to subscribe to Top Luxury. Thanks for watching this video: Telosa - America's Future City in the Desert

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#megaprojects #construction #america

0:00 Telosa - America's Future City in the Desert
0:37 What is Telosa?
3:52 Why will Telosa be in the desert?
6:41 The construction of Telosa

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All Comments (21)
  • @MegaBuildsYT
    What do you think? Will Telosa become a reality? 🤔
  • Instead of building a new city in the middle of nowhere, let’s improve the cities we already have.
  • I believe the housing market has been highly overpriced. There are different factors. Some of it is more buyers than sellers. People get in bidding wars over a home. Most homes sell within 2 weeks. Then if you want land in the country between the rich folk and China who are paying way to much for property they make it impossible for average people to purchase in the country. It's going to implode because all the people who paid a premium for house's are a paycheck away from losing those homes. Look at the trucking company that just went out of business. How many of those employees will lose their homes. Look at other big companies that announced layoffs. Housing will be taking a big hit and prices will drop
  • @natecarte6807
    20 years later...Telosa: America's super ghost town.
  • @kagemusha7029
    I think this will be totally disastrous if they ever decide to build on desert because Phoenix and Las Vegas already faced problem water supplies. they should transform Detroit, Pittsburgh or Cleveland into Telosa City that's probably better than desert. Appalachian might be better choice than desert too.
  • It’s always interesting to see what people think the future will look like then see what it turns out to be. People in the 40’s thought that there would be flying cars in the 80’s. And now people think that they can build sustainable cities in a matter of ten years.
  • @palmersolga
    After a terrible 2022, shell-dazed monetary supporters have incidents to recuperate and a ton to consider, as an extension report and a heap of various data did not near anything to change suppositions that the National bank would likely continue to climb intrest rates whether or not the economy tones down, And that suggests more red ink for portfolios for the chief quarter of year 2023. How should I benefit from the continuous temperamental market, I'm as of now at an intersection picking if to trade my $250k security/stock portfolio.
  • This project is about social engineering and control. One of the great balance points in liberal democratic societies is land ownership. You are invested in the society because you own physical land within it, a piece of it. That gives you a substantial amount of control over what is done within it's boundaries, and restricts government from interference or seizure. It's such an important concept in the American System that emmient domain is restricted as to use for a specific public good. That's why the New London decision by the Supreme Court raised all kinds of hell, since private land was being seized to give to a private development. It's also why Bills of Attainder are unconstitutional. You can't seize a person's or corporation's property unless it was attained through criminal means, such as drug dealers buying property with it. When government controls the land, they control the use, and residency. Simply put, they don't like you, they can seize the land and evict you no matter how much you invested into the property's development. They don't like your politics, they can seize it and lease it to someone they do like. While we restrict development through zoning, this is primarily as a protection for land owners, particularly in residential areas so a waste treatment factory isn't dropped like a bomb in the middle of a residential neighborhood, or a factory, destablizing the area and tanking land values, that can then be bought up for a song. If the government tells you that you can only build apartment blocks on the land, then you plans for a house are gone. You don't own the land... and you can be removed from it as a squatter. Throw on top of that the issue of water, which building in the desert should be a big red flag on, and this place is all kinds of trouble waiting to happen. You are building in the desert. There is is no water. And the Western United States is infamous for it's continuing water wars. Where are you going to get the water? Then there's wildlife in the region, and the ecological damage to the desert. You'd have to build major road networks, power generation, waste disposal, and so much else, just to turn what is financially worthless land into a cash cow for a billionaire and his investors to build a city where they control absolutely every aspect of life because they own the land, the utilities, and all the rest.
  • @salmp7
    Fun fact the meaning of Telos (Τέλος) in Greek is "the end", termination, close. Enjoy the rest of the video now.
  • @1Phedre
    Lack of water is going to be a huge constraint if they place this city in the wrong place.
  • @YourFrienjamin
    This is one of those channels you can like before watching and it stays liked afterward.
  • GREAT VIDEO! THANK YOU FOR CONSISTENTLY PUTTING OUT TOP QUALITY CONTENT. VERY INTERESTED! KEEP IT UP! ❤️👍 What is life without money? I think that's irrelevant. When you live, always try to invest for future times like this to ensure profits and growth. So you are not dependent on the government. Investing in the financial market should now be on every savvy individual's bucket list.
  • @JH-ot5mn
    Ah, lets build ANOTHER city in the middle of a desert, in a drought stricken area, near nothing important.
  • @hufemeve
    3:00 If Telosa is set to be the sole owner of all the land, that means the city's inhabitants are set to be "renters"? "YOU'LL OWN NOTHING AND YOU'LL BE HAPPY" - WEF AGENDA 2030
  • @HexHernandez
    Marc Lore "since exploiting all my Wal-Mart workers, I plan to make an entire equitable city"
  • somehow, i find it really hard to belive billionaires care about the general population
  • @meetadi4u
    If some of these ideas can be replicated in existing cities we would all have better life . Starting from scratch is easy but very expensive thing
  • @gcsinga4222
    This is clearly Utopia, that will never be finished
  • @b3arwithm3
    It's naive to think everyone wants to live in a small apartment stacked on top of each other. People with means will always want more space and have something different.