Things are going well.

  • @[email protected]
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    -61 year ago

    I mean DeSantis is a shithead, but Florida is also expensive, hot, has poor infrastructure, and is sinking.

    This article is putting a political spin on something that might not be that political.

    Academics do not get paid much, so the increase in Florida’s cost of living (combined with it being a shit place to live) probably contributes to them leaving.

    It’d be more compelling if they showed the stats of academics leaving Florida compared to non academics in the same economic bracket.

    • @fidodo
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      131 year ago

      All those things you just mentioned are heavily influenced by who is in political power.

        • @fidodo
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          41 year ago

          Ok, but did you read the article? It’s about a specific issues at Florida Universities where top leadership is being replaced by politically influenced Republican appointees who are punishing academic for doing their jobs as well as the impacts of anti academic legislation that’s making it harder for professors to do their jobs properly. You’re just complaining that they aren’t also covering random other social issues as well? It’s a news article about a specific subject, that doesn’t mean other subjects don’t exist outside of the scope of the article, otherwise you’d need every article to be an encyclopedia. It’s just how writing and articles work. I don’t understand your complaint.

    • Machinist3359
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      121 year ago

      I don’t think the point is “academics more so than other professions”, but that “any marginalized people with a choice” are ditching FL. Having that sort of choice is more common among knowledge workers, thus the brain drain.

      Florida being a shit place to live for many reasons, most of which (including your examples) are political. But it’s hard to deny a governor criminalizing your identity is a major deterrent.