MSM NYT: Middle-Class Americans Must Sacrifice Their Suburbs to Aid Poor Immigrants

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
NYT: Middle-Class Americans Must Sacrifice Their Suburbs to Aid Poor Immigrants | Breitbart
Neil Munro
9-11 minutes

The federal government must force tens of millions of suburban voters to sacrifice their houses’ value, their quiet schools, and their green neighborhoods so poor immigrants can have cheaper rents and investors can build more houses, according to the New York Times‘ editorial board.

“The federal government is an irresistible force when it chooses to prioritize an issue. It is past time to prioritize the availability of affordable housing” for immigrants, says the July 7 editorial, titled “A New Approach on Housing Affordability.”

The editorial starts with a complaint about housing prices — but it never mentions the obvious fix: Ending the federal policy of annually importing 1 million immigrant workers, consumers, and renters, which inflates housing prices and class competition for good neighborhoods and good schools. Reduced immigration, in contrast, would raise Americans’ salaries, lower their housing prices, improve their schools, and also disappoint real-estate investors.

The editorial declares;

A growing number of Americans are struggling to cope with the high and rising cost of rental housing in the United States. On any given night last year, more than half a million Americans were homeless. Nearly 11 million households managed to keep a roof over their heads only by spending more than 50 percent of their income on rent, sharply curtailing their spending on food, health care and other needs. Millions more cannot afford to live in the neighborhoods where children are most likely to thrive, or in the cities where jobs are concentrated.



Three candidates — Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey; Julian Castro, the former secretary of housing and urban development under President Barack Obama; and Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts — have proposed that the federal government should pressure local governments to allow more development [within suburbs] … Mr. Booker and Mr. Castro have proposed that the federal government should require local governments to adopt land-use reforms before they can obtain federal funding for infrastructure projects. The point is not to mandate construction of skyscrapers in place of suburban subdivisions. Rather, it is to require local jurisdictions to make reasonable plans to accommodate population growth — for example, by allowing small-scale apartment buildings in single-family neighborhoods.

The NYT’s “small-scale apartment buildings” link connects to a June 15 editorial by the board which lauds the progressive city of Minneapolis for taking single-family lot zoning away from the city’s homeowners. Suburbia is an economically inefficient “entitlement” for wealthy Americans, the paper claims:

in most places, [new] housing construction remains wildly unpopular. People who think of themselves as progressives, environmentalists and egalitarians fight fiercely against urban development, complaining about traffic and shadows and the sanctity of lawns.

That’s why a recent breakthrough in Minneapolis is so important. The city’s political leaders have constructed a broad consensus in favor of more housing. And the centerpiece is both simple and brilliant: Minneapolis is ending single-family zoning …

People should be free to live in a prairie-style house on a quarter-acre lot in the middle of Minneapolis, so long as they can afford the land and taxes. But zoning subsidizes that extravagance by prohibiting better, more concentrated use of the land. It allows people to own homes they could not afford if the same land could be used for an apartment building. It is a huge entitlement program for the benefit of the most entitled residents.

The loose fabric of single-family neighborhoods drives up the cost of housing by limiting the supply of available units. It contributes to climate change, by necessitating sprawl and long commutes. It constrains the economic potential of cities by limiting growth.

The phrase “constrains the economic potential” — hints at the bigger winner from the housing crunch created by mass migration — real estate investors:

Minneapolis’ decision to reduce the value of suburban housing is justified by racial inequality 93 years ago, according to the June 15 editorial by the board:

The 2015 shooting of Jamar Clark, a black man killed by Minneapolis police officers, focused the anger of the city’s black residents — and it persuaded some of their neighbors to listen more carefully. In the ensuing debates, many residents said they were surprised to learn that single-family zoning in Minneapolis, as in other cities, had deep roots in efforts to enforce racial segregation. Cities found that banning apartment construction in white neighborhoods was an effective proxy for racial discrimination, and the practice spread after it was validated by the Supreme Court in 1926.

In Minneapolis, the current political leaders argued that ending single-family zoning was a necessary step to rectify that history of racial discrimination. On many city lawns, signs that read “Neighbors for More Neighbors” stood alongside signs that read “Black Lives Matter.”

All of this deserves wide emulation by other American cities.

Naturally, the editorial board does not mention Minneapolis’ huge population of 50,000 imported poor people from Somalia, none of whom suffered from racial discrimination in Minneapolis 93 years ago.

Poor people also need taxpayer-subsidized rents and mortgages to keep pace with middle-class Americans, the board adds in the July 7 editorial:

Rent subsidies also hold promise as a tool for reducing residential segregation. Poor children raised in economically diverse neighborhoods thrive by comparison with those raised in concentrations of poverty, yet subsidized housing tends to be built in neighborhoods with high levels of poverty. Under the Obama administration, renters in some cities were offered larger vouchers if they agreed to move to areas with better schools, where housing tends to be more expensive. The early results were promising, and the program deserves to be revived and expanded.

