Social Class And Stratification (society Now) Page

Forty miles away, in the district known as The Basin, the Hum was a roar. It was the grinding of old gears, the screech of the 24-hour freight lines, and the constant thrum of the "Gig-Grid."

In the Basin, stratification was measured in time. The wealthy bought time; the poor sold it. Mara’s commute took three hours because she couldn't afford the "Express Veins." Her healthcare was a chatbot that usually told her to drink more water and take a nap she couldn't afford. Social Class and Stratification (Society Now)

In the Heights, the Hum was a soft, rhythmic pulse. It was the sound of automated climate control, the whisper of glass elevators, and the silent vibration of wealth. Here lived the "Optimized." Elias was one of them. His life was a series of seamless transitions: from a silk-sheeted bed to a hydro-shower that calibrated its temperature to his cortisol levels, then to a sleek vehicle that navigated the city’s upper-tier transit veins. Forty miles away, in the district known as

Mara, looking at the confused man in the expensive suit, realized that for all his wealth, Elias was more helpless than she was. He didn't know how to navigate a map, how to talk to a stranger, or how to survive a day without a digital assistant. Mara’s commute took three hours because she couldn't

Develop a focusing on a specific character’s journey