Monday, July 31, 2023

Who Really Owns "X"?

Everyone is talking about who owns the "X" Trademark, but it isn't that simple - it is simpler.  Source.

Trademarks confuse a lot of people, including Trademark attorneys, who often believe they are buying and selling words or even letters.  That is not the case.   As I noted before, people confuse Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights.  Patents cover inventions.  Copyright covers things like books, records, pictures and movies.  Trademarks - the bastard son of intellectual property - indicate the source of goods or services and unlike Copyrights and Patents (which are ensconced in the Constitution) were part of the Common Law, before being codified in America.

That simple definition "indicating the source of goods or services" says a lot.  It means that in order to "own" a mark, you have to be selling some goods or services.  You cannot merely file for registrations if you are not in business.  Well, you can, but your registration may be challenged for lack of use.  And even on an "intent to use" application, you must really intend to use it and if you don't, your registration is worthless.

So while a lot of ink has been spilled about how Microsoft or Alphabet or "Meta" has a registration for the mark "X" for social media, I am not aware of any of those organizations having a social media company or division or service called "X".

Note also that you have to renew your Trademark Registration every few years, so if a Mark has expired (or was cancelled or withdrawn) that status indicator only shows up on a secondary search engine.  The actual registration may appear online, but that doesn't mean it is in force.  Just because you have license plates on your car doesn't mean they are valid and your insurance is up-to-date.

And in any Trademark registration, field of use is key. I might own a registration for "X" for laundry detergent.  It doesn't mean I can sue Elon Musk or vice-versa (well, anyone can sue anyone, winning is another matter).  There are a plethora of registrations and applications for "X" marks on the USPTO database, but that doesn't mean any of their owners can sue anyone for saying "X" or using it on an unrelated product.

There are also word and logo marks to consider.  A word mark is more powerful as it encompasses the word (or in this case, letter) itself, regardless of what font is used or whether it is stylized.  A logo or image mark is narrower in focus, and is an image of a mark in a particular font and style.  And yes, you can have both - Ford has a registration to its word mark "Ford" and also to the stylized logo with (and without) the blue oval.

And bear in mind that you don't need to register a mark to have Trademark rights - common law Trademark rights.  Federal Registration merely provides you with additional litigation rights and also puts others on notice of your use of the mark.  But if someone has been using a mark in the common-law sense (TM) they may still have rights to use that mark.  If they obtain a registration (R) then they may be able to collect additional damages and have injunctive relief.

But what about domain registrations?  After all, Elon Musk bought the rights to "X.com" many years ago, right?  Well a domain registration isn't the same as a Trademark registration.  You can register (or could have) "CocaCola.com" back in the day, but it didn't mean you could start selling soft drinks.  A domain name registration is not a Trademark registration! And by the way, they passed a law against "domain name squatting" so people can't just buy domain names that are also trademarks belonging to others.

And bear in mind, I am talking about US law.  Laws in other countries differ.  In many small, third-world countries, well, the dictator's nephew owns the mark to "Coca-Cola" and they have to buy him off to get the brand.

All that being said, if you have a strong word and logo marks ("Twitter" and the blue bird) that you have already registered and used for years, it is foolish to re-brand yourself with a weaker mark like "X".   Twitter was a unique name that had no real connected meaning, so it was a strong mark. Not only that, but the years of use strengthen the mark as well.  Only an idiot would throw that away on a whim.

Google, Inc. may have renamed itself "Alphabet" but they never abandoned the "Google" mark or stopped using it.  No one "Alaphabets" something on the Internet - ever.  Similarly, Zuckerberg may want to call Facebook, Inc. "Meta" but their social media website is still called "Facebook" and I doubt they will change that anytime soon.  Those folks aren't idiots.

Of course, airlines often change their names after a major crash - maybe that is what Musk is trying to do here.  He claims that he wants to transform Twitter into some sort of one-stop-shopping online experience encompassing everything including your banking.  But after he fired all his programmers, it is not clear how he will construct this new website.  He doesn't even have the money to hire lawyers all around the world to register and obtain trademark protection for "X".  In terms of brand-management, this is a real boner.

