The new land rush in Wyoming

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • Teton County in Wyoming is home to the widest income divide in America, with a median house price of more than $5 million and an average income of $318,000. Correspondent Ben Tracy looks at how the wealthy, drawn to the state's picture-perfect settings, have been squeezing out the middle class - the very people needed to keep the community running. (An earlier version of this story originally aired October 16, 2022.)
    #jacksonhole
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @chrism2042
    @chrism2042 Год назад +558

    We just returned from vacation in Jackson Hole. A river rafting guide told us exactly what was happening, with him looking to move because he can't survive there. The average paid workers can't afford to live due to rent being so ridiculous. He told us it was the 2nd most expensive place to live in the US, following NYC. Said a couple just purchased a 0.25 acre lot to build a house, they paid $4.2 Million for the lot. On top of that, home owners insurance is rapidly increasing due to rip-off insurance companies and potentials for forest fires. There are restaurant workers, store workers, guides and other average paying employees living in campers and many their vehicles just to survive. What are the wealthy going to do living in a multi-million dollar home with nothing open in town because there are no people to operate the businesses?

    • @DonB.-Mulefivefive
      @DonB.-Mulefivefive Год назад +1

      Hope it burns.

    • @twystedhumour
      @twystedhumour Год назад +95

      Their problem. I just wish that the regular ppl like us "economize" and move to where they can afford. When the wealthy are left with no-one to "serve" them, then they can consider paying more for services.

    • @E1VM
      @E1VM Год назад +36

      Wish i had a cozy job like a "tour guide" and then cry about the low pay.
      Nobody is forcing them to stay.

    • @jackchueh1231
      @jackchueh1231 Год назад +9

      Eventually, you’ll need to tax on income.

    • @dianehess5520
      @dianehess5520 Год назад

      Don’t worry about the wealthy, they will figure something out, or move to one of their many other homes.

  • @jeffportnoy3863
    @jeffportnoy3863 Год назад +376

    "You either have 3 homes or 3 jobs" That's the new America we're letting them create. Much of their wealth derived from technology

    • @victorblock3421
      @victorblock3421 Год назад

      The technology that has double life expectancy in the past century and allows you and cry & whine about everything.

    • @ww2remembered983
      @ww2remembered983 Год назад

      What gets me is working people and the non wealthy working people supporting Trump. He's a 'real estate guy ' !! In other words, he loves to make that easy money in RE and wants the wealthy like himself to pay as little as possible in taxes. Talk about voting against your own interests! As it's all about lie, blame and deflect to keep us fighting amongst ourselves over culture wars they created! As they rip us all off blind!

    • @LilyGazou
      @LilyGazou Год назад

      Big pharma. Anyone who invested during the Covid bs.

    • @salpine
      @salpine Год назад +28

      Absolutely. This problem is not just confined to Jackson Hole Wyoming.

    • @AndrewSmith-uz8bg
      @AndrewSmith-uz8bg Год назад

      I guarantee you that is the democrats plans to ruin so many states surrounding California and other states like Texas, Florida, Tennessee, etc.

  • @scottwomack8905
    @scottwomack8905 Год назад +86

    The same thing has happened in all the major cities in Florida. Local people can no longer afford to live here.

    • @marygoff3332
      @marygoff3332 Год назад +2

      Yes. Up 30-35% over just last year.

    • @darylhill9400
      @darylhill9400 Год назад

      Yeah, I’ve been in Stuart Florida since the in 1980s and it’s being destroyed with over population! There used to be anti-developing city Council now it’s fullbore Republican dominated, greed, mongering, destroy nature situation

    • @joeys675
      @joeys675 2 месяца назад +1

      I'm 6th generation CA. I don't wanna hear it. I left 15 years ago. Was in Florida. Till a year ago. Now I'm in TN. And moving to Cheyenne WY in a few weeks...

    • @joefran619
      @joefran619 Месяц назад

      Too Hot and humid

    • @joeys675
      @joeys675 Месяц назад

      ​@@joefran619 where?

  • @jackfenton2271
    @jackfenton2271 Год назад +226

    "Being closer to nature" in a 6,000 square foot home for two.

    • @arthurmead5341
      @arthurmead5341 Год назад +12

      Well it is still closer to nature. Not exactly LA out there, is it?

    • @mattywho8485
      @mattywho8485 Год назад +32

      Translation: He voted Democrat in California for years, then ran to Wyoming to escape the tax burden in California that he helped create !

    • @matildagreene1744
      @matildagreene1744 Год назад +1

      So cozy 🤣

    • @thelaxlair6727
      @thelaxlair6727 Год назад +1

      sounds good to me

    • @RealLifeFinance
      @RealLifeFinance Год назад +4

      Exactly and his million dollar job while workers live in their cars

  • @stevemccurdy9201
    @stevemccurdy9201 Год назад +400

    This already happened in Wisconsin. Exceedingly wealthy people from Illinois have built huge McMansions in our Northwoods, tearing up the environment and displacing small cabins that have been in people's families for generations.

    • @mannyechaluce3814
      @mannyechaluce3814 Год назад +13

      You can either have that or blight, your choice

    • @Polack-ml9fh
      @Polack-ml9fh Год назад +35

      Well all those people didn’t have to sell their cabins, but Greed got the best of many of them too. When you have a cabin that your family built in 1950 that someone’s willing to pay $1.0million for, the decision is theirs. Also, the Wisconsin northwoods has always been the Chicagoan’s playground. That’s the only reason the bars and restaurants in the region are able to stay open. 30 years ago Jackson hole was much different.

    • @tysonkampbjj
      @tysonkampbjj Год назад +29

      @@mannyechaluce3814 That's a false proposition (false dichotomy). Learn logic before making propositions.

    • @margretblair5389
      @margretblair5389 Год назад +39

      Save Wisconsin vote ♥️ red

    • @RobertMJohnson
      @RobertMJohnson Год назад +11

      Uh. This is Jackson, Wyoming, not Wisconsin. There’s no comparison

  • @jonathanstensberg
    @jonathanstensberg Год назад +42

    Remember kids, “If your barista can’t afford to live within 15 minutes of you, you live in a theme park”

  • @user-po3mh4dy9r
    @user-po3mh4dy9r Год назад +194

    Jackson Hole isn't even Wyoming anymore. Back in the 80's I loved to go there, and planned my travels to put me there. Now I refuse to go there. Partly because I don't want the wonderful memories destroyed either. Yes, it's happening all over the West. Ironically, the people fueling this destroy everything in their path, just as they destroyed the places they come from.

    • @dfuss2756
      @dfuss2756 Год назад +7

      Truth.

    • @928pcar
      @928pcar Год назад

      That's because they leave blue states like California because of the terrible policies then continue to vote that way when they get to a red state. Country is doomed

    • @missmandy2049
      @missmandy2049 Год назад

      Yes, these are the people who vote democrat until their city is in ruins & not fit for habitation, then they pack up & flee. They have the means to run far away & hide in the comfort of the peaceful countryside, but, unfortunately, they’ll very likely bring their horrible voting habits with them & if so, they’ll eventually turn that peaceful, beautiful countryside into something unrecognizable, unsafe & uninhabitable.

    • @stj971
      @stj971 Год назад +4

      I knew a woman who was elderly in 1976 told me how beautiful JH was back then. I'm sure it's ALOT different now.

    • @johnbanach3875
      @johnbanach3875 Год назад +2

      It's not just Jackson Hole. Same thing happening in little old Encampment, WY, near the CO border.

  • @nancychace8619
    @nancychace8619 Год назад +320

    Ms. Hutchings is right. If the Blue Collar workers get squeezed out, how are you going to keep your town going? We've had a similar problem in Silicon Valley, where families who have been here for generations are getting priced out of the market and can no longer afford to live here anymore.

    • @dreamsofturtles1828
      @dreamsofturtles1828 Год назад +36

      Exactly what is happening in my western NC town. Home prices shot up, no locals can afford them anymore and i dont know what the blue collar workers are going to do. Its so unfair, these are the people who keep the shelves stocked, work in the restaurants...and did it all thru the pandemic too.

    • @ElSantoLuchador
      @ElSantoLuchador Год назад +44

      This happened in Seattle and now Seattle is falling apart. And since it's falling apart, all the rich people are leaving (I guess to Wyoming). Once all the rich people leave and the tech companies pull out Seattle will be affordable again and the crime rate will go down. The cycle of life. San Francisco people know what I'm talking about.

    • @jwt1035
      @jwt1035 Год назад +29

      You ask a reasonable sounding question, but practically speaking, just like ski towns, they’ve been managing to do it for a long period of time without any labor shortage. People want to live in these types of places so bad they’re willing to live in squalor.

    • @nancychace8619
      @nancychace8619 Год назад +11

      @@ElSantoLuchador San Francisco is a mess.

    • @hisaddle
      @hisaddle Год назад +25

      Aspen, Vail, Crested Butte, Telluride, the list goes on....ski towns, really beautiful places, the workers dont live there, they commute in. This has been going on for a long long time.

  • @txgreasemonkey
    @txgreasemonkey Год назад +319

    This happened in most mountain towns in CO back in the late 80’s. Forward to the present, my brother lives in a small town in CO and 60 percent of the houses sit empty for all but two weeks out of the year because they are owned by out of state people and they use as vacation homes. The homes that are available are way too expensive for a local to even think about buying. They are starting to build “affordable housing “ but these are mostly one or two bedroom condos. Fine for single people but if you are a family with two or more kids your out of luck.

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 Год назад +30

      Aspen needs a small army of workers to wait on the rich hand and foot but has no place put them. It is getting absurd.

    • @netherman1325
      @netherman1325 Год назад +29

      This is a really important issue to me, When I am old enough to vote I am going to make it my goal to stop the gentrification of Colorado, because it is depressing. I hate driving through the mountains only to end up seeing golf courses and $10 million Vacation homes everywhere.

