Remote workers moving from urban to rural areas

bubs

Heritage
Protestant
Wasn’t sure which forum to plop this topic in. Since the pandemic and the rise in remote work opportunities (with some forced “return to office” policies in the last year), there still has been noted of a growing surge in people fleeing major cities and moving to desirable rural areas and towns around the US where as long as the they have Starlink or decent wifi they can work just fine. If I were to guess for the Gen Z and millennials doing tech, sales, or admin type work that can be performed anywhere, they are probably left leaning politically. With all the dying small rural towns and counties with major population decline, are these young white collar city slickers being welcome or despised on this migration into these areas? I assume it’s very transient and not a permanent change. Regardless of political leaning, for American citizens that have this freedom to do research’s bd pick a spot to go live in a desirable place without the restrictions of proximity to an employer, I think it is wonderful. Great to be an American in 2025, but hopefully we won’t be corralled like cattle into the 15 min. city in the future as some predict.
 
Regardless of political leaning, for American citizens that have this freedom to do research’s bd pick a spot to go live in a desirable place without the restrictions of proximity to an employer, I think it is wonderful. Great to be an American in 2025, but hopefully we won’t be corralled like cattle into the 15 min. city in the future as some predict.
I've seen a lot of angst on this and some ideas that the boomers are mad and firing people for not coming back to the office, which may have something to do with the residential real estate issues, or just the idea that they want to fire more people. Who knows.

I don't think much of the old system really remains, and we'll start seeing this as early as 2028. Many of the problems moving ahead will be based on bankrupts states and tax issues from the more decentralized nature of things. But those will all happen at the same time as the cost of living continues to whittle down the middle class to nearly nothing, and the poors will also get less and less due to the system being broke, or having to print more to try and fake it all.
 
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