Search Results
6/17/2025, 8:08:12 PM
A Trip to Carnegia
January 16, 1933
The Royal Family arrived by plane to Carnegia, the curious environmental experiment in the Sahara that has exploded into a global tourist destination. Through canals, the British-German effort, funded by Andrew Carnegie, created a giant lake in the Sahara. It acts as a Garden of Eden for the super wealthy and elite, with shockingly expensive housing prices for land near the lake. Beyond the fertile and rich coastal cities, in the rural desert, rests numerous housing projects for the working class of local Maghrebi and imported peoples that include Han Chinese, Vietnamese, Bantu, and even Mestizo Mexicans. Working and living conditions are terrible, but these uncivilized savages are used to such conditions and are hardy at adapting to them.
Considered one of the world's most expensive project, the Carnegie family still retains control over their investment. Margaret Carnegie leads the Commonwealth of Carnegia, and its Governor-General was Queen Victoria's grandson, Prince George, until his death today by lung disease.
Now the family lays to rest yet another member of the aristocracy, who all wonder exactly when Queen Victoria will finally pass.
January 16, 1933
The Royal Family arrived by plane to Carnegia, the curious environmental experiment in the Sahara that has exploded into a global tourist destination. Through canals, the British-German effort, funded by Andrew Carnegie, created a giant lake in the Sahara. It acts as a Garden of Eden for the super wealthy and elite, with shockingly expensive housing prices for land near the lake. Beyond the fertile and rich coastal cities, in the rural desert, rests numerous housing projects for the working class of local Maghrebi and imported peoples that include Han Chinese, Vietnamese, Bantu, and even Mestizo Mexicans. Working and living conditions are terrible, but these uncivilized savages are used to such conditions and are hardy at adapting to them.
Considered one of the world's most expensive project, the Carnegie family still retains control over their investment. Margaret Carnegie leads the Commonwealth of Carnegia, and its Governor-General was Queen Victoria's grandson, Prince George, until his death today by lung disease.
Now the family lays to rest yet another member of the aristocracy, who all wonder exactly when Queen Victoria will finally pass.
Page 1