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 Год назад +28

      @@netherman1325 You are SO too late.

    • @alexlopez5800
      @alexlopez5800 Год назад

      ​@@netherman1325It seems like all the covid $ went straight into the pockets of the already wealthy. Making them even wealthier. This is a national problem, not a state problem.

    • @mysticone1798
      @mysticone1798 Год назад +9

      You're talking about a Colorado resort town, obviously, where wealthy people buy into it for summer homes and for occasional ski trips in winter. It's part of Colorado's tourist trade, and a great way to raise money for the state.
      Just because the houses aren't occupied for the entire year doesn't mean that the people who own them are criminals.
      If you can't afford to live there, you can choose from THOUSANDS OF CITIES all across the state and the country!!!

  • @sierrarmcclain
    @sierrarmcclain Год назад +167

    This is happening in Montana too. People have moved in and built multimillion dollar homes, raising the tax prices. The average house price in Bozeman, MT is $710,500. I was born and raised in Montana and I probably won’t ever be able to afford to go back and live there.

    • @raymondkidwell7135
      @raymondkidwell7135 Год назад +31

      Same thing in Florida. Mostly people from California and New York driving up real estate. Even though it’s high everywhere right now it’s insane in Florida. Full time job live homeless

    • @TheTonialadd
      @TheTonialadd Год назад +21

      My daughter lives in Montana near Glacier park. She works three jobs and she’s homeless. Rentals are overpriced and forget about being able to afford to buy a house…

    • @bertrenolds5
      @bertrenolds5 Год назад +5

      @@raymondkidwell7135 your taxes are insane there and good luck insuring your home

    • @twasbrillig33
      @twasbrillig33 Год назад +5

      Don't worry Sierra, this is happening everywhere =D

    • @jasonlommen4769
      @jasonlommen4769 Год назад +14

      Yep. My whole family is in MT. Thank goodness I can buy cheap land from my family. We never sell to outsiders. My brother and his wife are both professors at MSU and they do not qualify for a house loan. They are sick about it. They pay over 3k for rent and likely have to move and then commute an hour each way to work. It’s terrible how much the cost of living is there. The average folk just can’t make it.

  • @JimPfarr
    @JimPfarr Год назад +316

    The same thing is happening all over the west. I grew up in a small town in western Montana, my father bought 25 acres in 1974 for $500 an acre. The new owners of that land are selling 13 acres for $700,000 in a town of less than 1,200 people. Bozeman has gone stupid expensive, along the lines of Jackson Hole. Even the teeny town of Philipsburg, MT is seeing west coast transplants dumping ludicrous money to buy a piece of the western dream. Meanwhile the hard working people who built the towns and lived the dream the hard way are being priced out of their lives and homes, not to mention the attitudes and behaviors of the new inhabitants. Sad, but it's the way of the west.

    • @matildagreene1744
      @matildagreene1744 Год назад +10

      Guess the newcomers will just have to live amongst grouchy people...some like it just the way it is and don't want the attitude ..Go party somewhere else.

    • @dianemitchell1717
      @dianemitchell1717 Год назад +54

      Now those people know how the Indians felt when they were driven off their land. The wealthy and powerful always win until they too are shoved aside. To be fair there should be land set aside for middle class people and the lowly paid workers too.

    • @danb.709
      @danb.709 Год назад +2

      Bozeman is not on a par with Jackson as far as cost and demand, Bozeman has room to grow, Jackson doesn't. I will agree the same thing is happening lots of places, but nothing is quite on par with Jackson.

    • @muprock
      @muprock Год назад

      @JimPfarr You conveniently left out the part about how much money your father made from selling his 25 acres. If we were more honest, we would recognize that every landowner around here (except, perhaps, Native Americans) is participating in this. Everyone claims to be a true local, but in reality, they also came from somewhere else. Landowners who claim to have done things "the hard way", profited in the same way that the new wealthy are. The scale is now larger, but the phenomenon is precisely the same. I'm certainly not saying that all of this development is good. However, you and your father are no different from the newcomers you complain about. You're a hypocrite, walking around, blaming "transplants", acting like you and your dad invented the Rocky Mountain West.

    • @Teemoney741
      @Teemoney741 Год назад +8

      Went to both places for national park. And they both depressing . Couldn’t pay me to live there ..No blacks at all

  • @calebamore
    @calebamore Год назад +101

    I was invited here to become a police officer. I calculated that it was just impossible for me to get my own place to live based on what they were paying officers. Had to decline.

    • @melamineflorentine8134
      @melamineflorentine8134 Год назад +2

      and yet being a police officer or an essential worker could be used to convince these areas to create housing solutions for you. They have their 3500 acres ranch and somewhere nearby they can build a normal little American town where you could live among firefighters, cops, electrical workers, teachers and make the commute each day. Bet you could get an interested group together.

    • @jam-lm1sz
      @jam-lm1sz Год назад +2

      @@melamineflorentine8134 we have many dead towns, towns that are holding up but at times seem dead. Just restart them instead making more of same crap. Havoc on trees and lands, water already going on.

    • @BrentsView
      @BrentsView Год назад

      Sounds like a company town. Who wouldn't want to live there?@@melamineflorentine8134

    • @DavidEason-ui5ty
      @DavidEason-ui5ty Год назад

      @@melamineflorentine8134I am surprised the rich people haven’t created worker towns nearby like the old company towns

    • @willong1000
      @willong1000 Год назад

      @@melamineflorentine8134 Why bother? If everyone simply withheld offering their services to those ultra-rich "elites" they would either have to hike up service-industry wages to livable standards, and thus ruin the tourist trade that sustains such resort towns, or abandon the areas themselves. The latter seems an ideal situation 😆!

  • @strngenchantedgirl
    @strngenchantedgirl Год назад +75

    The rich dude - “I’m willing to give money to charity”. People don’t want to have to rely on charity. Maybe try pushing to build low income and affordable housing. So people can maybe afford to go to the grocery store instead of the food pantry.

    • @1000buffalos
      @1000buffalos Год назад +2

      With land prices as they are in Jackson, how would "pushing to build low income housing " look like? Who has to go without?

    • @SurpriseMeJT
      @SurpriseMeJT Год назад +6

      I noticed the same hipocracy. Sure, he's giving money to charities which preserve the nature that he's bought into. He could care less about people working for money in that town. His fortune rests on people working for a living to grow companies and yet he's here saying that he doesn't actually want to live in a capitalistic environment.

    • @KR-rs3sj
      @KR-rs3sj Год назад

      They'll never understand that we don't even want their charity because we don't want them. Say you're from Jackson anywhere outside of Teton county when you're in Wyoming and watch the looks you'll get.

    • @ljmolly4029
      @ljmolly4029 3 месяца назад

      It assuages his guilt while he exploits the tax system

    • @LeSillyGoose
      @LeSillyGoose 2 месяца назад

      They donate to get tax exemptions 🗿

  • @pibbitybibbity
    @pibbitybibbity Год назад +27

    Jackson Hole is not, by any means, the last of the Wild West especially in Wyoming. It is rich people playing cowboy at the expense of those who live there.
    It’s the most gentrified, citified place in Wyoming; it’s like Disney’s Wyomingland.
    The harsh truth is that the business owners who cater to the wealthy still pay crap wages to their staff, the people living in their vehicles or in towns 40 miles away.
    And the guy who says he’s allegedly giving 1/3 of his income to local charities? That’s not out of the goodness of his heart or his “investment” in the town. First, it’s a tax write-off so he pays less in taxes each year than the poor people living there and, second, he funds local charities so the people he needs to wait on him hand & foot will have services to keep them there.
    All these rich people who wanted to get “back to nature” then build multi-million dollar homes with thousands of square feet so they don’t have to be outside, especially in Wyoming.
    EAT. THE. RICH.

    • @debbabe2254
      @debbabe2254 Год назад +2

      He's planning to donate a third of his tax savings.. And Wyoming has no state tax. So, he is giving to charity a pittance, donating to charities he can control. Nothing that helps the struggling poor.

    • @matildagreene1744
      @matildagreene1744 Год назад +1

      SO TRUE. Nothing like an actual western (cowboy, if you wish) lifestyle. . Kind of like the TV series (that I will NEVER watch) Yellowstone..LOLOL 🤣 What a joke !!

    • @user-ho3dk4pg8y
      @user-ho3dk4pg8y Месяц назад +1

      TAX THE RICH!! Hard!

  • @doughull9287
    @doughull9287 Год назад +86

    This has happened in Colorado too. I moved 40 miles from from where I worked in a resort town due to lack of housing that I could afford. A large portion of the workforce has as well, and what this has caused is a shortage of workers in that community. Many local businesses have closed, and the larger, chain businesses such as the grocery store, building supply store, WalMart, restaurants etc. are understaffed to the point that they are unable to operate well. Even the resorts, which are the main main industry there are understaffed.
    The approach that the local government is taking is to try to provide subsidized affordable housing. This is a long process, and hasn't had much impact yet. I don't know the solution, and eventually the situation will find some sort of balance on it's own, but it has lowered the quality of life for everyone, both the wealthy and the worker.

    • @georgewagner7787
      @georgewagner7787 Год назад +1

      Why doesn't the government help you get an rv at least?

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 Год назад +7

      At least the hotels should have staff quarters as in The Shining.

    • @simplymarvelous4983
      @simplymarvelous4983 Год назад +2

      Theres a lot of affordable housing apartments all over Los Angeles they look exactly like the condos and lofts in downtown LA that the hipsters are paying 6 thousand a month to live in but you have to wait on long list to qualify I’m good with all that don’t need no handout I’m just saving some bread and moving to Vegas they got some nice areas like summerlin and Henderson where you get a new home with a pool for 400000 instead of living in the hood paying 1800 a month for a one bedroom and take a chance of getting robbed or shot LA is trash I hate to say it and this coming from a guy who was in prison for 14 years

    • @KutWrite
      @KutWrite Год назад +1

      That's what happens when one looks to government to solve problems its politicians created.

