I live in Florida, and, despite the OP, there is not really "room for everyone." Panhandle is different from the peninsula. I don't know how they're going to do it, but in the not-too-distant future, they're going to have to limit the population down there. There isn't the fresh water to support all the people, the agriculture, and wild areas too. Garbage/waste is another massive issue. Already in the South Beach area they're experiencing land subsidence from over-pumping the aquifer, and the bedrock is settling and crushing the aquifer's potential to recharge. Coastal areas are flooding...not from "sea level rise"...but subsidence.
I live in Florida, and, despite the OP, there is not really "room for everyone." Panhandle is different from the peninsula. I don't know how they're going to do it, but in the not-too-distant future, they're going to have to limit the population down there. There isn't the fresh water to support all the people, the agriculture, and wild areas too. Garbage/waste is another massive issue. Already in the South Beach area they're experiencing land subsidence from over-pumping the aquifer, and the bedrock is settling and crushing the aquifer's potential to recharge. Coastal areas are flooding...not from "sea level rise"...but subsidence.
Florida is a reallllllly good place to die in in any real SHTF scenario for all the reasons you just listed.