Anonymous wrote:I grew up in Florida, my family is still there, and I would move back for reasons unrelated to politics, but there are absolutely many people moving there for political reasons. I know people who have done it, my parents have gained neighbors who have done it, and the state has undeniably changed. That doesn’t mean it’s everyone’s reason though—there’s other stuff to love about Florida.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since things have gone downhill in the last five years, you couldn’t pay me enough to even travel to FL. I don’t even do a layover at FL airport. I’m surprised at people who still travel, live, or go to school in FL. I work in higher ed and it’s common knowledge that FL schools have different curriculum. I know it’s expensive to pick up and move, though, so I can see why some older people feel stuck.
You're surprised at 22 million plus something people who live, work, and go to school in Florida? Like, you're smarter than all of them? Please tell me where you are in ' higher education' so I can avoid that place!
A lot of people moved there from places with much higher COLA during the pandemic. Now they're stuck there. They have no where else to go. I don't think it's smart to live in Florida year round or to raise children there. Your children will have low paying jobs in the service sector or healthcare. You can't trust anyone you meet there because they all come from somewhere else. They move there to escape some problem in their current residence.
You realize this is racist and xenophobic, right?
Why? Donald Trump lives there. He's from somewhere else. I wouldn't want him as a neighbor.
I wouldn't want to live anywhere near your car jacking, gang shop lifting neighbors or neighborhoods
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're a retiree, conservative or not, underfunding public schools means lower taxes
And yet: https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/rankings/education
I think PP meant k-12 when they said “public schools.” If you read the article you linked, that #1 ranking is based mostly on the fact that Florida colleges are cheap.
For k-12, Florida ranks just behind VA. Leaders are Massachusetts, New Jersey, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and New York.
Interestingly, the state BOE website says that Florida schools are great because of their “parents’ bill of rights” - also known as the “don’t say gay” bill. So no, as the parent of a gay son, I’d never move to a place that crows so much about oppressing people like my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're a retiree, conservative or not, underfunding public schools means lower taxes
And yet: https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/rankings/education
Anonymous wrote:I doubt responses here will be very representative. But realistically, must be quite rare for someone to change states over an election. That's pretty intense ideology to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to live in a state where cops have never been ordered to “stand down” during a riot.
+1
And where public schools were safely opened for most of the time after September 2020.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think politics are a big part of why people move. I'd put a gun in my mouth before moving to Florida, and there's no politics that would change that either way.
Same here. Florida Man is a meme for a reason. The politics is the icing on the cake, though.
Also, the people who talk about Florida's "great weather" absolutely befuddle me.
Anonymous wrote:If you're a retiree, conservative or not, underfunding public schools means lower taxes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since things have gone downhill in the last five years, you couldn’t pay me enough to even travel to FL. I don’t even do a layover at FL airport. I’m surprised at people who still travel, live, or go to school in FL. I work in higher ed and it’s common knowledge that FL schools have different curriculum. I know it’s expensive to pick up and move, though, so I can see why some older people feel stuck.
You're surprised at 22 million plus something people who live, work, and go to school in Florida? Like, you're smarter than all of them? Please tell me where you are in ' higher education' so I can avoid that place!
A lot of people moved there from places with much higher COLA during the pandemic. Now they're stuck there. They have no where else to go. I don't think it's smart to live in Florida year round or to raise children there. Your children will have low paying jobs in the service sector or healthcare. You can't trust anyone you meet there because they all come from somewhere else. They move there to escape some problem in their current residence.
You realize this is racist and xenophobic, right?
Why? Donald Trump lives there. He's from somewhere else. I wouldn't want him as a neighbor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since things have gone downhill in the last five years, you couldn’t pay me enough to even travel to FL. I don’t even do a layover at FL airport. I’m surprised at people who still travel, live, or go to school in FL. I work in higher ed and it’s common knowledge that FL schools have different curriculum. I know it’s expensive to pick up and move, though, so I can see why some older people feel stuck.
You're surprised at 22 million plus something people who live, work, and go to school in Florida? Like, you're smarter than all of them? Please tell me where you are in ' higher education' so I can avoid that place!
A lot of people moved there from places with much higher COLA during the pandemic. Now they're stuck there. They have no where else to go. I don't think it's smart to live in Florida year round or to raise children there. Your children will have low paying jobs in the service sector or healthcare. You can't trust anyone you meet there because they all come from somewhere else. They move there to escape some problem in their current residence.
You realize this is racist and xenophobic, right?
Why? Donald Trump lives there. He's from somewhere else. I wouldn't want him as a neighbor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since things have gone downhill in the last five years, you couldn’t pay me enough to even travel to FL. I don’t even do a layover at FL airport. I’m surprised at people who still travel, live, or go to school in FL. I work in higher ed and it’s common knowledge that FL schools have different curriculum. I know it’s expensive to pick up and move, though, so I can see why some older people feel stuck.
You're surprised at 22 million plus something people who live, work, and go to school in Florida? Like, you're smarter than all of them? Please tell me where you are in ' higher education' so I can avoid that place!
A lot of people moved there from places with much higher COLA during the pandemic. Now they're stuck there. They have no where else to go. I don't think it's smart to live in Florida year round or to raise children there. Your children will have low paying jobs in the service sector or healthcare. You can't trust anyone you meet there because they all come from somewhere else. They move there to escape some problem in their current residence.
You realize this is racist and xenophobic, right?