    • @ellafields9424
      @ellafields9424 Год назад +4

      @@georgewagner7787 Live in a RV in CO in the winter = certain to freeze to death!!

  • @Corpvet
    @Corpvet Год назад +505

    The problem is rich people crossing state lines and raising property values without a care for locals.

    • @theviking2877
      @theviking2877 Год назад +46

      Also money from.Russians/Chinese/Indians and not all of it is clean

    • @victorblock3421
      @victorblock3421 Год назад

      Nice communist statement.
      Maybe they can clear out and let you move in.

    • @philshifley574
      @philshifley574 Год назад

      Honestly there aren't many "locals" from there. Most people are just transplants anyway

    • @Grumpollion
      @Grumpollion Год назад +21

      Hey let's cool it with the antisemitism.

    • @LR-mh8hs
      @LR-mh8hs Год назад +52

      It's the government that allows it. All states should have corporate and income tax for the wealthy, and it should be uniform.

  • @johndzurenko
    @johndzurenko Год назад +147

    I love when rich people say, "I have an obligation to give it back". So long is it gives them a tax right off and does NOT give the people that need it a living wage. Every last one of these rich people have the same mentality. It is truly what is wrong with this country.

    • @dac545j
      @dac545j Год назад +1

      Yeah. I always wonder about 'The Fable of the Bees' when I come across stories like this. I suppose Wyoming and Texas will need to instigate income tax at some point or other but in the meantime it gives a place to go for 50-something millionaires, instead of Florida. *I'm not American, just interested in US culture, etc.

    • @MatthewC137
      @MatthewC137 Год назад +14

      Most rich people earned their money by working harder than most while delaying gratification and creating jobs. There's no need for them to "give back" because they already did more good than most people. The richest people of all however often made their money through politics and therefore should give back because they represent a net cost to society not a net benefit.

    • @wesleyhempoli5548
      @wesleyhempoli5548 Год назад +5

      Write* off

    • @kjuarez29
      @kjuarez29 Год назад +5

      Start making those charitable donations not a tax write off and watch the hypocrisy take place.

    • @flechette3782
      @flechette3782 Год назад +1

      @@dac545j Income tax will be the last nail in the coffin for normal people. The billionaires can pay it or find tax shelters with ease.

  • @ghostrider51500
    @ghostrider51500 Год назад +11

    It’s called “gentrification”. It’s happening all over Idaho, Wyoming and Montana.

  • @MD-sg4oc
    @MD-sg4oc Год назад +98

    First time in Jackson Hole was over 10 years ago I went again about 2 years ago and man has it changed drastically. Way more upscale dining and stores compared to the old western feel of the past. Such a shame the elites did this and the state allows it.

    • @WanderingExistence
      @WanderingExistence Год назад +17

      Lol, this is just capitalism.... yet, people hate and then say "well it's the best system we got". We need a new economic system.

    • @mtns340
      @mtns340 Год назад +29

      @@WanderingExistence Capitalism can work a lot better if there's more checks & balances, & closing of loopholes. Right now it's more an oligarchy than a capitalist society.

    • @WanderingExistence
      @WanderingExistence Год назад

      @@mtns340 Don't you realize that capitalist create oligarchies... When the main motivation of the economy is to make as much profit as possible corporations will lobby the government to create laws in their favor. Capitalism creates a system where a few people are able to control capital, that is oligarchic and plutocratic. Capitalism can't be tamed it is inherently misguided.
      Wage labor is renting yourself via "self ownership". Employment is literally renting another human being as if they're property. The employer-employee relationship is a very insidious dynamic. Employment is a rental contract, like if you rented capital (say, a chainsaw from Home Depot), you pay rent for the "time preference" (basically the cost of time) for a piece of property. Capitalism is based on a principle of self ownership, which sounds empowering, until you realize that most people don't own enough capital goods to make enough income other than themselves, and must rent out the authority over themselves as pieces of "human capital". This is a process of dehumanization where human beings are valued for their return on investment as capital goods. This is why, at the very least, capitalism needs unions and safety nets (or abolishment), or else the system won't value people for their human value. Importantly we must also think about our sick, elderly, and disabled people, as they can't provide competitive economic return for the investor class to value. We must figure out a way to change this economic system if we wish to value each other.

    • @v7poistblaznei
      @v7poistblaznei Год назад +5

      Last time I went was 10 years ago.......It had changed drastically since the late 70's............Looks like it's changing again.

    • @RobertMJohnson
      @RobertMJohnson Год назад +5

      @@WanderingExistencegrow up

  • @61futura
    @61futura Год назад +47

    I visited in the early 80s when it wasn't much more than a regular tourist town. Part of the problem now is that they built a commercial airport because they apparently wanted the growth. If someone rich had to pack up the station wagon and drive three days to get there, there wouldn't be near the problem there is now. Same thing for Telluride.

    • @Resistculturaldecline
      @Resistculturaldecline Год назад +16

      Ease, convenience, and accessibility ruin things. This I've learned in my life.

    • @cletusvandamme6262
      @cletusvandamme6262 5 месяцев назад

      Um, the Jackson airport was built before WWII.

  • @cesarguzman2626
    @cesarguzman2626 Год назад +15

    This is happening all over America, not only in Wyoming. A few own all the homes and they rent them to the millions of poor people very expensive.

  • @younghan3573
    @younghan3573 Год назад +64

    One thing I've learned is that rich people do not listen because they have so much money, they think they know better

  • @geraldking4080
    @geraldking4080 Год назад +230

    "No amount of charity in the spending of such fortunes can in any way compensate for the manner in which they were acquired."
    - Theodore Roosevelt

    • @carynmartin6053
      @carynmartin6053 Год назад +6

      🎉perfectly appropriate saying!🎉

    • @BlueAgaveStudios
      @BlueAgaveStudios Год назад +3

      Yeah, but he was another New York millionaire. A little easier to talk.

    • @starlite556
      @starlite556 Год назад

      He knew that fortunes are acquired be selling your soul to satan. That is why the HOLY BIBLE, says that a rich man has about as much chance of going to heaven as a camel going through the eye of a needle.

    • @howard5992
      @howard5992 Год назад +10

      @@BlueAgaveStudios - Well he wasn't criticizing people for being rich. He was discussing the fact that some wealth is made at the expense of others.
      It seems if the rich criticize the rich it is taken for hypocrisy and if the non-rich criticize the rich it is taken for jealously.

    • @jtg1465
      @jtg1465 Год назад

      💯👍🔥🔥🔥

  • @steveb6761
    @steveb6761 Год назад +22

    Figured out a long time ago that you have to live where most people don't want to if you want affordability. You can't live in one of the most beautiful places on earth and expect it to be affordable- it just doesn't work that way. Because rich people want to live there too and they're pretty damn hard to compete against. Sad but true. I avoid places with growth and people moving in and instead seek places where people are leaving. Where I live might not be Jackson Hole but I don't have to watch everything around me getting destroyed by growth either. I've lived in high growth areas in the past and the only thing I've ever seen growth do is diminish one's overall quality of life in pretty much every way imaginable. Staying in places like this and waiting for a solution is a fool's errand. The people profiting off of it are the same people making the rules and they definitely aren't interested in changing anything.

  • @juliethompson8685
    @juliethompson8685 Год назад +127

    My condolences, Wyoming. People are coming.

    • @mattt4374
      @mattt4374 Год назад

      why? they voted for this. They keep politicians in office who cater ONLY to the wealthy.

    • @dpeatebc7265
      @dpeatebc7265 Год назад +1

      She said, with a touch of misanthropy. 😉

    • @matildagreene1744
      @matildagreene1744 Год назад +6

      Good luck..LOL...They're not welcome.

    • @juliethompson8685
      @juliethompson8685 Год назад +1

      @@dpeatebc7265 Perhaps.

    • @EndIsAtHand
      @EndIsAtHand Год назад +4

      My condolences Native Americans, the Europeans have arrived.

  • @Cucumberflavoredmustard
    @Cucumberflavoredmustard Год назад +5

    This just in: living in cool, trendy places costs more money. The purple-haired barista acts like she didn't know this before she hopped in her car to move out there. There are plenty of towns in this country that are cheap. Move to one, make a home, and leave Jackson to it's inevitable implosion.

  • @johnnieboy3458
    @johnnieboy3458 Год назад +8

    That would be funny as hell if all the employees move to Idaho Falls an affordable town over the mountain pass and nobody staffs the town

  • @elslick
    @elslick Год назад +119

    Born and raised in wyoming. Sad to see the way this great state is going.

    • @Orville9999
      @Orville9999 Год назад +18

      could say the same thing about idaho. everyone on the west coast is moving east and property isn't getting built fast enough.

    • @elslick
      @elslick Год назад +24

      @Orville9999 yeah and they are both getting urbanized. Some of the most beautiful land in the US is thru the Dakota Wyoming Idaho region and its getting all kinds of wrecked.

    • @The_Quaalude
      @The_Quaalude Год назад +3

      Get ya money up 🤡

    • @johnnynephrite6147
      @johnnynephrite6147 Год назад +10

      Dude the state of Wyoming has NEVER BEEN GOING ANYWHERE! Highest suicide rate in the country. Near the bottom in education, industry development, poverty, and NUMBER ONE in suicide. Hello. At some point ANY change is Good change.

    • @tranger4579
      @tranger4579 Год назад +3

      Same thing is happening in Texas. I live in a small town in south Texas and the rush if people hitting the coast is raining the price slowly on everything especially property taxes.

