The exits are lit, and the stampede is on. California lost more than 330,000 residents in a single year. New York? Nearly 300,000. Illinois waved goodbye to another 100,000. But this isn’t just about bodies in motion — it’s capital flight, too. IRS data shows New York hemorrhaged $24.5 billion in adjusted gross income. California bled $11.2 billion.
This isn’t random churn. It’s the consequence of policy — decades of high taxes, weaponized regulation, decaying infrastructure, and ideological governance that treats productive citizens as little more than ATMs with a side of guilt.
The people leaving aren’t confused. They’re done. They’re relocating to states with lower taxes, fewer mandates, and a remaining memory of what order and opportunity look like.
And yet, the political class presiding over this exodus doubles down. They chase ESG unicorns, micromanage housing markets, and reimagine law enforcement into performance art. Meanwhile, the roads crumble, crime climbs, and the tax base flees.
This is the great American divorce — not declared, but lived. One U-Haul at a time. And until accountability returns to the statehouse, the moving trucks won’t stop rolling.










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