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What are the possible outcomes of a flying car?

Ever since the start of the late 20th century, people have been fantasying about flying cars. There are movies, games, and even TV shows that reminded us about the fact that we're in the future, but it's not like we expected at all. Along with flying cars, people have tried to predict that we'd have things like storm catchers and silver homes made of mirrors in the new 21st century. Humans have been improving technology at a fast rate ever since the start of the first World War. Ice Boxes have turned into Refrigerators and House Phones have become little gadgets that are small enough to fit in your pockets. The world has been connected ever since the inventing of the internet. Our world is futuristic, just in a different way. People have still predicted that there would be robots in the 21st century, and now we have A.I. and self-driving cars. Even though we have the materials to create flying cars, they are too expensive to make, and no one actually has blueprints to look off of like a LEGO set. Flying cars can be dangerous and could be a threat to the environment whether we know it or not. Just like everything else, the prices for flying cars will go down as time goes on, making it easier for criminals to buy them and raise the criminality rate around the world. The invention of flying cars would also make it harder for people to get their license, as most of the population would need a driver's license, as well as an aviation license to get a car. Also, with the extreme use of portable technology these days, aircrafts like planes and jets would be harder to track, endangering the lives of many innocent people.

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What people thought flying cars would look like in the future during the 1900s.

This is an Aerocar, the closest we can get to flying cars with our current technology.

This is an Aerocar, the closest we can get to flying cars with our current technology.
This car comes around the price of $740,000 and was invented in 2019.

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