> Alternatives need not be better or worse. Just different. Alternatives need [not] be doing the same thing somewhere else, it might be seeking out something else to do where you are.
People have families to feed and lifestyles to maintain, anything that's not equivalent will introduce hardship. And "different" most likely means worse, when it comes to compensation. Even a successful career change usually means restarting at the bottom of the ladder.
And what's that "something else," exactly? You need to consider that may be disrupted at the same time you're planning on seeking it, or fierce competition from your peers makes it unobtainable to you.
Assuming there are alternatives waiting for you when you'll need them is its own kind of complacency.
> It might be selling all your stuff and live on an island in the sun for all I know.
Yeah, people with the "fuck-you" money to do that will probably be fine. Most people don't have that, though.