I was thinking about this yesterday when looking at the topography of Florida on Google Earth.
1. It's surrounded on three sides by ocean (3.5 sides if you include the panhandle).
2. It's almost all very low-lying.
3. Almost half of the land area appears to be covered by swamp or bodies of water.
4. Land in the central area, especially around Lakeland-Orlando, seems to be being cleared at breakneck speed to build ever more densely packed developments of plywood hutches for retirees, most from out of state.
Result? An ever increasing proportion of the population which is already late middle-aged or early elderly with increasing health and mobility issues as they age, being packed together in an low-lying area surrounded on three sides by ocean etc, and increasingly dependent on state/emergency response personnel in hurricanes and similar situations? Two people in their 60s would presumably still be self-reliant, but two in their mid to late 80s probably not.
Does there come a point when people are going to die purely because of the nature of population change and the type of development in the state?