  • @christophercaprio4983
    @christophercaprio4983 Год назад +18

    "I donate to local Non Profits"- (I get a huge Tax deduction!).

    • @nextari
      @nextari Год назад

      What is your point? It's still a net loss when you give money away. Yes, you don't pay taxes on it, so what? He's still get to keep half of the amount instead of giving it away, so why complain?

    • @928pcar
      @928pcar Год назад

      Don't hate the player, hate the game

  • @paule8536
    @paule8536 2 месяца назад +3

    Why would someone choose to move to a city you can’t afford to live in? That’s insanity to me !

    • @George_panagiotis
      @George_panagiotis 2 месяца назад +2

      Exactly! It's like sitting down at a five-star restaurant, eating your meal, then screaming "How will I pay for this!" when the check comes.
      Can't afford to live in Jackson? Um, neither can 99.999999% of the population. That's why we live in Topeka, Omaha, or some other boring, ugly city. Don't move to the most expensive place on earth and complain about housing prices. Clearly, the view and the atmosphere is a worthy tradeoff for this woman since she's been there for six years.

  • @wyomingrealestate
    @wyomingrealestate Год назад +12

    In Wyoming, we do not consider Jackson part of Wyoming. We consider it an extension of California.

  • @brooklynnchick
    @brooklynnchick Год назад +69

    The entire state is like this. Sheridan, Caspar, Powell, and Laramie are out of reach for all of us who were born here.

    • @robbrown4621
      @robbrown4621 Год назад +3

      Would you consider a law making it illegal to sell any acre of land for more than $10,000? And would you support the idea of no home being worth more than $300,000 no matter its size or style?

    • @LilyGazou
      @LilyGazou Год назад +3

      Pool resources. Buy a big chunk of land. I’ll join and contribute.

    • @robbrown4621
      @robbrown4621 Год назад +1

      Perhaps 20% of all high end real estate taxes must go to building moderate cost housing. Is this an idea that you would endorse? :) @@LilyGazou

    • @PelosiStockPortfolio
      @PelosiStockPortfolio Год назад +5

      Isn't it great seeing free market capitalism in action?

    • @ElSantoLuchador
      @ElSantoLuchador Год назад +1

      I was born in Seattle so I've already been there and I've already done that when Californians migrated in droves for the tech money. Now they're all leaving. For Wyoming I guess. Sorry, not sorry.

  • @cheesemaster113
    @cheesemaster113 Год назад +4

    Could they seriously not find someone who was born there to be in the interview ?

  • @Pou1gie1
    @Pou1gie1 Год назад +32

    Elizabeth Hutchings seems very kind. They would be losing a great, empathetic neighbor if she left.

  • @GaryWinstonBrown
    @GaryWinstonBrown Год назад +298

    High prices for everything have severely affected my plan. I'm concerned if people who went through the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am having now. The stock market is worrying me as my income has decreased, and I fear I won't have enough savings for retirement since I can't contribute as much as before.

    • @allympili3437
      @allympili3437 Год назад +1

      It's recommended to save at least 20% of your income in a 401k. You can use online calculators to estimate how much you should save based on your age and income. Saving at least 20% of your income in a 401(k) can help ensure that you have enough money to retire comfortably. By saving this much, you can take advantage of investing in the stock market and potentially grow your retirement savings over time.

    • @Bradleyschaeffer376
      @Bradleyschaeffer376 Год назад

      Considering the increased complexity since the 2008 crash and COVID, I suggest diversifying your financial portfolio. I hired an advisor and successfully grew my portfolio by over $150K during this turbulent market using defensive strategies that protect and profit from market fluctuations.

    • @GaryWinstonBrown
      @GaryWinstonBrown Год назад

      My partner's been considering going the same route, could you share more info please on the advisor that guides you?

    • @Bradleyschaeffer376
      @Bradleyschaeffer376 Год назад

      The advisor I use is
      Gregory Thomas Patchak, can't divulge much here. He's well established and has attained quite a great deal of expertise, you'd most likely find his details on the internet.

    • @GaryWinstonBrown
      @GaryWinstonBrown Год назад

      I've come across a lot of recommendations but this one stands out. Greg's resume is pretty sophisticated according to my web search, and shows he was active during the last bear market, I also emailed him. Thanks for the info!

  • @umsami
    @umsami Год назад +27

    We need to limit how many homes one person/LLC/company can own. You should also have to occupy a home a certain number of months. We have a housing crisis and the backbone of this nation can't afford to live in it anymore. Homes where I live in FL have gone up $200k since Covid started. My home cost $200k when I bought it 20 years ago. Rents are $2500/month on a crappy 1-2 bedroom apartment. Much more than the mortgage I had, with nothing to show. I fear for my kids.

    • @RealLifeFinance
      @RealLifeFinance Год назад

      I agree, it needs to be addressed. The wealthy now own 2-5 houses and can only reside in one. The housing stock is in short supply because it's not being used for families. Something like 20 million homes are vacant at any one time in USA. Insanity

    • @deva190
      @deva190 Год назад +1

      That's going too far and will never be upheld by the courts, however.

    • @melamineflorentine8134
      @melamineflorentine8134 Год назад

      @@xlgnepo "free market" not "free for all market"... if the incentives and pressures overwhelm sensible motivations that can disrupt and damage a market. Every market has rules and must be regulated or it invites fraud.

    • @porcian4306
      @porcian4306 Год назад

      Then you become communist like Canada . Not good either .

  • @michellebowers8652
    @michellebowers8652 Год назад +34

    Didn’t this same thing happen in Aspen 30 years ago?

    • @johngoldsworthy7135
      @johngoldsworthy7135 Год назад +3

      Exactly. Same story, different time and place.

    • @rr7firefly
      @rr7firefly Год назад +4

      yep. Aspen used to be a kooky place with beautifully designed public features. I remember seeing SAAB police cars that were painted very smartly. Now it is about rich people showing off.

    • @x-raycat323
      @x-raycat323 Год назад +4

      Yes the billionaire's bought out the millionaires

    • @x-raycat323
      @x-raycat323 Год назад +2

      Also look what's happened to Nantucket 🌈🌈🌈🔥🌈🔥🎊

  • @caracoates4834
    @caracoates4834 Год назад +50

    They should have interviewed their local government. What have they done or going to do to preserve their way of life? They are responsible for affordable housing or at least limiting outside investment.

    • @christiananderson478
      @christiananderson478 Год назад

      It's a nice idea, but when the wealthy are or own the government, as I suspect is the case here, your options diminish rapidly. The wealthy don't care until it inconveniences them.

    • @philshifley574
      @philshifley574 Год назад +2

      They do have a large area in town of "affordable housing" where a lot of the service industry workers end up living

    • @beckykazeks6827
      @beckykazeks6827 Год назад

      What do governments ever do?? Shelter the rich.

    • @ww2remembered983
      @ww2remembered983 Год назад +7

      The real estate industry is unregulated, so they can do whatever they want....

    • @LateNightCable
      @LateNightCable Год назад +6

      @@philshifley574I live in Key West - which has similar challenges regarding affordable housing, namely for those in the service industries. So to cut some slack, they bulldoze the trailer courts, and put up apartment communities which more or less act as a facsimile of what someone thinks working class people today strive for. Which apparently is small apartment, and a patio to park a few chairs. But to leave rental slavery and own a home, someone in the family better have a real job.

  • @stephenfazekas5054
    @stephenfazekas5054 Год назад +2

    50% property tax on non-primary residences would fix this

  • @osimeon00
    @osimeon00 Год назад +31

    The worst sin is those hideous modern boxes they call homes being built among historical buildings and residences. They don't match the landscape!

  • @JesusChrist2000BC
    @JesusChrist2000BC Год назад +27

    I live in Middle TN and the same thing is happening. Half of the celebs or influencers moved here over the past 5 years. Companies too.

    • @davidkirkpatrick712
      @davidkirkpatrick712 Год назад +3

      Franklin home prices are outrageous

    • @alicyasimmons5000
      @alicyasimmons5000 Год назад +3

      The amount of celebs who moved there is insane

    • @blokcomNativeFaces
      @blokcomNativeFaces Год назад

      Progressives are going to change Wyoming and they are already doing in TN. It's called Californification.

    • @RealLifeFinance
      @RealLifeFinance Год назад

      I almost bought a nice house in Brentwood on 2acres in 2018 for $450k. I've heard they are over a million now.

    • @vincentvilay1407
      @vincentvilay1407 Год назад +2

      Indeed. The house I grew up in costs over 4 times what it did when my uncle sold the place in 2011. I love Middle TN, but I hate the direction it's going in and with the way it's going, owning property is increasingly going to become more and more unobtainable for people my age or younger.

  • @PBosco
    @PBosco Год назад +45

    I live in rural Vermont and the same thing is present here. Alec Baldwin recently moved up the road from me. It's haves and have-nots. It's always been like this in Vermont. What blows my mind is you can go a few miles from a wealthy area to a poor one and life is so different. There are a lot of trailer parks off the main roads that don't show up in travel brochures. There is a huge drug problem in those communities. What is most maddening is the hypocrisy of the wealthy who consume so much and pretend to have compassion.

    • @desktopfan8870
      @desktopfan8870 Год назад +3

      I live in Bennington County too, and I know exactly what you're talking about. I'm fortunate enough to live in an affluent area but I hear a lot about the unfortunate circumstances of others who live in the area just 10 minutes away from me.

    • @Actias1974
      @Actias1974 Год назад +1

      I live in lamoille county. So….. try living in the Stowe area on a typical income. Sigh. I wish they would return to their cities.