Unless, of course, it is all just a last gasp for attention - the "New Coke" of social media.  After a month, he will "capitulate to popular demand" and revert to Twitter.  Perhaps.  Perhaps he has lost his mind or perhaps he is doing massive amounts of coke.  The behavior is erratic and narcissistic.

So who owns "X" anyway?

Well, there are hundreds of registrations to "X" marks, both word and stylized - and thousands of applications pending.  But only a few are in the same or similar "Field of Use" as Twitter and are still actively being used.  Microsoft has a lot invested in its "XBox" mark and apparently has a registration (I will update later, the USPTO search engine keep crashing this morning!) to "X" for use in communicating with and between XBox users - a "field of use" similar enough to social media (if not the same) to cause major concern.  Worse yet, the mark belongs to one of the richest and most litigious companies in the world.  Microsoft can afford to sue over this.

But wait, it gets weird.  According to the USPTO database (see below) Meta somehow purchased the rights to this Mark!  I am not sure how they are using the Mark in commerce, though.

Like I said, it seems like a really dumb move, not very well thought out, like most of what Musk has done since his wife left him for a trans person.  The guy is just getting crazier and crazier - or maybe we are just starting to realize the Myth of Musk was just a PR stunt, and since he's fired his PR team, he can't keep up the facade anymore.  Impulsive and erratic actions are not the sign of a stable CEO.

So, who owns "X"?  A lot of people.  But all Musk has is a pretty useless domain name registration, in an era where everyone uses Google to find sites, or bookmarks them.

And people will still call it "Twitter" just to piss off Elon, too.

Domain Names!  How 1990's, Boomer!

* * *

From USPTO.gov:


Serial NumberReg. NumberWord MarkCheck StatusLive/DeadClass(es)
198099150XTSDRLIVE
298054107XTSDRLIVE
398048172XTSDRLIVE
497334517XTSDRLIVE
597851290XTSDRLIVE
697553549XTSDRLIVE
797482057XTSDRLIVE
897482055XTSDRLIVE
997844245XSTSDRLIVE
1097829016XTSDRLIVE
1197138397XTSDRLIVE
12972585977000298XTSDRLIVE
13971283266946508XTSDRLIVE
1497679188XTSDRLIVE
1590553426XTSDRLIVE
1690556063XTSDRLIVE
1790145131XTSDRLIVE
18906910737003064XTSDRLIVE
19909790206997911XTSDRLIVE
20902717356424881XTSDRLIVE
21900058846660507XTSDRLIVE
22904115696535858XTSDRLIVE
23883820016969421XTSDRLIVE
24888875466153371XTSDRLIVE
25887954736680136XTSDRLIVE
26875058975426439XTSDRLIVE
27879808315777374XTSDRLIVE
28870730225383322XTSDRLIVE
29878276955968076XTSDRLIVE035
30878468205673081XTSDRLIVE009
31878467285668845XTSDRLIVE009
32871785845525441XTSDRLIVE035
33876450995474780XTSDRLIVE045
34872166915217582XTSDRLIVE041
35868035664988122XTSDRLIVE
36865168495057126XTSDRLIVE
37866287765661721XTSDRLIVE
38868846475370645XTSDRLIVE035
39866771315319855XTSDRLIVE041
40868806135220893XTSDRLIVE009035038041042045
41852053954009078XSTSDRLIVE
4279361658XTSDRLIVE
43791665604899942XTSDRLIVE
4479362051XTSDRLIVE
4579350759XTSDRLIVE
46793147156932602XTSDRLIVE
47792926246541587XTSDRLIVE
48792587326050141XTSDRLIVE
49791982095488615XTSDRLIVE009035036038039042043
50766657173263948XTSDRLIVE009


Of these, one of interest, as it was originally filed by Microsoft but is now owned by Meta.  It is for an stylized image Mark, though:

