When you spend $100 at a big-box chain store, a significant portion of that money immediately leaves the community. It goes to a headquarters in another state, to shareholders on Wall Street, and to manufacturing plants overseas. Studies suggest that only $13 to $43 of that $100 stays in the local economy.

When you Google "local plumber near me" versus a national franchise, you are often trading price for accountability. The local plumber knows that if they do a bad job, you will tell 20 neighbors at the next block party. The franchise call center probably doesn't care. Ironically, the internet—the great globalizer—has become the best tool for finding local gems. Search engines now prioritize "near me" searches. Social media groups (Facebook Neighborhoods, Nextdoor, Reddit subs) are hyper-local recommendation engines.

In a world dominated by global supply chains, multinational corporations, and same-day shipping from warehouses thousands of miles away, a quiet but fierce revolution is taking place. The hero of this story isn't a new technology or a viral app. It is a four-letter word that has been around for centuries: Local .

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