    • @showwhite7320
      @showwhite7320 Год назад

      Well, it's the fault of millions of Americans who constantly vote for Republicans. At least, Democrat millionaires pretend to share. Republican millionaires don't even hide their greediness.

    • @Uncletoast52
      @Uncletoast52 Год назад

      Like on Maui !?

    • @Jmith-su3ze
      @Jmith-su3ze Год назад

      Why are you saying the problem is productive people who have made money by contributing something to society are the problem and not the lazy degenerates sitting around in trailer taking drugs?
      I agree with you though that any compassion the wealthy show is fake

  • @verseau8360
    @verseau8360 Год назад +7

    Nearby Yellowstone is a huge volcanic caldera folks. You couldn’t pay me to live there.

  • @Me97202
    @Me97202 Год назад +24

    All of the best places get hyped, exploited, made unaffordable and then used up.

    • @ww2remembered983
      @ww2remembered983 Год назад +1

      Do you think that is a coincidence, or a worldwide scam and rip off?

    • @keenansmith1021
      @keenansmith1021 Год назад +2

      Reason I can't get back to Montana

  • @ESPLTD322
    @ESPLTD322 Год назад +21

    People in many states have got to quit letting people from different regions build everything up and then abandon it. The obsession with destroying nature for profit disgusts me.

  • @pmstff700
    @pmstff700 Год назад +11

    Those very wealthy won’t find it to livable when they can’t hire a plumber, electrician, house keeper. golf course attendants and the restaurants go away or are a pain because there are not enough severs. Same thing happening in Havasu AZ. The workers can’t afford to live there and are leaving.

    • @MTknitter22
      @MTknitter22 Год назад +1

      Won’t happen. Congress services the rich by allowing plenty of European work visas to work cheap in those jobs.

  • @juju-xx5xn
    @juju-xx5xn Год назад +47

    This is happening in MANY places across the country, not just Jackson Hole. If the rich cannot help to support the workers in these towns and cities, it will all collapse in the very near future. The rich won't be able to eat at their favorite restaurant, go to their fitness club, go to the golf course, etc. The workers are the ones who keep everything going in these towns and cities. No workers, you have nothing. It is in the best interests of the rich to help support the workers. They are able to write off whatever they would spend to help the workers. Help the workers.

    • @dianehess5520
      @dianehess5520 Год назад +6

      These workers are already moving farther and farther away. I live in CA, it’s only going to get worse, the middle class shrinks every year.

    • @matildagreene1744
      @matildagreene1744 Год назад

      In the closest resort town to me, they have come up with a temporary fix to the last few years of price hikes. The restaurant owners that have the means have purchased housing for their employees and keep the rent reasonable. Seems to work pretty well.

    • @gregorystinette8271
      @gregorystinette8271 Год назад +4

      All them " rich peepol " should open up a space in their home & rent to lower income workers. Shalom

    • @matildagreene1744
      @matildagreene1744 Год назад

      It's a joke. Always looking for more at the end of their 'big noses'. Chao 😁@@gregorystinette8271

    • @gforcedod
      @gforcedod Год назад

      Unfortunately, the survival of restaurants will rely on the employment of foreign individuals with work visas and minimum wage contracts. This may lead to the emergence of a new aristocracy. The beginning of this phenomenon is evident, and we may witness a war reminiscent of the late Renaissance in Western Europe. However, it is worth noting that people today are generally less educated compared to their counterparts from that era.

  • @auntiegemini
    @auntiegemini Год назад +51

    Its happening even in small rural towns in the south. Retirees from large cities moving in, buying large tracks of land, jacking up the price of land and building massive houses. Its pricing the younger generation and regular working people out of home ownership. It may be cheaper for them but it makes it much more difficult for those that have lived there for generations.

    • @TK-gd9td
      @TK-gd9td Год назад +3

      supply and demand my friend. unless you want state controlled communism that can override free market actors. rural people hate communism, right?

    • @johnmcbride364
      @johnmcbride364 Год назад +10

      @@TK-gd9td We don't have a free market in this country, my friend, only the pale illusion of one. Eliminate the Federal Reserve and let this economy FINALLY become a free market.

    • @jeffk464
      @jeffk464 Год назад +3

      It already happened in big cities. The only way young people can afford to buy a house is if they're high end professionals, doctors, successful lawyers, etc. Whats really going to make you mad is they're not going to want to live through a Wyoming winter, so you'll find this is just a summer home.
      PS Wyoming is also a huge tax shelter, if they can claim Wyoming is their state of residence they save a fortune on taxes.

    • @mav8332
      @mav8332 Год назад

      @@TK-gd9td Right, because the only alternative to unchecked capitalism is full blown communism? Snap back to reality and just entertain the idea that a system in which e-celebrities make more money selling farts in jars might not be the most equitable economic system if left running rampant as it is for these folks.

    • @dvach6352
      @dvach6352 Год назад

      Good. Young people do not need housing. They need to work on their careers. I have 4 Homes that I rent out. Most people prefer to rent than to own. This is a fulltime job for me

  • @paulgreen2303
    @paulgreen2303 Год назад +70

    We moved to Jackson in 2000. Bought a very nice brand new home in a neighborhood 3 mi south of town. In 2005 we sold it for a couple hundred grand more than we paid for it and moved back to Texas. I keep track of the home and it's sold twice in the past 15 years. The last time it sold for 400% more than I paid for that same house. No major changes or improvements. It sits on 1/4 acre of land. It's a very nice $400,000 house anywhere else in the country. But certainly not a $2.5 million dollar home anywhere but Teton County.

    • @komoru
      @komoru Год назад +5

      ....or in Orange County by the beach in an area like Laguna Beach or Newport Beach.

    • @Osnosis
      @Osnosis Год назад +3

      We encourage people to move to Florida or Texas. Be free!

    • @Google123ABC
      @Google123ABC Год назад +9

      @@OsnosisNo we do not. Same thing is happening here in Texas. Let me rephrase that. Has BEEN happening. All around the Houston area everything has gone up.

    • @videograss
      @videograss Год назад +1

      Sounds like you lived in Rafter j-! I was there for almost 3 years-- my landlord's house went from $ 200 k to $1.8-$2 million+ since 1987 when she and her ex-husband bought it...
      And honestly it's one of the least attractive houses in the neighborhood and barely 1400 sqare feet....

    • @melamineflorentine8134
      @melamineflorentine8134 Год назад +2

      @@Osnosis I think the Florida & Texas miracles occurring there do have a limited shelf life. Fresh water doesn't grow on trees and a no tax limited government model works best when LESS than 30 million people crowd into your state. Plenty of derelict and abandoned cities that if groups of people moved there could be reclaimed like Wheeling, WV.

  • @christineb5232
    @christineb5232 Год назад +3

    My husband loved Wyoming he would be devastating to see it now

  • @gnick66
    @gnick66 Год назад +76

    This is what's happening in Idaho, too. Rich Californians are buying up all the land around lakes. Some lakes can't even be visited except in one little designated area that also double as a boat ramp.

    • @swilliams1759
      @swilliams1759 Год назад +2

      Guess they don't care about groundwater contamination from all the fracking in Wyoming.

    • @realtalk5329
      @realtalk5329 Год назад +4

      Don't forget about texas

    • @dk-qr5xt
      @dk-qr5xt Год назад +5

      @@banhammer3904I'm sure they'll be a getting a great 'return on investment' 🙄. As a former Texan, I've come to borderline despise my former people for how little they care for anyone but themselves when they come flooding here out west. Should be shunned to the same degree as Californians in my opinion, along with anyone else with such a blatant lack of respect for these places too for that matter.

    • @lour9348
      @lour9348 Год назад +15

      It is not all Californians who are moving in, or have. That is getting old to hear. In JH's case, they are coming in from around the globe.

    • @christianbritton1362
      @christianbritton1362 Год назад +1

      Yep. I say that all the time

  • @CooperMV
    @CooperMV Год назад +100

    Something similar happened in Vermont, during Covid all the wealthy people that had a 2nd home here became full time residents and invited their friends. Modest, even run down, properties were ridiculously overpriced, however prices are slowly coming down. A couple Vermont winters and the Flatlanders will be running back to where they came from…

    • @Flyfishtherockies
      @Flyfishtherockies Год назад +8

      Vermont winters send the weak packing

    • @Ispike73
      @Ispike73 Год назад +9

      Same here across the lake in the Adirondacks. They are like locust and have left the towns with no affordable housing available. There isn't even any apartments available.

    • @desmo8755
      @desmo8755 Год назад +10

      Would like to believe that, but many are more than able to move to a southern home for the winter and leave the northern house either vacant or rented when they're away.

    • @MTknitter22
      @MTknitter22 Год назад +1

      But lots of NYers are going to stay because urban E coast cities ruined by democrats

    • @spiritcreek9813
      @spiritcreek9813 Год назад +2

      Jackson winters are very long, with temps reaching down to -20 or more. It’s ok, been there frequently around Christmas. Kind of isolated. The closest “city” with specialized health care and large airport is Salt Lake. About 5 hours away.

  • @delavalmilker
    @delavalmilker Год назад +154

    Back in 1968 when I was 13, my family visited Yellowstone on a driving vacation. Back then as a Nebraska farm kid this was a BIG journey for me. I remember how Yellowstone was crowded with tourists. Then, when we drove back, we drove through Teton National park. It was so peaceful and especially beautiful. Hardly anyone around. I can still remember it to this day. Now I see videos like this, and I'm heartbroken.

    • @netherman1325
      @netherman1325 Год назад +10

      It is truly a shame, I live in Colorado, I haven't actually seen the place go from quiet town to suburban sprawl, but I am witnessing the aftermath and the suburbanization of everything good in Colorado. I wish people would stop moving here and I wish the local government would come to their senses and realize that the grasslands are beautiful and 2 million dollar suburban duplexes aren't good for Colorado.

