I mean, if weβre mandated to work for others so they get their government programs, might as well
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π¨3π―2
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The level of Gen X/boomer sh&tposting Iβm witnessing is next-level
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Nancy Pelosi makes $174,000 a year as a congresswoman and is worth an estimated $270 million. Her stock trades consistently outperform Wall Street hedge funds. She says her husband handles all the investments independently. Sure he does
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Japanβs ghost home crisis: nearly 10 million akiya left empty as villages fade away
Japan is confronting one of the most unusual housing crises in the developed world, with an estimated nearly 10 million abandoned homes, known as akiya, scattered across the country as population decline accelerates and rural communities slowly empty out.
The crisis is being driven primarily by Japanβs rapidly aging society and persistently low birth rate, which has fallen to around 1.2 children per woman. As older homeowners pass away, many properties are left without heirs willing or able to maintain them. At the same time, younger generations continue moving toward major urban centers such as Tokyo, Osaka, and Yokohama in search of employment and modern opportunities, leaving behind shrinking rural towns where essential services are increasingly disappearing.
Inheritance and maintenance costs are also contributing to the problem. Many older homes require expensive repairs, while property taxes and cultural reluctance to live in homes associated with death or long vacancy further discourage reuse.
As a result, entire neighbourhoods in some regions now consist of rows of empty, deteriorating houses, with schools and shops shutting down as populations decline.
According to official estimates, around one in every seven homes in Japan is currently vacant, and more than 9 million akiya were recorded in 2023, with projections suggesting the situation could worsen significantly in the coming decades. Some forecasts indicate that by 2038, as many as one in three homes could be empty if demographic trends continue.
In response, local governments across Japan have begun experimenting with aggressive revival policies, including offering abandoned houses for free or for symbolic prices as low as around $700, provided buyers commit to renovating and occupying them. Despite these efforts, reversing decades of demographic decline remains a major challenge.
Analysts warn that unless birth rates stabilize or immigration patterns change significantly, parts of rural Japan risk becoming permanently depopulated, reshaping the countryβs social and economic landscape.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
Japan is confronting one of the most unusual housing crises in the developed world, with an estimated nearly 10 million abandoned homes, known as akiya, scattered across the country as population decline accelerates and rural communities slowly empty out.
The crisis is being driven primarily by Japanβs rapidly aging society and persistently low birth rate, which has fallen to around 1.2 children per woman. As older homeowners pass away, many properties are left without heirs willing or able to maintain them. At the same time, younger generations continue moving toward major urban centers such as Tokyo, Osaka, and Yokohama in search of employment and modern opportunities, leaving behind shrinking rural towns where essential services are increasingly disappearing.
Inheritance and maintenance costs are also contributing to the problem. Many older homes require expensive repairs, while property taxes and cultural reluctance to live in homes associated with death or long vacancy further discourage reuse.
As a result, entire neighbourhoods in some regions now consist of rows of empty, deteriorating houses, with schools and shops shutting down as populations decline.
According to official estimates, around one in every seven homes in Japan is currently vacant, and more than 9 million akiya were recorded in 2023, with projections suggesting the situation could worsen significantly in the coming decades. Some forecasts indicate that by 2038, as many as one in three homes could be empty if demographic trends continue.
In response, local governments across Japan have begun experimenting with aggressive revival policies, including offering abandoned houses for free or for symbolic prices as low as around $700, provided buyers commit to renovating and occupying them. Despite these efforts, reversing decades of demographic decline remains a major challenge.
Analysts warn that unless birth rates stabilize or immigration patterns change significantly, parts of rural Japan risk becoming permanently depopulated, reshaping the countryβs social and economic landscape.
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π¨6
They donβt catcall me βhandsome manβ anymore
Now they catcall βbig boyβ
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Now they catcall βbig boyβ
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π₯°6
Chickens prefer the same faces that humans consider attractive.
It seems hard to think that they do so due to social construct.
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It seems hard to think that they do so due to social construct.
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π―4
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π7π2π1
Honestly, nothing has made me more excited for the Enhanced Gamesβand a little bit scaredβthan this picture of an absolutely roided-to-the-gills swimmer who could probably kill a great white shark with his bare hands mid-race and still set a record
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π1
Just sent everything to 0 and be done with this sh&t once and for all.
Can't take this pain everyday.
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Can't take this pain everyday.
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π―2
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Turkish concerts are a heaven for the performers β¦ cigarettes and fire are provided during the show β¦
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π₯°3π2
JUST IN: Iran's IRGC says "our forces still control the Strait of Hormuz."
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