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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 9, 2026

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Another factor, I suspect, is labor mobility. I'd have to double check (I won't), but I believe an ever greater share of people are moving significant distances for work. This puts them in the position of breaking existing relationships and puts them in the awkward spot of being an adult with no real social connections in their new community. And they may do this several times over their career.

I was kind trying to say this in the main post, & Richard is saying this specific thing in the video.

Thing is, i have no idea how one would go about rectifying this. The labor market is just insanely competitive and difficult, and many industries that are high paying or may be of interest to a specific person aren't evenly distributed across the country (there are more software engineers in California than Alabama, because Cali & 'Bama have fundamentally different economies). The alternative seems to be just biting the bullet and accept working $6 per hour at a gas station and buying the substandard trailer, whose best amenities consists of roaches & mold, for those who live in fundamentally poorer areas of the US. Not a very attractive proposition.