Word Mark X

Goods and Services IC 009. US 021 023 026 036 038. G & S: Computer software for broadcasting, transmitting, receiving, accessing, viewing, uploading, downloading, sharing, integrating, encoding, decoding, displaying, formatting, organizing, storing, caching, transferring and streaming of data, text, games, game content, digital media, images, music, audio, video, movies and animations; application programming interface (API) software for broadcasting, transmitting, receiving, accessing, viewing, uploading, downloading, sharing, integrating, encoding, decoding, displaying, formatting, organizing, storing, caching, transferring and streaming of data, text, games, game content, digital media, images, music, audio, video, movies and animations; computer software for sending, receiving and organizing electronic mail, messaging, enabling internet chat and social networking; computer software for purchasing and subscribing to digital media content; computer software development tools; computer software for developing and publishing applications for interactive streaming; software development kits (SDK's) for developing software for broadcasting, transmitting, receiving, accessing, viewing, uploading, downloading, sharing, integrating, encoding, decoding, displaying, formatting, organizing, storing, caching, transferring and streaming of data, text, games, game content, digital media, images, music, audio, video, movies and animations; computer software that enables users to designate specific content for future viewing; computer software for management and storage of digital media; computer software for accessing, browsing and searching online databases; software for filtering internet searches; audio recordings featuring music; video recordings featuring music, video games, movies and animations; computer software that allows gamers to live broadcast their games from a gaming console, or to watch games being played by others. FIRST USE: 20170525. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20170525

IC 035. US 100 101 102. G & S: Promoting the goods and services of others; promotional sponsorship of games, gamers, and gaming events; promoting the goods and services of others by arranging sponsorships for others; administration and coordination of community recreational team leagues in the field of video gaming; administration and coordination of recreational opportunities for individuals who wish to participate in team leagues for video gaming; providing a website portal and online database featuring promotion and advertising for music, video games, movies and animations. FIRST USE: 20170525. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20170525

IC 038. US 100 101 104. G & S: Streaming of digital media content on the Internet; streaming of games on the Internet; streaming of audio, video and audiovisual material on the Internet; video on demand transmission services; providing user access to digital data and content in the field of music, video games, movies and animations in a data network; providing a website for live streaming of gaming content, music, audio, video and animations on the internet; providing access to databases that feature game-related information, audio, music, video and animation via websites; providing online forums for transmission of messages among computer users ; providing internet chat rooms; audio broadcasting; video broadcasting; electronic transmission of mail and messages; communications services, namely, transmission of voice, audio, visual images and data by telecommunications networks, wireless communication networks, the Internet, information services networks and data networks; audio, video, and Internet broadcasting and webcasting services; streaming of music and movies on the internet streaming and audio, radio, video and Internet broadcasting services; transmission of news; video on demand transmission services of entertainment content; providing access to a web site on the Internet featuring gaming-related information, music, videos, movies and animation. FIRST USE: 20170525. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20170525