    • @HomelessOnline
      @HomelessOnline Год назад +2

      What was the population of America back in 1968? Living in Montana in 1968 was probably very difficult with much fewer people living there.

    • @larsonfamilyhouse
      @larsonfamilyhouse Год назад +7

      Lol it was perfectly fine and regular. Better than today. Affordable with similar people minus all the super rich ones. Montana has always had rich ranchers but these other people moving here for fun is what’s ruining the beauty of the mountains in small towns. It’s also making everything else unaffordable @@HomelessOnline

    • @showwhite7320
      @showwhite7320 Год назад

      @@netherman1325 Just playing devil's advocate. Why are 2-million-dollar suburban duplexes bad for Colorado? Why is suburbanization bad? Why is wildlife necessarily good? What about progress? Why are grasslands necessarily prettier than soaring skyscrapers? I think it's dangerous to blindly believing in keeping things the same. That's how traditionalists like the Taliban think.

    • @netherman1325
      @netherman1325 Год назад

      ​@@showwhite7320 Two million dollar suburban duplexes aren't necessarily bad for Colorado's economy, but they are bad for the people who want to live there, or in my case, stay there. The existence of those places help drive out the middle class, and force hard working individuals into shacks that still manage to cost 500k. (Referencing 98 Alcott Street, Denver which took me less than 5 seconds to find listed on zillow.) As for why suburbanization is bad, it spreads everything out, and on purpose too. For instance, if you look at a place like Paris, its about the same size as Denver, but while Paris has a population of 2 million, Denver has a population of around 700k. The reason for that is while paris has Urbanized, Denver has Suburbanized. Paris focused on multi story apartments rather than single family homes. With the whole of Colorado, A majority of the state lies in the Grasslands, but due to agriculture and Suburbanization only about 1% of the plains exists. It is one of the least protected bits of nature on earth, and some of the last holdouts of the great plains exists in colorado, where suburbia is being built over it. The thing with the skyscrapers vs grasslands is, most of our skyscrapers arent even pretty to begin with. There was no attention to detail when creating the cash register building, and while it may be an interesting sight to see, the open expanse of the grasslands is prettier, and 100x more relaxing.

  • @Clintsessentials
    @Clintsessentials Год назад +12

    This should NEVER have been allowed...greed!!!

  • @scotsoaring5373
    @scotsoaring5373 Год назад +16

    35 years ago we would travel to Jackson Hole in the winter because it was one of the cheaper areas to go skiing at. Motels were cheap and restaurants reasonable. It is a shame it has changed. We really liked it there. The people were great.

    • @gadfanad
      @gadfanad Год назад +2

      Crazy to imagine that. We visited in 2013, and I checked out home prices. At the time, I couldn't believe that the condos were going for $700k. Should have bought one! :)

  • @a.trevino30
    @a.trevino30 Год назад +6

    This is happening all over the United States we are only seeing the beginning.

    • @myinfo11
      @myinfo11 Год назад

      😭😭😭🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

    • @eathecommie
      @eathecommie Месяц назад

      We need to limit out of state growth. These sudden population booms are harmful.

  • @LairAstro
    @LairAstro Год назад +14

    I live here, it's true that the people who live here don't know how much longer they can hold on before being forced to move away. Rent can double in a year without notice and there's nothing you can do about it because there's always someone with more money than they know what to do with moving in.

  • @gregparrott
    @gregparrott Год назад +237

    I passed through Jackson Hole last Summer. I say 'passed through' because with all the tourism, there was absolutely no place to park. There were standing lines outside of all the restaurants. Stores had tourist trinkets on sidewalk display stands, crowded streets, etc. The mountains and scenery are stunning. But as for the town, I wouldn't touch it. The tourist centric downtown, the town homes with closely coiffed lawns and even more pricey homes are surreal. It more contrasts than compliments the wild nature of the Tetons. Within town, I'd feel like I had been stuck in an artificial land, such as Disneyland, or what's created for a miniature golf course.

    • @DonB.-Mulefivefive
      @DonB.-Mulefivefive Год назад +9

      In my minds eye, I can see this wide horizon of events and goings on occurring as we speak.
      Having been in this very area som 25 years ago, it's only gotten considerably worse as time goes on.
      If you happen to be a seasonal worker within the National Park Service and are looking for some place to park your head every night within reasonable outgo of meager income, the best bet was, the campground itself. There is just no way any noraml average person can or could or will ever be able to afford to live in side of the limits of the town.
      I say town on purpose. It's just two steps away from becoming the next big city in Wyoming.
      That's a sad state of affairs fr all concerned but, of course the rich and well to do.
      Their above all this. (sic).

    • @vanrozay8871
      @vanrozay8871 Год назад +4

      well put.

    • @vanrozay8871
      @vanrozay8871 Год назад +5

      another reply: my motto might agree with you... get a life, not a lifestyle.

    • @gregparrott
      @gregparrott Год назад +4

      @@DonB.-MulefivefiveActually, a seasonal worker working within the park service may actually have spartan accommodations as one of the perks. But if one works in the commercial space of the town, you're right about accommodations. I spoke with someone in a town (Alpine?) 40 or 50 miles out. They used to commute to Jackson. That could get REALLY dicey in Winter. At least for him, there was a bright side. When Covid struck, the real estate went nuts with everyone wanting to get out of cities. His property value jumped about 60%, primarily because it was affordable (but still not cheap) and close to Jackson Hole.

    • @DonB.-Mulefivefive
      @DonB.-Mulefivefive Год назад +1

      @@gregparrott Sure for some NPS seasonals but not all.
      Worked that area. Grew to hate it.
      Good luck.

  • @AhJodie
    @AhJodie Год назад +3

    Funny thing is that sometimes I want to cry when I think of how all of North America used to be for the people living with the land, now covered with filth and garbage and thousands of corrupt greedy people and alcoholics/drug addicts. All over the world it is the same..... one day it will return to nature..... and the places will be beautiful again.

  • @tylerbarnhoornproductions7506
    @tylerbarnhoornproductions7506 Год назад +20

    I feel like it’s getting expensive everywhere at this point.

    • @kagnewcobra5228
      @kagnewcobra5228 Год назад

      No doubt!

    • @tru3sk1ll
      @tru3sk1ll Год назад

      You're not wrong, what do you expect when you open borders and let migrants flow through, immigration rates are double the birth/death rate, and in some cities its 400% immigration growth

    • @ediewall6360
      @ediewall6360 Год назад

      You are correct. The White Hats and Earth Alliance and BRICS nations are doing their part to turn this around. The financial part is complete and read. Research NESARA.

  • @chris2884
    @chris2884 Год назад +6

    I wanna go to one the most beautiful places on earth and then complain that I can’t afford it.

  • @uwillnevahno6837
    @uwillnevahno6837 Год назад +2

    5:00 I'm wealthy it's important that I listen to the discussion about wealth inequality but take no action to address it.
    This guy literally embodies the problem.

    • @vesta8481
      @vesta8481 Год назад

      Arrogant progs always pretend to listen, but the problems they're exacerbating in these communities is exactly what they mean to do.

  • @BZB33
    @BZB33 Год назад +36

    "He's planning to donate a third of his tax savings.. " Great, so not even all his loose change, just the small coins. What a guy.

    • @dawnbonome9056
      @dawnbonome9056 Год назад

      He sounds like Oprah and the Rock. This is what happened in Maui!😡

  • @zhinan888
    @zhinan888 Год назад +63

    Same thing is true all over the world

    • @ww2remembered983
      @ww2remembered983 Год назад

      Yep, international real estate investment firms are screwing everyone, besides themselves.

    • @ghostfarts_
      @ghostfarts_ Год назад +1

      fr

    • @mysterioanonymous3206
      @mysterioanonymous3206 Год назад +5

      Depends. I live in Switzerland and we have rent control and tenant friendly laws and while housing is still expensive-ish (mainly due to scarce land Ressources and very strict building code and requirements), you can live pretty decently with a normal job. No, not down town in the cities or a ski town and you'll probably live in an apartment and not a house, but you'll be fine. I think this whole free market and pull yourself up by your bootstraps stuff over in the US is not making it better. Large wealth discrepancies are poison for the social fabric, I think here where I am the disparity for the broad majority of residents seems much smaller. Our wage gaps are clearly much narrower and you see it reflected in crime, education, and other metrics. I also pay very low tax here btw. so that's not it.

    • @zhinan888
      @zhinan888 Год назад

      @mysterioanonymous3206 I know it is very true in big Chinese cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Hong Kong. The housing price is far far out of reach of the common working class. This is the necessary effect of global capitalism. I think Northern Europe is more egalitarian and may be an exception to the rule.

    • @mysterioanonymous3206
      @mysterioanonymous3206 Год назад +2

      @@zhinan888 Switzerland has amongst the lowest homeownership rates in the developed world, but sure, China/HK is overheated (Beijing being the priciest market in the world at around 50x average annual income if I recall correctly), BUT... there's also a cultural proclivity towards home ownership in East Asia and industry knows that.
      Pricing works primarily via market studies where you establish the maximum amount your customer can pay for the optimal amount of product turnover, and then you mark prices up to that. It has nearly zero correlation with the cost of building/making the product - its called manufacturing to price. So we're stupid for paying up, because someone can and does.

  • @johnswick4593
    @johnswick4593 Год назад +36

    I'm amazed that this is even news. This is happening all across America. Seattle, Portland, San Diego, San Francisco, etc...

    • @manager4409
      @manager4409 Год назад

      Almost as if taking in millions of immigrants every year is bad for americans

    • @FreeDumb101
      @FreeDumb101 Год назад +2

      Teton County is worse than most places.

