No it's not. I packed up my bags one day, moved to a state I didn't know a soul in, and thrived. It was the best thing I've ever done for myself. It's only hard if you convince yourself that it is.
So, you left your children with your former spouse behind? Your ailing elderly parents? The business you spend 25 years building that relies on the local clientele you've built up over the decades? Your 200-year-old family farm?
You probably had no obligations like that at all, so it was easy for you to pack your bags and move, hurting no one and sacrificing nothing. People do what you did every day for fun, adventure, or a change of pace.
Other people might not be literally "stuck" in a place, but they have deeper ties and more serious obligations that make it much harder to leave without doing great damage to themselves and others.
When people say they're "stuck" some place, they're not the hopeless hand-wringers you seem to assume they are. Most of them are speaking figuratively. They know they could move if it got so bad that the pain of staying was worse than the pain of leaving, but they're not at that point yet.
Also, many believe that the Great Awakening will turn things around all over the country. We're not working toward freeing just a few states from the grasp of these globalist sickos, but the whole country, and in fact, the whole world.
No it's not. I packed up my bags one day, moved to a state I didn't know a soul in, and thrived. It was the best thing I've ever done for myself. It's only hard if you convince yourself that it is.
So, you left your children with your former spouse behind? Your ailing elderly parents? The business you spend 25 years building that relies on the local clientele you've built up over the decades? Your 200-year-old family farm?
You probably had no obligations like that at all, so it was easy for you to pack your bags and move, hurting no one and sacrificing nothing. People do what you did every day for fun, adventure, or a change of pace.
Other people might not be literally "stuck" in a place, but they have deeper ties and more serious obligations that make it much harder to leave without doing great damage to themselves and others.
When people say they're "stuck" some place, they're not the hopeless hand-wringers you seem to assume they are. Most of them are speaking figuratively. They know they could move if it got so bad that the pain of staying was worse than the pain of leaving, but they're not at that point yet.
Also, many believe that the Great Awakening will turn things around all over the country. We're not working toward freeing just a few states from the grasp of these globalist sickos, but the whole country, and in fact, the whole world.