See, this is why we need a water cooler to talk around (metaphorically).
You're jumping to people who don't want to come into offices. I'm describing people who live more than 50 miles from an office (and really less than that in a lot of cases).
There are obviously gigs where the entire company is geographically distributed and there was never any plan to have employees share a communal office, nor any need for it, based on the type of work being performed.
And there are cases of companies that, even before the pandemic and certainly since then, have decided that they don't place high value on personal employee interaction, so they've allowed employees to move further away from corporate HQs and engaged in hiring practices where they've hired large amounts of remote workers without ever having the intention of expecting them to come into any office whatsoever.
But there are also a very large number of fortune 500 companies, and a lot of government jobs, where WFH flexibility that was once allowed, either because of the pandemic or because of a move toward cutting overhead and opex or even because of the expectations of the labor pool, is now being rescinded, and those employees are being recalled to the office. During the intervening years, many of them have moved far away from corporate offices. They're now being asked either to absorb the commute no matter how long, or move. The alternative beyond that, is almost certainly eventual termination.
The last batch is the one I'm primarily focusing on, and indeed is the category in which I find myself at this point.
As I've said, before the pandemic I was already 95% WFH and my employer was pushing more and more employees toward that end. Now, post-pandemic, there's a 5-day work-from-office policy. My remote status was revoked and I am now 100% in-office. There are some advantages and some disadvantaged to this, and I'm not really making any statement regarding the relative merits of this policy, but rather just observing that this is a major trend right now, and the labor pool is going to be forced to adjust to it.