    • @paulhunter9613
      @paulhunter9613 Год назад +3

      What are you talking about? All those city’s you named off are city’s people are running FROM

    • @wildcatgrljulie63
      @wildcatgrljulie63 Год назад

      It's happening in Indiana too.
      😢

  • @DebsFan101
    @DebsFan101 Год назад +11

    Thanks to growing income inequality, this is a problem that will only get worse.
    A town can’t only house billionaires and still be a town worth living in.

  • @ddellwo
    @ddellwo Год назад +49

    I weep for you, Wyoming - Californian’s don’t relocate - they metastasize………☹

    • @johnnynephrite6147
      @johnnynephrite6147 Год назад

      No, we MULTIPLY, then spread out elevating the consciousness of the backwards redneck states.

    • @Justmekpc
      @Justmekpc Год назад

      You must be young as it wasn’t Californians that destroyed the state it was everyone from the poor red states that flooded California for all of the jobs starting in the 70s

    • @geargeekpdx3566
      @geargeekpdx3566 Год назад +1

      And yet California feeds more of the world, has more nobel prize winners, is the most visisted by both americans and non-americans than any other US state and has an economy so good it pays for the deficits that ALL red states run that pays for your adult diapers and wifebeaters

    • @geargeekpdx3566
      @geargeekpdx3566 Год назад +2

      awww you seem jealous of Californians. Is it the weather, their tans, the palm trees, awesome skiing, tech industry, hot women, six figure average income?

    • @TS-rd7oy
      @TS-rd7oy Год назад

      Like the New Yorkers infested Florida, especially the Tampa area, and totally ruined it.

  • @faisalyousufosman3752
    @faisalyousufosman3752 7 месяцев назад +1

    I wanted to move to Wyoming because I fell in love with the local culture and thought it would be a simple and peaceful life. Now certain people are adamant on turning it into a cowboy-themed disney ride.

  • @Joe-ij6of
    @Joe-ij6of Год назад +23

    It's one thing for a place like NYC or San Francisco to have high housing costs due to the lack of developable acres per 1,000 residents (most of the cityscape is already developed, locked up due to parking minimums, and there's basically no greenfield development available), but to have that in a municipality with such low population density is basically insane. If the community is unwilling to allow some density, mixed use, mixed income, or missing middle housing, even if only in the center or main st part of town, then that's a signal they're too elitist to want to facilitate blue-collar and essential workers for their town and these people should take their talents and contribute them where they're wanted.

    • @huntstyle
      @huntstyle Год назад +8

      A lot of land around Jackson is federally owned/protected. So they are constrained by that rather than development.

    • @RealLifeFinance
      @RealLifeFinance Год назад +1

      I agree. The blue collar workers should pick a day and all pack up and leave town. Watch them billionaires enjoy their closed town.

    • @ZER0ZER0SE7EN
      @ZER0ZER0SE7EN Год назад +2

      @@huntstyle The Federal gov't (BLM & USFS) should sell nearby land. This would lower the prices of the existing real estate in Jackson Hole.

    • @huntstyle
      @huntstyle Год назад +3

      @@ZER0ZER0SE7EN disagree. Keeping habitat for wildlife is more important. The local government should take measures to reduce costs. For one, they should only allow one to buy property if they're going to live in it full-time.

    • @ZER0ZER0SE7EN
      @ZER0ZER0SE7EN Год назад +1

      @@huntstyle Keeping habitat for wildlife is important. 46.7% of Wyoming is owned by the Federal gov't so converting a few hundred acres for housing won't impact the wildlife.

  • @sbrehabaddict
    @sbrehabaddict Год назад +12

    "Generosity is not a substitute for justice." Anand Giridharadas in Winners Take All

    • @matildagreene1744
      @matildagreene1744 Год назад +2

      Ha...what a joke..LOL. They have money but if you ever get to know super rich people well and spend time around them...they have issues you don't even want to discuss...believe it. Very discontent bunch of people ALWAYS searching for something new, never satisfied. All that $ and can't buy what they really need.

  • @alanl3511
    @alanl3511 Год назад +2

    The purple hair tells me everything that going on in Jackson Wy… it was such a great place 45 years ago.. not sure I would even live there even if I could afford to do it comfortably….

  • @kenhoward3512
    @kenhoward3512 Год назад +22

    Just considering the fast-rising cost of housing nationwide, in most (/all?) of the places generally considered desirable over the last decade, America is becoming unaffordable for millions, especially those forced into homelessness, increasingly, month-after-month. It's a bitter pill for those who grew up here in decades-past. Since ~1980, the wealthy have gotten wildly-richer, while the other 90% struggle.

    • @1000buffalos
      @1000buffalos Год назад

      The greatest transfer of wealth in history occurred in 2020-22 with the COVID fiasco. Small business--once the lifeblood of the nation--was decimated by lockdown mandates. Big Tech--Amazon, FakeBook, Zoom--all rose into the stratosphere, as did the big Corporate players. A mom and pop restaurant was unsafe to eat in, but Denny's was okay. The government spending trashed the value of the dollar, and real assets have jumped in value.

    • @mysterioanonymous3206
      @mysterioanonymous3206 Год назад +1

      Yeah true but then... Everyone and their auntie want to live in either the same 5 cities or the same 20 (tiny) ski towns so there you have it.

    • @ediewall6360
      @ediewall6360 Год назад

      Research NESARA if you really do want answers and info.

  • @NicholasDeLaat
    @NicholasDeLaat Год назад +43

    Millionaires ruined Jackson Hole. Then the billionaires came in and kicked the millionaires out.
    Honestly, the "new residents" of Jackson Hole is a thorn in the paw of the Great State of Wyoming. Beautiful Country taken over by out of staters that have ruined the area.

    • @Clintsessentials
      @Clintsessentials Год назад

      Yep!

    • @wyomingadventures
      @wyomingadventures Год назад

      Exactly 💯

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Год назад

      Do you mean "residents"?

    • @twostop6895
      @twostop6895 Год назад +1

      Wyoming is not great at all or the population would not be 500,000 for that last 30 or 40 years, it's geographically isolated and unlivable

    • @NicholasDeLaat
      @NicholasDeLaat Год назад +3

      @@twostop6895 Apparently you've never lived there.
      And, since when does population equate livability? I find that the more populous a place is, the worse it is to live in. Maybe YOU couldn't live there, but trust me. Many of us have/do, and wouldn't have it any other way. We just wish the others would stay home where they ruined things, instead of moving away from their mess and ruining our home. It's happening now in the Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, and Alaska. Also in Hawaii, northern Michigan, and other place that have always been isolated from the mess of urban American Society.
      You need to be self-reliant, hard working, humble, and a "pull yourself up by your bootstraps" "salt of the earth" kind of fellow to live there. As a result, you tend to be surrounded by overall better people and communities.

  • @robinpowell2712
    @robinpowell2712 Год назад +3

    Another paradise that's ruined by out of staters and rich people. Or, people move there, but don't like the winters, and then...

  • @TheRockkickass
    @TheRockkickass Год назад +5

    There’s a lot of other places to live in Wyoming. No one is forcing people to move there.

  • @Quanic2000
    @Quanic2000 Год назад +8

    Being close to nature while living in a 5 million dollar house 😂

  • @ReeferCheifer13
    @ReeferCheifer13 Год назад +4

    A tiny home on a half acre in mountainous area, with privacy and a job potential within 30 minute drive. Thats my American dream as a 26 year old that works full time framing houses. It’s hard to accumulate the capital to build your own house. Sometimes feels impossible.

    • @waffles4393
      @waffles4393 Год назад +1

      That's everyone's American dream. That's why the prices are so high.

    • @ReeferCheifer13
      @ReeferCheifer13 Год назад

      @@waffles4393 the ever ongoing enigma

  • @kweukuafirim
    @kweukuafirim Год назад +45

    Philanthropy is how the rich avoid taxes and get a kick back

    • @thefix2573
      @thefix2573 Год назад +1

      Supporting things like the Sierra Club that locks up public land in the name of conservatism. These people don't even hunt.

    • @Joe-ij6of
      @Joe-ij6of Год назад

      Exactly... save $100 in taxes, donate $9 to a "charity" and label anyone that calls you out a communist. The reason foodbanks are so busy isn't because food is too expensive, it's because non-rich workers are spending the vast majority of their money on housing. The solution isn't pennies to feed the homeless, it's dollars towards housing construction so supply meets demand.

    • @nathankelly7259
      @nathankelly7259 Год назад +5

      …and give themselves a pat on the back at the same time

  • @pl1532
    @pl1532 Год назад +124

    Jackson and other resort communities around the country share the same issues. They need to address affordable housing first by banning or severely restricting Airbnb, VRBO’s and other short-term rentals, as is happening elsewhere. Then adding surtaxes on the wealthiest homeowners and non-resident homeowners to subsidize affordable housing for the local work force. To prevent generations of locals from having to move out of the homes they were born and been raised in, real estate taxes should be based on the original purchase price not the current estimated value.
    The crux of the problem is local and state lawmakers as well as city planners who disguise themselves as conservatives, while hiding behind campaigns on social issues. In the meantime, they are screwing over the middle class and pushing out the locals once elected.

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Год назад +1

      Easy solution: Every worker in your city is entitled to own some type of housing. Some people don't mind small spaces.@@MM-nh8ez

    • @sonicdewd
      @sonicdewd Год назад +11

      Quote: "..real estate taxes should be based on the original purchase price, not the current estimated value."
      What a great idea. This will stop gentrification from pushing original people out. I see nothing wrong with this at all.

    • @driatrogenesis
      @driatrogenesis Год назад

      @@MM-nh8ez you dont get it
      think covid
      think great reset
      then try to come up with a better statement, you dont get it yet

    • @maddierosemusic
      @maddierosemusic Год назад +1

      How do you figure banning AIRBnB's would help a bartender or other support person? Might actually hurt if it would limit tourism $$. We have the problem throughout the country of expensive housing and those who can't afford it. I couldn't even buy my own house now at its price. All over Social Media people are screaming "Make affordable housing" but the market is moving against them. Maybe the whole thing craps out and those people could jump in at a lower price.

