this post was submitted on 02 Aug 2024
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Shirts That Go Hard

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[–] [email protected] 139 points 3 months ago (9 children)

I live in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. I bought my place in 2016 and I competed with other locals for this modest home. I was not the highest bidder but the seller honored our verbal agreement. By 2021 this house was valued at over $800k. I paid $185k. No local, including myself can afford this house.

This is unsustainable.

[–] [email protected] 72 points 3 months ago (7 children)

I go to Hawaii a lot for work. And only work. Get off plane, get onsite, work, sleep, get on plane.

Every time I get an Uber, they talk about cost of living, unprompted by me. They ask how much it is in SoCal, one of the worst and most expensive places to live in the entire country.

They’re always shocked by how much cheaper it is.

Born and raised locals work like slaves every day for the bourgeois that can afford to stay in the Hyatt resorts and residences and Hiltons and….

Buying a home is simply not something local working class even considers possible. And they’re forced to watch as every year, more $2MM 600sqft condos get built, blocking out the beautiful ocean.

Meanwhile Zuck and Obama and a hundred others are buying hundreds of acres for their mansions. While the kupuna die in the streets.

Rich neighborhoods like Portlock full of the parasite class, contributing nothing to the state yet demanding any public works stop.

Hawaii is the first wave of the American collapse.

As I always say to any leftist. Stay armed and practiced. The current economic model is in active collapse. Intel and Boeing are the most obvious examples.

[–] [email protected] 20 points 3 months ago (1 children)

It's the same story on the East Coast. Cape Cod homes are still going for $200k over asking price, cash in hand, just like they were during the COVID quarantines. Boston's CoL is around the same as LA, and they've basically run out of land to build on.

I grew up in a vacation town, and everybody I've ever talked to who also grew up in one has the same story. Up to 50% of businesses close down after the tourist season, so most of the town is closed (and the jobs are gone) for 8 months out of the year. Drugs and homelessness run rampant while locals can't afford a living, and the rich folks keep shutting down any publicly funded projects to keep the taxes down on their second home.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Yup we live in one of those New England beach towns. We’re here to take care of my elderly Father in law and will likely be selling our house when he’s gone.

But somehow the taxes are around half what my Mom is paying in a bigger town no where near the coast.

Our town is split between old money mansions, and new money vacation homes. Then there’s a cluster of us full timers with kids who are usually scraping by.

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