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I keep saying this. WFH is here to stay and slowly will continue to grow more as people decide they don't want to live in shithole blue cities. Remember, there are no Blue states, only blue cities.

Look at it from this side. All of the things that made/make "big cities" appealing to young workers is gone. There is massive crime and violence now, most events just don't happen anymore. Most of those great "food spots" you loved have closed or cost so much you have to cook at home even if you hate doing it (you should be cooking your own food).

There is little if any reason to be in the "big city" anymore. Especially when you can make a "big city" income while working remote somewhere that a house with land costs as much as it would cost you to rent a tiny shitty apartment in the "big city".

Archive: https://archive.today/wBTJ7

From the post:

>While people in Asia are spending more time in the office, workers in the US and UK are not, according to a new report from XY Sense, a company that uses sensors to track office occupancy in more than 40,000 workspaces.

I keep saying this. WFH is here to stay and slowly will continue to grow more as people decide they don't want to live in shithole blue cities. Remember, there are no Blue states, only blue cities. Look at it from this side. All of the things that made/make "big cities" appealing to young workers is gone. There is massive crime and violence now, most events just don't happen anymore. Most of those great "food spots" you loved have closed or cost so much you have to cook at home even if you hate doing it (you should be cooking your own food). There is little if any reason to be in the "big city" anymore. Especially when you can make a "big city" income while working remote somewhere that a house with land costs as much as it would cost you to rent a tiny shitty apartment in the "big city". Archive: https://archive.today/wBTJ7 From the post: >>While people in Asia are spending more time in the office, workers in the US and UK are not, according to a new report from XY Sense, a company that uses sensors to track office occupancy in more than 40,000 workspaces.

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