Question:

What will be the best state to live in the US in 10 years?

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I am referring to the weather, etc etc

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  1. No one really knows that. Scientist's can only predict the stuff they say usually it's true but hey no one is perfect. We'll all know what the best state to live in is in ten years but all the states can be the best if we all get together and GO GREEN and recycle.


  2. In 10 years there may not be much noticeable change.

    In 50 years British Columbia and Alaska may be attractive.  

    Their agriculture may improve from a longer, warmer growing season, and new fisheries may open up where there used to be Arctic ice.

  3. New Hampshire

  4. the temperatures are decreasing, so id say stay in the south. global warming is a fraud

  5. I would say michagan...

    i live there, but that is not the main reason...

    michagan hs nice weather, in the summer it can get, on average, to around 85 degrees ferenhight

    (can't help u if u go by celcious)

    and winters on averge can get to 0-25 degrees...

    and , also, michagan has a good amount of precipitation, michagan nearlly never gets a drout, or an overrain....

    also, michagan is not in a natural disaster spot, it is not in tornado vally, not a place were a huricane could hit (if it did, by the time it would get here it would be rain, no high winds)and it is not california, america's earthquack sentral...

    but, in 10 years it could change, but still, michagan is AWSOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  6. I can't say what will be the best, but i can say what will probaly be the worst. I would say that the north west (Wyoming, Idaho, ect.)

  7. East Texas

  8. Although I'm not sure about the information,California.It's cool!

  9. Hopefully up here in Northern Wisconsin

  10. MICHIGAN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...

  11. I vote for South Eastern Ohio or West Virginia.  The Appalachian mountains holds a large number of rural people with common sense about surviving under the toughest conditions, and without the assistance of technology.  When the going gets tough, they are capable of going on despite difficulties.  Their "common sense" knowledge is a natural resourse.  Highly populated areas will run out of food fast if times get tough.  My Appalachian parents had a basement in our family home with more than 10 years of food that had been sealed in jars in a process called canning, that would last them through nearly any emergency.  The people there are also used to "helping thy neighbor" in times of need.  Not to mention, these states are not known for excessive seismic activity, hurricanes, or similar disasters.  They are also home to underground cave systems that offer filtered, fresh clean water, and some of the underground streams even have fresh fish.  Underground caves offer natural climate control systems when the temperatures above ground are intolerable.

    If the world decides to flood, the Appalachian Mountains may become an island chain, but by then a majority of the rest of the states would be well under water.  If the world warms, the soil in these areas is some of the most fertile in the United States, and would support growth of palm trees as well as it does pine trees.  

    If the global warming is followed up shortly thereafter by an ice age reocurrance, well, Ohio has a wider range of biodiversity than do many areas in the U.S..  Local citizens have been known to do "ice fishing" on frozen lakes around Ohio and West Virginia.  Many house in these areas still have coal burning furnaces to heat the home should an ice age follow the global warming.  

    No matter which way the wind blows, much warmer, or much cooler, the aforementioned regions seem to provide the best likelihood of offering the basic necessities for survival.

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