IC 041. US 100 101 107. G & S: Entertainment services, namely, providing online video games; entertainment services, namely, live streaming content; entertainment services, namely, providing non-downloadable films and movies via a video on demand service; entertainment services, namely, providing non-downloadable online videos featuring games being played by others; entertainment services, namely, live performances by video game players; entertainment services, namely, providing a web site featuring computer gaming-related information, non-downloadable music, non-downloadable videos about music, video games, movies and animations; providing information and news relating to computer gaming and music; Online journals, namely, blogs featuring articles on gaming and gaming-related activities; arranging and conducting competitions for video game players; entertainment services, namely, organizing and producing gaming events; organizing, conducting and operating video game tournaments; entertainment services, in the nature of organizing video gaming leagues; organization of gaming competitions, namely, organizing electronic, computer and video game competitions; providing online news, information and commentary in the fields of entertainment as it relates to e-sports, video gaming, video games and video game players; entertainment services, namely, providing on-line video games via social networks; providing enhancements within online video games, namely, enhanced levels of game play; entertainment services, namely, providing virtual environments in which users can interact through social games for recreational purposes; entertainment services, namely, providing virtual environments in which users can interact for recreational, leisure, or entertainment purposes; organizing educational and entertainment conferences for software developers in the field of software development and gaming; organizing educational and entertainment conferences in the field of gaming, video gaming and digital content; education, namely, conducting classes, seminars, workshops and training services in the field of software development; publishing of online works of others featuring user-generated text, audio, video, and graphics; providing online publications in the nature of blogs and articles in the field of music, video games, movies and animations; entertainment services, namely, providing online non-downloadable pre-recorded music tailored to viewer's programming preferences; arranging of contests and sweepstakes; entertainment services, namely, providing non-downloadable movies and documentaries via a video-on-demand service; providing information, news and commentary in the field of computer gaming and entertainment; providing an online website portal for consumers to play on-line computer games and electronic games and share game enhancements and game strategies for recreational computer game playing purposes; providing educational training, namely, online tutorials in the field of video gaming and video games; providing an Internet website portal featuring entertainment content about video games and video game players; Non-downloadable electronic publications in the nature of blogs in the field of music, video games, movies and animations; providing temporary use of non-downloadable game software. FIRST USE: 20170525. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20170525

IC 042. US 100 101. G & S: Design and development of computer software; providing interactive websites featuring technology that enable online users to create personal profiles; providing online non-downloadable software and software as a service (SaaS) services featuring software, for transmitting and for receiving live streaming; providing online non-downloadable software and software as a service (SaaS) services featuring software, for transmitting and for receiving video on demand; electronic storage of electronic media, namely, images, text, video, and audio data; providing temporary use of online non-downloadable software and software as a service (SaaS) services featuring software for broadcasting, transmitting, receiving, accessing, viewing, uploading, downloading, sharing, integrating, encoding, decoding, displaying, formatting, organizing, storing, caching, transferring and streaming of data, text, games, game content, digital media, images, music, audio, video and animations; providing temporary use of online non-downloadable software and software as a service (SaaS) services featuring software for sending, receiving and organizing electronic mail, messaging, enabling internet chat and social networking; providing temporary use of online non-downloadable software and software as a service (SaaS) services featuring software for purchasing and subscribing to digital media content; providing temporary use of online non-downloadable software and software as a service (SaaS) services featuring software for developing and publishing applications for interactive streaming; providing temporary use of online non-downloadable software and software as a service (SaaS) services featuring software for management and storage of digital media; computer software consulting services in the field of gaming technology and graphics software; computer programming services; providing temporary use of non-downloadable game software; Application service provider (ASP), namely, hosting computer software applications of others; hosting of third party digital content in the nature of photos, videos, audio, music, text, data, images, software, applications, games, web sites and other electronic works on the Internet; hosting of digital content on the Internet; consulting in the field of the design and development of computer hardware, software, software applications, and computer networks; digital and electronic file data transfer from one computer format to another; provision of Internet and computer network search engines; graphic design services; Software as a Service (SAAS) featuring software for facilitating audio, video and digital content creation, subscriptions and one-time purchases; creating an online community for computer users to participate in discussions, obtain feedback, form virtual communities, and engage in social networking; software maintenance, installation and update services; providing a website featuring technology that enables users to live stream gaming content, music, audio, video and animations. FIRST USE: 20170525. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20170525

IC 045. US 100 101. G & S: Online social networking services; online social networking services, namely, facilitating social introductions or interactions among individuals; social networking services in the fields of entertainment, gaming and application development; providing information about social networking that involves online gaming, online video games and online video gaming applications; providing an Internet website portal for engaging in social networking; providing information, news, commentary in the field of social networking. FIRST USE: 20170525. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20170525

