Truth to this. However the rate at which we’re seeing the corporate buying/bulldozing in the last 5-10 years is not going to be sustainable much longer. Used to be when you saw a subdivision coming up around here they were multi acre lots with septic. Now they run sewer out to their shoestring areas and build 5 houses in that same size lot while at the same time allowing developers to do all of this without some sort of rural buffer and without investing money in the road system that is about to be impacted.Most of suburbia throughout the South has evolved like this...Grandpa Joe owns 100 acres of land that has been passed down for generations. He earns just enough income from farming/pasturing/logging to pay the property taxes. One day Grandpa Joe dies. His heirs are offered 100k per acre. Do they keep the land and scrape by to pay taxes, or take the $10 million. Most take the money and go about their lives and boom, a new 300-home subdivision is developed. Rinse/repeat thousands of times for decades and you have modern suburbia.









