Some major U.S. metros governed by certain administrations face a striking affordability squeeze. New York, Illinois, and California are textbook examples—steep tax burdens paired with skyrocketing housing costs, while public education and infrastructure improvements stall. It's a real paradox: more government spending, fewer tangible results. For investors tracking macro trends, this kind of regional economic stress often correlates with wealth migration patterns and shifting capital allocation strategies.

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NFT_Therapyvip
· 3h ago
Damn, it's these three states again. No wonder everyone is moving to Texas.
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TheShibaWhisperervip
· 5h ago
Nah, this is a typical policy failure. Where did all the money go?
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zkNoobvip
· 5h ago
ngl this is a typical case of "burning money with no effect," right? New York and California are really out of control... taxes keep increasing while housing prices soar, people are forced to leave 🏃‍♂️
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CryptoCross-TalkClubvip
· 5h ago
Laughing to death, internal tax competition, exploding housing prices, and shrinking services—this combination punch is quite something. --- Oh my god, the more money you spend, the faster you lose it. I can't even come up with this kind of act in ten years of comedy. --- Where is the money from New York and California going? I need to keep an eye on it. The next hot spot might be among the leeks fleeing their household registration. --- Government spending is like me pulling up a stock. It looks lively but actually doesn't improve anything. Laughing to death. --- This wave of wealth transfer is even more ruthless than a bear market trap. Truly the invisible hand, everyone. --- Let me explain: this is called the "high tax trap," more damaging than a project crashing. --- So wealthy people have all moved to Texas? I need to pay attention. Capital flow is the next signal of the hot spot.
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Degen4Breakfastvip
· 5h ago
Nah, these places are really terrible. Where did all the money go?
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AirdropBlackHolevip
· 5h ago
Nah, this is a sign of capital fleeing. New York and California should have seen it clearly long ago.
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