Mark Drawing Code (5) WORDS, LETTERS, AND/OR NUMBERS IN STYLIZED FORM

Serial Number 87980831

Filing Date May 25, 2017

Current Basis 1A

Original Filing Basis 1B

Published for Opposition July 24, 2018

Registration Number 5777374

International Registration Number 1396905

Registration Date June 11, 2019

Owner(REGISTRANT) Microsoft Corporation CORPORATION WASHINGTON One Microsoft Way Redmond WASHINGTON 980526399

(LAST LISTED OWNER) META PLATFORMS, INC. CORPORATION DELAWARE 1601 WILLOW ROAD MENLO PARK CALIFORNIA 94025

Assignment Recorded ASSIGNMENT RECORDED

Attorney of Record Melissa Capotosto

Description of Mark The color(s) white and blue is/are claimed as a feature of the mark. The mark consists of a stylized letter "X". The left side of the "X" is white and the right side of the "X" is blue. The shaded square carrier represents background only and is not a part of the mark.

Type of Mark TRADEMARK. SERVICE MARK

Register PRINCIPAL

Live/Dead Indicator LIVE

Sunday, July 30, 2023

Slap and Tickle (Let's Misbehave!)

People want what they can't have, and everyone covets that whiff of danger.

A reader writes:

I saw your blog today, and it reminded me of something an older gay man told me. He said that one thing he missed about the era before homosexuality was accepted (the pre-90s I guess) was that it was kind of a thrill having to sneak around to gay bars and underground establishments. He said it was fun discovering people were gay when you met them at clubs at night. As bad as things were for gay people when it was taboo, there does sound like the lifestyle was more adventurous because of that, like you had to live a double life. What do you think?
The cocktail was really invented - or popularized - during prohibition to make drinks from sketchy liquor.  My grandmother loved to go to the "blind pigs" or "speakeasies" in New York City. It was thrilling to be breaking the law!  So scandalous!  Her parents (strict Lutherans) were mortified!

That being said, my great uncle shot himself after the police raided a gay bar and put his name and photo in the paper.  Some thrill.

But the reader has a point - throughout history, people have reveled in being "naughty" and pushing boundaries.  In some cases, there are celebrations such as Mardi Gras,where people are expected to do things they would not ordinarily do.  Kids love to scare their parents with offbeat clothing and hairstyles - Mom and Dad hate it!   And that's the point.

The whole drug culture, so to speak, is based in part on this - the speakeasies of our generation.  Lighting up at "4:20" is the height of naughtiness and even now that it is legal, I see many marijuana smokers sort of sneak a puff as if they were being bad boys.  I guess cigarettes are the new marijuana and of course, vaping is the new bad-boy thing to do.  "People keep telling me to stop!" says one bad-boy, "but I'm a rebel!"  Hope that lung transplant comes through.

Catering to people's desires to be naughty has always been a major job of organized crime, which has become increasingly frustrated as one vice or sin or another is made legal and socially accepted.  How can you make millions running shady gay bars in a bad part of town, when the gays no longer feel ostracized?  How can you make money from adult book and video stores when people shamelessly download porn on their phones?  How can you make money from prostitution when your child's schoolteacher has an OnlyFans page?

Obviously, we have to bring back shame - and that seems to be a big plank of the GOP agenda.  Hey, if they have to be ashamed, why shouldn't everyone else be, too?

On a smaller scale you see this in everyday life.  Speeding, for example, is another "bad boy" naughty behavior that people engage in, to experience the thrill of being a scofflaw, if even a minor one.  People like to play their music just a bit too loud, just to be a "rebel" and see if someone wants to make an issue of it.  And we all do these foolish things on occasion, as we strain at the leash of our civilized society.

It reminds me of my posting on Inheritance Scenarios where I listed some examples from real life, of friends and family members who were screwed out of an inheritance (or someone tried to).  A young law student wrote to me and said, "That could never happen, that would be illegal!"  Oh, to be a naive young law student!   The reality is, most people don't have the intelligence or money to litigate such issues, and as a result, an executor can loot an estate and the other "heirs" might not do much about it.

