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Daily Migration of Taxpayers

Posted on 12/22/25 at 7:54 am
Posted by OU Guy
Member since Feb 2022
24758 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 7:54 am
SEC gaining daily



Posted by stout
Porte du Lafitte
Member since Sep 2006
179651 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 7:56 am to
This isn't a good thing
Posted by zuluboudreaux
God’s country USA
Member since Jan 2008
1070 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 7:56 am to
Is Louisiana the only Red state in the bottom 14 that are losing population?
Posted by Red Stick Rambler
https://i.imgur.com/2j5cbGm.jpg
Member since Jun 2011
2267 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:03 am to
quote:

Is Louisiana the only Red state in the bottom 14 that are losing population?


Damn, even Mississippi is way ahead of us.
Posted by SoFlaGuy
Fort Lauderdale
Member since Apr 2020
2493 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:04 am to
It’s almost like people hate paying more than their fair share of taxes.
Posted by The Torch
DFW The Dub
Member since Aug 2014
27878 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:07 am to
California

BREAKING: Chevron is pulling out of California after 146 years — headquartered there since 1879.
Chevron leadership informed Gavin Newsom of the decision.

Newsom’s response?
“We’re good.” ??

The Democrats wonder boy has ran his state in the shitter but will make a great president because he has good hair.

The Clown Party
Posted by tiggerthetooth
Big Momma's House
Member since Oct 2010
64163 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:09 am to
quote:

Is Louisiana the only Red state in the bottom 14 that are losing population?


"Red" state. Louisiana is extremely dependent on government programs. One of the worst states.
Posted by LuckyTiger
Someone's Alter
Member since Dec 2008
51021 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:10 am to
Illinois
New York
California




Bringing their shitty politics with them that caused them to leave those states.

They're like locusts.

Once they destroy Florida and Texas and Georgia they'll move on to Oklahoma, Kansas, and Tennessee and destroy those places with their shitty politics.
Posted by Bengalbio
Member since Feb 2017
2104 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:21 am to
All those extra taxpayers and the quality of life in Florida is declining and there are massive budget deficits looming.

Something doesn’t add up.
Posted by Bard
Definitely NOT an admin
Member since Oct 2008
57975 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:30 am to
quote:

Is Louisiana the only Red state in the bottom 14 that are losing population?


EBR is an exception to that.
Posted by DarthRebel
Tier Five is Alive
Member since Feb 2013
24997 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:30 am to
quote:

Damn, even Mississippi is way ahead of us


No shite. Your state is the cancer of the SEC.
Posted by Vacherie Saint
Member since Aug 2015
46223 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:34 am to
Lets see... Dems are polling at 73% negative, their constituents are flocking to red states, and the party is doubling down on trans-illegal-socialist policies that got them absolutely shellacked in the last election.....


But the retards are convinced dems will sweep the midterms?
Posted by ReauxlTide222
St. Petersburg
Member since Nov 2010
88920 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 8:35 am to
quote:

Damn, even Mississippi is way ahead of us.
Mississippi is in the middle of a glow up from what I read here
Posted by tigerfan 64
in the LP
Member since Sep 2016
6148 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 9:24 am to
quote:

But the retards are convinced dems will sweep the midterms?

Well, they are the masters of "The Art of the Steal".

They wrote the book on it.
Posted by RelicBatches86
Florida
Member since Nov 2024
1056 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 9:28 am to
That is not the entire picture.

Yes, that graph is little outdated and misleading... different X values for the negative and positive sides?

The pandemic population boom in Florida is over. We have some of the worst housing markets in the country for sellers. Home sales are down.

But Florida does not have "massive" budget deficits, thats ridiculous.

LINK

quote:



In the year through November, just over half of global moving company Atlas Van Lines’ Florida-related moves were inbound, the firm said in its annual Migration Patterns Study — a near-even split between people moving in and moving out that marks a sharp shift from the pandemic era, when Florida ranked among the nation’s strongest inbound states.

During the COVID-era peak, 60% of Atlas’ Florida moves were inbound — then the fourth-highest ratio in the country — as the state became the fastest-growing in the U.S., per Census estimates. But in 2025, for the second consecutive year, inbound moves accounted for only about half of the company’s Florida relocations, among the lowest shares Florida has posted in more than a decade.


LINK

quote:


Post-Pandemic Migration Reversal

The extraordinary surge of migration into Florida during the pandemic was central to its housing boom. Between March 2020 and June 2022, home prices in the state soared 51 percent, compared to 41 percent nationally, fueled by an influx of remote workers and retirees fleeing higher-cost states. But that inflow has slowed sharply. Net domestic migration to Florida dropped to just 64,000 in 2024 — down more than 75 percent from the 314,000 peak in 2022.

