Seeing this, Di Tou really couldn't help but feel depressed and uncomfortable. Although he understood the fundamental relationship between cities and towns was one of 'exploitation' of resources, wherein resources were brought in from settlements that in many cases had been set up for the express purpose of obtaining a certain resources, while the cities would produce and change those resources into useable goods before exporting them out again, the scene before him was a bit too disorienting,
This wasn't a healthy cycle of production and then manufacturing, this was just… a great divide that Di Tou saw no way of fixing or coming to terms with.
