Anonymous wrote:I'm staying put in mid-atlantic. With the climate change, we are getting milder winters. Win-win.
Anonymous wrote:Northern Maine is unpleasant, cold, and filled with unfriendly people. Florida is warm and people are more sociable. Many of the people moving will live maybe ten more years max. The odds of their house washing away in that time aren’t high even with global warming. It makes sense to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you're old and bitter, people will be living in Florida and having a party.
NP. I think over time that living in FLA with hurricanes becoming more frequent & destructive might make you more bitter. Also, living with the crazys.
Anonymous wrote:When you're old and bitter, people will be living in Florida and having a party.
Anonymous wrote:Everything about whether or not Americans take climate change seriously can be told in the migration southward to Texas and Florida. I get that it’s probably mostly Republicans, covid deniers, and people who only care about low taxes, but it really goes to show how so many people do not think that climate change is a threat. Hope they enjoy the hurricanes and realize that it’s taxpayers that will pay their rescue bills.
Meanwhile, I plan on retiring in northern Maine.
Anonymous wrote:Eventually the government won't be able to afford to bail people out and they will have to learn to live with it and save to continually rebuild or leave. Like all our ancestors used to do in the "good old days" before government assistance.
Anonymous wrote:Everything about whether or not Americans take climate change seriously can be told in the migration southward to Texas and Florida. I get that it’s probably mostly Republicans, covid deniers, and people who only care about low taxes, but it really goes to show how so many people do not think that climate change is a threat. Hope they enjoy the hurricanes and realize that it’s taxpayers that will pay their rescue bills.
Meanwhile, I plan on retiring in northern Maine.