That reversal has fundamentally weakened demand for housing of all sorts. Without the steady inflow of higher-income, out-of-state buyers, Florida’s housing markets are increasingly reliant on local purchasing power. And with wage growth failing to keep pace with rising costs of ownership — particularly for insurance and association fees — affordability constraints are biting hard.



LINK
quote:



Florida’s economy, one of the nation’s fastest growing since the pandemic, is expected to shift into a slower gear as the state returns to what analysts describe as “pre-pandemic growth rates.”

A Florida TaxWatch report released Thursday projects real gross domestic product growth will decline from 2.4 percent in 2025 to 1.2 percent by 2030. The state will keep expanding, but at a far more moderate pace than the surge seen between 2021 and 2024, when strong population inflows, a hot real estate market, and record tourism drove outsized gains in output.

The labor market reflects the same trend. Florida is forecast to add about 216,000 jobs in 2025, but annual job creation is expected to slow to roughly 146,000 by 2027 before recovering modestly to 208,000 in 2030. The unemployment rate, now at 4.1 percent, is projected to climb to 4.5 percent as higher Federal Reserve interest rates weigh on hiring, then ease back to 4.1 percent by the end of the decade.

The report notes that the forecast signals a normalization rather than a downturn, following three years of strong growth, pointing to the state’s transition away from a high-inflation, high-interest-rate environment toward more sustainable conditions. The state’s Revenue Estimating Conference has offered a similar assessment, expecting consumers and businesses to adjust spending and investment as borrowing costs stabilize.

Personal incomes are projected to rise at a healthy pace, increasing from 3.9 percent growth in 2025 to a peak of 6.4 percent in 2027 before easing closer to 5.6 percent by 2030. Still, the report cautions that inflation will limit how far those income gains stretch. The gap between nominal and real GDP is expected to persist through the decade, reflecting ongoing price pressures.

Tourism, a cornerstone of Florida’s economy, underscores the reversion. After record visitor numbers in 2023 and early 2025, overall growth in arrivals is forecast to fall by 1.2 percent this year before rebounding briefly and tapering off again in the early 2030s. Analysts said the pattern represents less a sign of weakness than a “long-term reversion” to more typical visitation trends that existed before the pandemic disrupted global travel.

Florida’s growth trajectory is now set to more closely mirror the national economy. U.S. real GDP is expected to grow by 1.4 percent in 2025 and peak at 2.3 percent in 2027. Florida will begin the period with faster growth, but by the end of the decade the two are projected to converge. State income growth is expected to outpace the national average after 2026, even as Florida’s unemployment rate remains slightly above the U.S. level in the near term.


This post was edited on 12/22/25 at 9:38 am
Posted by TigerAxeOK
Where I lay my head is home.
Member since Dec 2016
35600 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 10:31 am to
Look at Oklahoma up there in the top 10.



But seriously though, I want all the liberals to know that it's absolutely horrible here. There's no need to waste even a moment coming to this state where Ryan Walters still lives and we still believe in GOD and the Second Amendment. It's absolute torture, I tell ya.
Posted by deltaland
Member since Mar 2011
100579 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 11:48 am to
The future of Louisiana is a bleak one
Posted by OU Guy
Member since Feb 2022
24758 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 12:25 pm to
quote:

Look at Oklahoma up there in the top 10.



But seriously though, I want all the liberals to know that it's absolutely horrible here. There's no need to waste even a moment coming to this state where Ryan Walters still lives and we still believe in GOD and the Second Amendment. It's absolute torture, I tell ya.


Seriously, its so bad the NBA is talking about taking our title away since we’re too red.

On a very serious note, prior to last election in 24, I was concerned all the in-movers were gonna ruin my red state. So I went to the state records to look at registered voters by party for proof of the blue invasion.

I looked at 2016 and 2020 and 2024. And in fact what I learned was we increased Pub registrations by a lot. And blue lost registered voters. Indys gained too but not as much as red.

That was shocking to me yet we did have an even bigger win in Nov 2024 compared to 2020 and 2016. All 3 of those election years the Potus carried every single county. But it grew.

That dispels the notion blue voters are moving into red states and destroying them. I’m sure there are counties or cities in other states this is true. But every person I know who moved from Cali to OK, loves it here and votes red. Think of it like Cubans who migrated to US, a majority of them loved thru communism and want no part of it.

I also think most blue to red state movers realize we are the last stand against WEF and Communism/Socialism. And they are not bringing all their failed ideas to new states.

Cali has the most red voters in the country just because of size. Since they can’t overcome election theft and other BS, we can sure use them to move to toss up or close states to shore up the vote.
Posted by 844_Tiger
Down_Under
Member since Jul 2021
282 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 12:27 pm to
Very interesting and catastrophic for Cali if true. Any link to the original study?
Posted by justaniceguy
Member since Sep 2020
6700 posts
Posted on 12/22/25 at 12:35 pm to
Have you been under a rock? Mississippi has left Louisiana in the dust
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