The Days of the Industrialization (Dec.2013). | Page 8

WillYou Strike it Rich?

It has become evident that time are changing. Investments in technological innovations are paying off, and money is coming to Britain. However, it seem that not everyone in our nation is able to reap the benefits. The new influx of money is changing our class structure, and making everyone, even children work for less. This new structure has forced urbanization and condemned clean living, even if it works to innovate our cities and lifestyles.

Those who were able to have placed investments in various technological innovations. These rich folk are now being paid back, and have acquired a newfound wealth. Granted, they have brought us many technologies, such as an electric system for our street lights. Lives are becoming easier, lifestyles are changing more now than ever. We now find resources beneath our feet to mine and progress with.

These materials have forever changed our infrastructure. Modernized building continue to make Britain a shining beacon of paragon society against a dark world. Our building of iron stand tall and stable, again by the blessing of resources in our homeland. Every man, woman and child can stare into the future, the future that we have constructed with our own hands.

Factorization and manufacturing has become a large part of society now. We can produce far more than we ever could before, and export it across the world for return in fame and profit. Labor has moved to the factories, so that all may see these benefits of our new society. However, is this all too good to be true? Surely, there must be some consequences or repercussions for these great advances.

It seems that we are not without consequences. The class structure of our great nation is changing. The rich become richer, and in their greed, pay their workers less and less, even as they replace them with their new machines and constructs. The poor seem to have no chance to experience the lavish lifestyles created by the precious pounds. Some of the lower classes have become violent in these times, and pillage the foundries and factories. This behavior will not stop until the riches are spread throughout every family in the country.

Because the farms have been bought, their residents have moved to cheaper living in the cities, which is simultaneously closer to new occupations. This urbanization has received little money to expand cleanly and efficiently. Sewers back into houses, the contents of chamber pots litter each and every road. The sight and smell are none short of satanic.

2 inMagazine/January, 2012