I told the young law student that yes, those things are illegal, that's why we have laws.  But also that people often do illegal things - which is why we have lawyers (and cops and courts and jails).  People are always pushing boundaries, sometimes for personal gain, other times for a thrill.

Of course, thrills can be had without breaking laws.  I remember when I was a kid, we would go skiing, and it was always this mixture of excitement and dread going to the ski slope.  Would I remember what I learned last year?  Would I fall and break my leg?  We're sure to find out - shortly!

But getting back to the reader's comment, did the mainstreaming of homosexuality result in the decline of gay bars?  Perhaps, but perhaps also the "thrill" of going to a "forbidden" bar has now been passed to bachelorette parties and whatnot.  The thrill of being in a "naughty" place on the eve of one's wedding is an attractive lure.  It is also why some bachelorette parties hire male strippers.  Naughty, Naughty!

Of course, like with anything else, when you move the football down the field, you are constantly changing the goal for a first down.   George Carlin blessed us with his "Seven Dirty Words" and as a result, today, you hear toddlers repeating them.  The goalpost has been moved.   Of course, we have new dirty words we are not allowed to say - politically incorrect ones.  You can say "Motherfucker" but not the N-word.  And in a way, this is progress, as one is a swearword and the other a racist insult.  But you still see some folks getting a thrill by saying the naughty word when no one is looking (or they thought no one was looking).

When I was young, children born out-of-wedlock were called "Bastards" whereas today they represent about half of the newborn population.  Premarital sex, once taboo, has been normalized.  What passes for sexual promiscuity or kinky behavior has changed as well, with more and more extreme sexual behaviors becoming normalized.  In some regard, this is a healthy thing, provided people are kind to one another and everything is between consenting adults.  On the other hand, there are people (I've met them) who turn sex into a hobby, with each new sex act another box to check off on their list of things to do (and equipment to buy).  There is such a thing as too much of a good thing, I think.

One last thing.  When I was President of the Gay & Lesbian Student Association, we organized a "Gay Pride" event and even chartered a bus to drive to New York for the gay pride parade.  I was handing out pamphlets at a local gay bar, and an older gay man took one from me and read it and handed it back.  "Gay Pride?" he said, "I'm not proud of this!"

How sad for him.  But he was from another era - like my Great Uncle - and the shame and thrill of it was part and parcel of the deal, I guess.  It is like an old joke I read a long time ago, "If you aren't at least a little embarrassed after having sex, you didn't do it right!"

Because let's face it, sex is awkward when viewed in the cold light of day.  And maybe being naughty is one way our brains convince ourselves to do it.

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Are Californians Fleeing the State and Moving to Texas and Florida? (Not Exactly)

Several States are experiencing small population losses.  Is this a trend?

Californians are not welcome in most places.  A couple of decades ago, we went to visit Oregon and they rented us a car with California tags on it.  "Why not just paint a target on my back?" I said.  And sure enough, we were cut off and given the finger more than once, even though we were not from California and had no intention of moving to Oregon.

But the same effect was true in Colorado, Washington State, and Texas - among other States.   As the Bay area became more and more expensive, semiconductor companies relocated to Boulder, Austin, and Seattle, until those locations became too expensive as well.  It was not a "California" thing, but a technology thing.

In the run-up to the 2024 election, the GOP strategy is fear.  Fear that the country is "going woke and going broke" and that if Democrats have their way, criminals will run rampant on main street. If Republicans have their way, criminals will run rampant through the halls of Congress.  The narrative the GOP sells is that cities like San Francisco have turned into dystopian hellscapes, where only the richest 1% can afford to buy a house and that homeless people break into your car daily and assault your family while you are at work. You call the Police and they say nothing can be done - after all, the criminals are the real victims here, right?  Californians are fleeing the State in droves!  Well, not droves, but a trickle.  But it's a really big trickle, right?  And they're all moving to right-wing-friendly Florida for low taxes and low crime rates!  Right?

