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BlueJay_NE t1_j28ky4x wrote

Hopefully, they were MAGAts fleeing to the fascist utopias of either Texas or Florida.

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alagba85 t1_j28nyon wrote

The great migration we’ve been hearing about? How underwhelming

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kissmekate48 t1_j28rgmw wrote

Love the photo of the downtown with the Fells in the distance. /s

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Dunder72 t1_j28rtp0 wrote

Kiss those traffic jams goodbye!

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Past-Adhesiveness150 t1_j28ujyc wrote

They weren't. They're mostly well paid white collars that can now work from home/mobile thanks to covid. They got out of the city & burbs & moved to much more less populated/ rural areas.

My plan was to build in NH, till prices doubled. But we're back on track this spring.

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LetsPlayCanasta t1_j28uvk4 wrote

According to the linked article, New York, California and Illinois lost the most population while Texas, Florida, and North Carolina gained the most.

Gee, there must be some reason for this.

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jp_jellyroll t1_j298pn5 wrote

Even among the WFH crowd, not everyone wants to live in a quiet rural area. Moving is expensive & tiresome. My company went fully remote in 2020 and of the ~40 in my office, only a few moved far away.

My wife & I strongly considered moving to western MA, NH, or even ME. But we had our first child and the schools in those areas are... not so hot. There's no money in a small rural town. And we're a non-white mixed-race couple, so there's another kicker. We're staying in the 'burbs.

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Proof-Variation7005 t1_j29drvn wrote

I'm sure that's part of it but I think it's easy to forget that a large chunk of the workforce in position to do working from home don't particularly want to live in a rural area. Young adults, especially those without children, would consider that to be hell.

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lostmindplzhelp t1_j29kac9 wrote

That double negative in the headline is mildly infuriating.

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Past-Adhesiveness150 t1_j29ngux wrote

I could see the younger generation moving out & away to warmer climates in Texas or Arizona.Especially if you're keeping the same job & pay with a lower cost of living. My sister went to Austin for work & said it was clean & beautiful.

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HopefulDrink3 t1_j29r9zg wrote

Cool now I need to know how many people have moved here bc a bunch of people I talk to in Boston say they all have been here under a year or moved last December

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saturosian t1_j29vq09 wrote

YES. If we lost -0.1%, does that mean we actually gained people? Why does it switch to positive 0.7%, is that supposed to be going the other way or is it a typo? It's very hard to get the story from the title

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gregkel22 t1_j2au6ny wrote

we have become a woke, oppressive, communist police state.

I'll say it. We have. How the fuck did healey get 113% of votes in some districts?

But I can afford to live here. Here and established. Many of the young coming up... Pack yo shit! Move somewhere they won't mandate jabs, masks. Go somewhere that the incoming Govenor doesn't scissor her inferiors on the job.

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gregkel22 t1_j2avser wrote

>How the fuck did healey get 113% of votes in some districts?

Don't know what you are into dude, but read this again...

"How the fuck did healey get 113% of votes in some districts?"

​

I don't care if she was running against a fucking log. She got "volume to 11" votes. Above and beyond. We know the volume went to 10, but somehow she found it to 113% Hmmmmm...

​

And bullshit if it's ok for her to be fucking 3 of her inferiors. Media covered that up well.

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NowakFoxie t1_j2b50sk wrote

>communist

god i wish

>I'll say it. We have. How the fuck did healey get 113% of votes in some districts?

This page has the results by town. Please say where Healey got 113% of the vote, because the highest for Healey is Cambridge, at... 91% of the vote.

Also, I dunno why you're so obsessed with the sex life of someone else. That's kinda creepy, honestly.

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Itchy-Marionberry-62 t1_j2bo3zr wrote

Will only continue to decline…especially with the newly voted in tax increase. Connecticut did that…and now is regretting it badly.

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Adorable_List3836 t1_j2by636 wrote

People don’t want to live in an expensive nanny state, I’m not going anywhere but I understand why someone would leave Mass. As an adult, I can’t buy flavored vapes or menthol cigarettes, I can’t light off a few bottle rockets on the Fourth of July and I can’t buy the gun I want without it being neutered. Most adults don’t want the state government to tell them what they can and can’t do. I saw a different article posted on the Rhode Island sub with the same subject because Rhode Island lost people also, the only states that gained population in New England were New Hampshire and Maine.

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Adorable_List3836 t1_j2cj6n4 wrote

I’m happy you feel that way but as I said I’m not leaving but I understand why people would. I have it made here, I’m living in the house I grew up in that I inherited from my parents and now raising my own family in, on land that has been in the family for 300 years, I wouldn’t give that up for anything. The school systems are great and it’s an awesome state to live in with plenty of history also which I love. Those examples that I made are some of the reasons why we are losing people, tax paying people that help our economy. Some people want to live their life without needing Maura Healy to wipe their ass for them.

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ManWithTheCats t1_j2cqr58 wrote

Lol You sound like a little baby. Especially when you assume “most adults” agree with you without providing evidence that that is the case. Implying that people are leaving the state en masse because we protect ourselves against dangerous lunatics who think they should be allowed to carry assault rifles everywhere they go and outlawing products that present a public health threat is childishly silly. Anybody who wants to leave for a red state nightmare is free to do so. We’re not loosing anybody we can’t live without.

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Adorable_List3836 t1_j2cvunq wrote

“Childish silly” is not being able to have a conversation or debate with someone without trying to personally insult them as you do. All I’m saying is that I can see why people are leaving for cheaper and freer states, all of those people that we are “loosing” are taking their tax dollars with them

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ManWithTheCats t1_j2efwqo wrote

You said “freer” to refer to states where women aren’t allowed to make their own health care decisions, certain people aren’t allowed to get married, black people are systematically disenfranchised, and religious fundamentalists decide what kids are going to learn in school. It’s an odd definition of freedom. As far as taxes go, there are plenty of people to fill that void. Capitalists depend on the populations of states that have good educational institutions. They whine about paying taxes, but the major sectors of the economy rely on the educated population that that tax money pays for. We’re not losing anybody important. Additionally, we’re in one of the best regions in the world if you’re concerned about being able to breath and find water as the human environment collapses. The dum-dums who vote for people like Ted Cruz can enjoy choking on their poor decisions. Anyway, I think we’re about done here, so if you need to get the last word in, go for it.

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NowakFoxie t1_j2epy7l wrote

I can't find any references to this happening outside of conservative rags, and having been a conservative before (unfortunate) I'm well aware that they're even more divorced from reality than most other liberals. The veracity of this is doubtful.

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