    • @driatrogenesis
      @driatrogenesis Год назад

      @@maddierosemusic Yeah should have already happened, but bankers are rigging markets....last time we bailed them out, even though they caused it

  • @Tlester
    @Tlester Год назад +2

    Most resort towns based on tourism is unaffordable to the average person!

    • @matthew3136
      @matthew3136 9 месяцев назад

      Most resort towns are taken over by tourists that move there and kick the original people out.

  • @adoerofstuff
    @adoerofstuff Год назад +10

    I lived in Jackson for 11 years in one rental place. Then my family and I moved to Victor, Idaho, just 40 mins outside of Jackson, it was the closets place we could buy a property. The Town of Jackson is just too expensive for the workforce.

  • @CarguyEd5150
    @CarguyEd5150 Год назад +55

    Greed eventually destroys everything it touches. Not at first and so noticeable, but at the roots where many can't see it until it's too late and the damage has been done.

    • @leo-wr6do
      @leo-wr6do Год назад +2

      Yes, let's all be communists, it did wonders to Cuba and Venezuela.

    • @pogiboy3571
      @pogiboy3571 Год назад

      Gresham's law in reverse... good money on the move.

    • @BongRipBing
      @BongRipBing Год назад

      If you have the US Real Estate market function on an International level, allowing property to be used as assets instead of limiting it to living so stuff besides housing would be used, what else would the people of the US expect to happen? Why does the US media machine constantly strive to turn everyone who isn't rich against each other? Why does the "welfare queen" stereotype generate so much angst against welfare and its perception as free handouts for fudge rounds?
      NO PROSPECTS FOR ADVANCING OUT OF POVERTY WILL CREATE CRIMINALS & HOMELESSNESS! WAGE STAGNATION CREATES CRIMINALS & HOMELESSNESS! HYPERINFLATION OF COST OF LIVING CREATES CRIMINALS & HOMELESSNESS! GETTING PRICED OUT INTO POVERTY CREATES CRIMINALS & HOMELESSNESS!
      The Shareholder coupled with the Corporation began the elimination of the ease of living that was the norm after WWII, Reagan sounded its Death Knell where the flatlining of the Federal Minimum Wage began along with the ever increasing Cost of Living. Citizens United ensures no meaningful changes to US gov't will happen until it's repealed.

    • @mtns340
      @mtns340 Год назад

      Human greed, at least. Every species has the same instinct to hoard resources, but humans take it to the next level.

  • @theophilhist6455
    @theophilhist6455 Год назад +1

    Glad so many think the old Midwest and deep South have nothing to offer. The gal sounded that she's honest and willing to say "is it worth it?

  • @tigerphid9677
    @tigerphid9677 Год назад +9

    The wealth disparity is just like Aspen, Colorado and other resorts. But guess what? Jackson Hole is extremely liberal, just like Aspen, and most of the rich and super-rich people there are way over on the political left.

    • @LilyGazou
      @LilyGazou Год назад +2

      I hope they get boosters.

    • @barrya.6212
      @barrya.6212 Год назад +1

      BUT BUT I THOUGHT LIBERALS CARED ABOUT THE POOR AND DISPARITY ...THAT'S THEIR LIE THEY KEEP PREACHING....

    • @user-qr8ki8ue4i
      @user-qr8ki8ue4i Год назад

      @@LilyGazou , Hee hee.

  • @maryellencrociata181
    @maryellencrociata181 Год назад +8

    That gentleman who moved there from California would be respected if he contributed to affordable housing

    • @ww2remembered983
      @ww2remembered983 Год назад

      No money in that! If you want affordable housing, change your laws so anyone who develops housing has to include affordable housing along with it.

    • @jaydenp4975
      @jaydenp4975 Год назад +1

      He won’t. Greedy is what they are.

  • @7_of_9
    @7_of_9 Год назад +2

    Corporations are buying up houses creating a rent monopoly!

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Год назад

      And gentrification in rural america and natural disaster via eminent domain.

  • @ptakvm
    @ptakvm Год назад +6

    Jackson needs the "juvenile delinquent flash mob" syndrome much like San Francisco, Oakland, Seattle and all the liberal cities.

  • @rr7firefly
    @rr7firefly Год назад +54

    If all the low-paid underlings left this area there would be no one to service the ultra-rich. They'd be forced to provide all the conveniences that define their lives. Making their own coffee, tending to their own landscaping, plumbing, electrical repairs, car maintenance, etc. The rich are always dependent on poor people.

    • @adamhuffman3354
      @adamhuffman3354 Год назад +5

      Sounds like slavery in a reincarnation type way I guess.

    • @blackmagic63109
      @blackmagic63109 Год назад +13

      The workers can't afford to live and they can't afford to leave either. Same thing here on the West Coast. It's a hamster wheel that just keeps turning.

    • @Grumpollion
      @Grumpollion Год назад +15

      It sounds like the landscapers, plumbers, electricians, and mechanics in the area should just charge more.

    • @chriskelly6559
      @chriskelly6559 Год назад

      This country was physically built on the backs of the poor, tens of thousands died doing so. The rich did not care, then or now.

    • @SasukeUchiha-zu6dw
      @SasukeUchiha-zu6dw Год назад +4

      ​@@Grumpollionyep charge more and pay themselves and employees more

  • @Honestandtruth007
    @Honestandtruth007 Год назад +1

    WOW 😮😮. Mr Ted..... You are still in good Health. I used to watched in the 80 and 90's for World 🌎 News 👍👍

  • @barbarasanders7965
    @barbarasanders7965 Год назад +12

    There goes Wyoming.

  • @davidparker4058
    @davidparker4058 Год назад +10

    same thing is happening in florida. rich retirees flocking to their political bubbles and cosplaying as middle class. this is why ill never be able to afford a home. smh

  • @davidwelty9763
    @davidwelty9763 Год назад +2

    I can’t afford to live in Beverly Hills, not everyone is entitled to live wherever they want. If low income workers can’t afford to live there eventually they will move away. When that happens they will have to offer service workers more money. That is how the market works.

  • @Von45Rose
    @Von45Rose Год назад +8

    The haves and the have nots!
    Once the rich take over that area (and they will), do the rich expect the people making $40 to $50k to just commute in to fill jobs in the service industry?
    I AM SO SICK OF LOCALS BEING PRICED OUT!

    • @5280MTM
      @5280MTM Год назад +3

      It's even simpler. The rich don't care. I'm in a Colorado ski town and locals have been pushed out. Now the 2 neighboring towns are drastically raising rental costs. I saw a 1 bed 1 bath apartment for 1700 no utilities included. In Hayden! 4 years ago it would have been 500 a month. The college can't get enrollment because lack of housing. The ski resort now runs on a skeleton crew. The resort had to run a collaboration with my job to train lift mechanics because they don't have people to run the fancy new gondola. Most my friends have all moved away because having 3 jobs and commuting from a town over isn't worth it. Wages stay stagnant, yet everything keeps getting more expensive. I was forced to move during covid when everyone was selling their old ski homes for WAYYYY more than they were worth.

    • @TheHamburgler123
      @TheHamburgler123 Год назад

      ​@@5280MTMGood ol Steamboat Springs. If only I had bought property there 20 years ago...

  • @shmpooch
    @shmpooch Год назад +6

    Wages need to be based on cost of living. Our system is broken

    • @Grumpollion
      @Grumpollion Год назад +2

      Workers simply need to demand more pay.

  • @steffenrosmus9177
    @steffenrosmus9177 Год назад +2

    Jackson Hole has become a Disney Land during the last 30 years. You nearly find no old " Holers""anymore because they could not afford living.

  • @bepriceless
    @bepriceless Год назад +13

    And what really sucks, these rich people probably aren't paying the same percentage of tax as the poor bartender is.

    • @axetu
      @axetu Год назад +1

      Maybe not the same percentage, but still 100x more

  • @ohhimark2130
    @ohhimark2130 Год назад +10

    People need to discriminate and not sell their homes/land to rich people. If rich people can keep their rich stock of homes, the middle class needs to do that too. Affordable homes are needed, rich developers have proven to not provide this resource, so many the other classes need to do the work to make it happen

  • @Ezekiel336
    @Ezekiel336 Год назад +2

    Moved here a year ago from Lake Geneva Wisconsin. Same thing is happening there. I was debating moving to Northern Wisconsin or here but came here. I LOVE it here but definitely want to live where my money goes farther in a few years.

  • @e.miller8943
    @e.miller8943 Год назад +9

    This is a world wide problem. There are gated and restricted communities in China, Russia, India, etc. as well as the US and always have been. I recall a story where John Denver bulldozed off the side of a mountain in Aspen Colorado built a huge home and then proclaimed there was too much development in the area. Because many people no longer have to be in big cities to work at a good job, it looks like this is a trend.

    • @ediewall6360
      @ediewall6360 Год назад

      Respectfully , you are unaware of what is going on behind the scenes, globally and in the US. Do you understand BRICS? Gold and asset backed currencies. That will happen in the US before too long also. The ground work has been completed. It is called NESARA or GESARA, You can look it up. Cabal / NWO rats need to be rounded up first and that has been happening for a few years. “ The best is yet to come “ is fact, not just a cute saying. Most people have no clue. Ask your conspiracy friends. Most of us have done the research.

    • @RealLifeFinance
      @RealLifeFinance Год назад

      Yup people can keep there $200k a year job and plop down anywhere with good wifi

  • @Hklbrries
    @Hklbrries Год назад +14

    Poor Wyoming.