Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We knew this over a year ago.
Between the Covid restrictions and the ridiculous remote "learning," many people have decided they prefer the freedom red states have to offer.
That is why Covid policy is a big deal when voting. If you liked the blue states' policies, vote for them. I'll stick with the route the red states took.
It’s much more likely this had to do with housing prices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No they don't. It's been 150 years since they lost the Civil War, and the Confederate States are still full of racist hicks telling each other tall tales about the Lost Cause. That's not a quick recovery.
Ah. Someone didn't bother to read the article and just wants to nurse old grievances. Bye, now.
Anonymous wrote:We knew this over a year ago.
Between the Covid restrictions and the ridiculous remote "learning," many people have decided they prefer the freedom red states have to offer.
That is why Covid policy is a big deal when voting. If you liked the blue states' policies, vote for them. I'll stick with the route the red states took.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We knew this over a year ago.
Between the Covid restrictions and the ridiculous remote "learning," many people have decided they prefer the freedom red states have to offer.
That is why Covid policy is a big deal when voting. If you liked the blue states' policies, vote for them. I'll stick with the route the red states took.
Freedom???? Where have you been the past couple of weeks? There’s no freedom for any female capable of bearing children anymore in those states.
Anonymous wrote:We knew this over a year ago.
Between the Covid restrictions and the ridiculous remote "learning," many people have decided they prefer the freedom red states have to offer.
That is why Covid policy is a big deal when voting. If you liked the blue states' policies, vote for them. I'll stick with the route the red states took.
Anonymous wrote:Ok. Glad they recovered! Don’t want any state to do poorly. Guess that’s where we differ. Stop making every topic divisive, OP.
So those states will be purple now?
Anonymous wrote:How unsurprising. Now that people can live wherever they WANT to live and work remotely, millions have moved to red states to do so.
By many measures, red states—those that lean Republican—have recovered faster economically than Democratic-leaning blue ones, with workers and employers moving from the coasts to the middle of the country and Florida.
Since February 2020, the month before the pandemic began, the share of all U.S. jobs located in red states has grown by more than half a percentage point, according to an analysis of Labor Department data by the Brookings Institution think tank. Red states have added 341,000 jobs over that time, while blue states were still short 1.3 million jobs as of May.
Several major companies have recently announced moves of their headquarters from blue to red states. Hedge-fund company Citadel said recently it would move its headquarters from Chicago to Miami, and Caterpillar Inc. plans to move from Illinois to Texas.
To track each state’s progress toward normal since the pandemic began, Moody’s Analytics devel-oped an index of 13 metrics, including the value of goods and services produced, employment, retail sales and new-home listings. Eleven of the 15 states with the highest readings through mid-June were red. Eight of the bottom 10 were blue.
The states that gained the most, led by Florida, Texas and North Carolina, are almost all red, as defined by the Cook Political Report based on how states voted in the past two presidential elections. The states that lost the most residents are almost all blue, led by California, New York and Illinois.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/red-states-winning-post-pandemic-economy-migration-11657030536
Anonymous wrote:Maybe if the red states recover some more they’ll stop being such welfare leeches on the rest of us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people last about 5 years in Fla before they realize what they gave up in the north. Then if they are young and not on probation, they move. If they are old they are stuck until they die. Neither is economically reliable. Then Florida falls into a slump until the next boom of suckers trying to relive their childhood dreams.
-Florida native
I have heard similar about people who move down there when they first retire but this is different now. I know a lot of families who have moved to Florida in the past decade. This was long before retirement and all before covid. All are happy and none are leaving. They say it’s a great place to raise their families, contrary to what you read about the schools here. I admit, I’m jealous of their lives every time I visit.
DP. I agree - we know tons of families who have moved to Florida and all love it. I wish I enjoyed hot weather more - I'd be all for moving there too.
Anonymous wrote:No they don't. It's been 150 years since they lost the Civil War, and the Confederate States are still full of racist hicks telling each other tall tales about the Lost Cause. That's not a quick recovery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people last about 5 years in Fla before they realize what they gave up in the north. Then if they are young and not on probation, they move. If they are old they are stuck until they die. Neither is economically reliable. Then Florida falls into a slump until the next boom of suckers trying to relive their childhood dreams.
-Florida native
I have heard similar about people who move down there when they first retire but this is different now. I know a lot of families who have moved to Florida in the past decade. This was long before retirement and all before covid. All are happy and none are leaving. They say it’s a great place to raise their families, contrary to what you read about the schools here. I admit, I’m jealous of their lives every time I visit.