And while there is a nugget of truth to some of this, the idea that States like Florida are crime-free low-tax havens is not only somewhat flawed, but laughably so.   While there is no State income tax in Florida, the local property taxes can be onerous - in the five-figures in many instances.  Insurance costs can be just as much, particularly toward the coast.  You may not be saving much money moving to Florida - which is one reason we left.

And crime?  Florida invented "Florida-man" - the meth-head drug addict who eats the face off some innocent passerby and finds new ways of cruelly exploiting his fellow man.  Reliable and recent crime statistics are hard to come by.  This interactive map claims the District of Columbia has the highest crime rate per capita, as of August 2022, while other sites claim Alaska is the crime capital of the country.  Yet others point to Louisiana as the murder capital of the USA.  Which is it?

Looking at all these statistics, it seems clear that California isn't some weird outlier of crime, but rather falls in line with the national average.  Some States that Republicans point to as "Law and Order" are, rather in fact, lawless in comparison.   The violent crime rates in Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi (and the South in general) make California look relatively safe.  But that doesn't fit the narrative of "Woke States are Crime-Ridden!" that the GOP likes to sell.

And as for a "flood" of people leaving California, the flood is more of a trickle. As one site notes (to exaggerate) "1 in 100" people have left the State during the pandemic, which sounds like a lot, until you realize they are adding up three years' worth of data.  Annual outflow is less than a half a percent.  Not so dramatic, eh?  And certainly, if so many people were leaving the State, property values would be in free-fall, right?

The reality is, people move from one place to another to find jobs or live a better life.  "Rust Belt" States have seen an outflow of people because there were no jobs.  Today, with many people working remotely, you can live wherever you want to, and I suspect a big chunk of the people "Leaving California" still work for companies headquartered there.  They are just enjoying a lower cost-of-living facilitated by living in a less-populated area where land is cheaper.

That being said, the statistics on ingress and egress are somewhat mixed.  New York State has seen an increase in population in most years, other than during the pandemic.  Eventually, if enough people leave and land becomes cheap enough, someone will see an opportunity and move there and establish a business.  That's how Capitalism is supposed to work, right?

For example, here in Georgia, we are seeing folks moving into the State as the economy is doing OK and the cost of living is relatively cheap compared to heavily populated urban areas.  Of course, no one is giving away houses in Atlanta, but the prices are lower than New York City or San Francisco - both of which are bounded by water and densely populated.   Our crime rate and taxes are far lower than Florida as well. We pay 1/5th the amount of property taxes that we would pay in Florida, and unless they change the law, when I turn 66, the property taxes will drop to a few hundred a year.  Beats $15,000 a year, don't it?  Yea, Florida is just peachy. No pun intended.

And bear in mind that from April until October, half of Florida migrates up North to escape the staggering heat and humidity.  Some fun, under the sun!

So I have to call bullshit on this.  Yes, wildfires and mudslides are no fun - but then again, they have been part of the California landscape (along with earthquakes) for decades now.  California is in no danger (nor is any other "Blue State") of going broke or becoming a vast, empty desolate desert.   Nor are Texas and Florida a Shangri-La because they have banned "woke textbooks."  In fact, that sort of nonsense, which has distracted government from real pocketbook issues, such as the staggering property tax rates and homeowners insurance rates (because politicians are in the pocket of the roofing scam) might eventually drive people away, or drive them to vote Democratic.

You can only distract people so much with a Punch and Judy puppet show, while you pickpocket them as they watch.  Eventually people catch on, usually when they realize they are broke.   Yes, that is the odd part - "go woke, go broke" on a personal level, turns out to be a cruel joke.  Republicans are distracting voters from real pocketbook issues with "social values" issues.  But eventually, people reach into their pockets and discover that while they were rooting for a book-burning, their pockets were emptied.

Can they keep up this charade until November 2024?  Or will they somehow convince their followers that "Woke Democrats" were responsible for the over 200% increase in insurance costs while Republicans controlled the State government.

Anything is possible with followers dumb enough to buy "Trump Bucks" - right?