11:47pm here in Orlando, Florida, I was in my living room and noticed a huge flickering of light during a regular rainstorm, but it was followed by a huge thunder boomer that went on for at least 30 to 40 seconds. Please let me know if you hear of anything!!!!
@pajamakillyou@angie_angers@BN9 Interesting probably cuz the studs are there so it can just change from one thing to the next but since the storms perfect opportunity for corporations to buy in
Florida's population losses are compounding.
Miami had the 4th-largest population loss among U.S. metros in Q1 2026.
Orlando had the 6th biggest.
And Tampa lost more people than Chicago.
This data comes from Bank of America's internal account data and is a shocking revelation for anyone who thinks Florida's housing market is recovering.
People continue to leave Florida due to still high prices, soaring property taxes, and expensive insurance.
So much so that a state that was built on massive levels of in-migration of Americans is now losing people in its three biggest metro areas.
As a result, don't be surprised if Florida's housing market continues to correct until things become cheap enough to keep people from leaving.
Track migration by county at https://t.co/50vYuH88dW.