WFH - “Work from home,” as in: COVID-era policies of (mostly tech jobs) being administered outside of a central office building.
I was entirely in favor of WFH and the struggle of office workers up until recently. Although my career is functionally incompatible with the idea, I had sympathy for members of my class and supported them fighting against an archaic and unnecessarily authoritative policy of office attendance.
BUT.
WFH-ers and West/East Coast refugees have decimated historically low income communities by flooding to parts of the Southeast and Midwest with salaries that were meant to be competitive in an urban environment, where COL is always going to be higher, and pricing out/displacing local (oftentimes minority) populations. Anecdotally, I’ve seen rental prices more than triple in my hometown within the past four years, with no real wage increases for local groups in what can only be called gentrification.
This isn’t my wording, see:
VICE | Digital Nomads Are the New Gentrifiers
You can’t have your cake and eat it, too, as the saying goes, and I just can’t defend the people who have destroyed local economies. Even if that animosity goes against class solidarity, which I do agree with, the damage WFH has done is too direct and too severe for me to support it.
Edit: I’ve spent the past hour thinking about this post and have thought of a more succinct way to express my argument:
If I want the best for historically low-income communities, and the following are both true:
A) Gentrification is bad for historically low-income communities, and
B) WFH policies have facilitated gentrification, then
it logicially follows that WFH is bad for historically low-income communities and that I should be opposed to WFH policies.
This is the process rationale behind my argument.
Alright, we’re done. I tried in good faith to show you another way of thinking about this and you’re just refusing to see another point of view, and you’re resulting to insults.
Just to really nail it in, I never said gentrification was not bad. You missed the entire point of what I was trying to say. I can tell because your rewording of it is literally saying the same thing, you just can’t see it. I’ll try to make it painfully obvious what I’m trying to say.
The cause of the rise in costs is irrelevant. The response by local politicians is the crucial factor.
Some examples of things that have been tried and have worked
and if they do it right, raising taxes on those moving in to help pay for these new services.
If your local government is not doing these, then they have failed you. That is literally their job. I would be going to town hall meetings and demanding change. You can’t just be mad your town is growing. Literally every city originally started as a small town. You just need to demand they start acting like a city, or you need to choose a different small town.
Anyway, I’ll leave you with this. My hometown went through the same thing. My mom lost her house. We were forced to move. We went on foodstamps. We went on unemployment. It was not the people who moved there who caused this. It was taxes going up on low income earners, it was safetynets being removed, and wages remaining stagnant. You know, what I’ve been fighting for ever since.
and just so you know, I’m a millennial, but hey thanks thanks for resolving my point down to some generational gap issue that you have. Don’t expect another reply, I have no interest in you just insulting me so you don’t have to see my point.
Rage quit, okay I’ll take that as a W
Jesus Christ take some personal responsibility.
“Pull yourself up by your bootstraps.” He said, without a hint of irony
I’m pretty sure the entire point of this thread is that you should be organizing and working with others instead of sitting there in self-pity like a dejected self debased defeatist. Go wallow in self-pity like a pig.
Good arguments and totally right, but people would do every kind of mental gymnastic to avoid to take responsability for their action and squeeze any advantage for themselves and still feel as good persons.
Deflecting the responsability on the politicians and the laws ignores the simple fact that we do make choices and those have consequences. We are free to not take advantage of something harmful for other people, but it takes ethic and backbone.