Government should use its power to force middle-class suburbanites to accept poor people and minorities in their neighborhoods and schools, the board said: “Proposals to make federal infrastructure funding contingent on land use reform also might be usefully extended by requiring affluent communities to accept affordable housing projects.”

The board does not say which Americans will pay the housing subsidies nor which investors will profit from the subsidies.

The editorials modestly declined to mention how many board members live in expensive and childless downtown apartments, where they quietly freeload off suburbanites’ hard-earned ability to raise the next generation of children in suburban parkland.

But the board does admit the political danger of reorganizing the nation’s suburbs to match the federal government’s high-migration/low-wages economic strategy:

This embrace of [suburban] deregulation merits particular praise because the states most resistant to allowing housing construction are the strongholds of the Democratic Party, in the Northeast and along the Pacific Coast, and the most resistant voters are the wealthy residents of those states who provide so much of the funding for Democratic presidential campaigns.

Immigration Numbers:

Each year, roughly four million young Americans join the workforce after graduating from high school or university.

But the federal government then imports about 1.1 million legal immigrants and refreshes a resident population of roughly 1.5 million white-collar visa workers — including approximately one million H-1B workers — and approximately 500,000 blue-collar visa workers.

The government also prints out more than one million work permits for foreigners, tolerates about eight million illegal workers, and does not punish companies for employing the hundreds of thousands of illegal migrants who sneak across the border or overstay their legal visas each year.

This policy of inflating the labor supply boosts economic growth for investors because it ensures that employers do not have to compete for American workers by offering higher wages and better working conditions.

This policy of flooding the market with cheap, foreign, white-collar graduates and blue-collar labor also shifts enormous wealth from young employees towards older investors, even as it also widens wealth gaps, reduces high-tech investment, increases state and local tax burdens, and hurts children’s schools and college educations. It also pushes Americans away from high-tech careers and sidelines millions of marginalized Americans, including many who are now struggling with fentanyl addictions. The labor policy also moves business investment and wealth from the heartland to the coastal cities, explodes rents and housing costs, shrivels real estate values in the Midwest, and rewards investors for creating low-tech, labor-intensive workplaces.

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/...crifice-their-suburbs-to-aid-poor-immigrants/
 

sssarawolf

Has No Life - Lives on TB
So hard working Americans can just take it and lose what they worked so hard to achieve. :(
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
"From each according to his ability; to each according to his need."


The Communist rulebook
 

Luddite

Veteran Member
Don't know that this little reminder should make any more impact than others we see regularly. It is one thing to give the foreign gibsmedats printed FRNs. Also, if some rich, self-loathing FatCat wants to give away his money instead of leaving it to his/her miserable heirs, Who Cares.

When the assaults on J6P and podunk, reach critical mass, watch out. Ugliness follows.

Off to buy more bullets.
 

cleobc

Veteran Member
Socialists have figured out that most successful people come from safe environments like suburban ones, so they want to force millions of inner-city people into suburban environments and then they magically will become successful too. The left thinks everything can be made fair by complete government control, plus--and I think this is big also--they want to punish people who are successful by destroying their home environments.
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
If they are here illegally I'm in full defense of country mode and see to it they are deported at once and if they come legally and cannot stand on their own two feet and pull their own weight and earn a living then they need to go back to where they came from We have no place for them.
 

greysage

On The Level
It's happening in the county where I live. Most all of the available for development land in the last few years has been built into 3 story multi-unit (20+ units) apartment buildings. No more neighborhoods with houses. Well there's been a some but the homes are all $500K and they're built in some sort of new style of neighborhood with shared open space and no privacy like a back yard.
 

Bardou

Veteran Member
Sacrifice

Ayn Rand

“Sacrifice” is the surrender of a greater value for the sake of a lesser one or of a nonvalue. Thus, altruism gauges a man’s virtue by the degree to which he surrenders, renounces or betrays his values (since help to a stranger or an enemy is regarded as more virtuous, less “selfish,” than help to those one loves). The rational principle of conduct is the exact opposite: always act in accordance with the hierarchy of your values, and never sacrifice a greater value to a lesser one.

This applies to all choices, including one’s actions toward other men. It requires that one possess a defined hierarchy of rational values (values chosen and validated by a rational standard). Without such a hierarchy, neither rational conduct nor considered value judgments nor moral choices are possible.

The Virtue of Selfishness

“The Ethics of Emergencies,”
The Virtue of Selfishness, 44

“Sacrifice” does not mean the rejection of the worthless, but of the precious. “Sacrifice” does not mean the rejection of the evil for the sake of the good, but of the good for the sake of the evil. “Sacrifice” is the surrender of that which you value in favor of that which you don’t.

If you exchange a penny for a dollar, it is not a sacrifice; if you exchange a dollar for a penny, it is. If you achieve the career you wanted, after years of struggle, it is not a sacrifice; if you then renounce it for the sake of a rival, it is. If you own a bottle of milk and give it to your starving child, it is not a sacrifice; if you give it to your neighbor’s child and let your own die, it is.

If you give money to help a friend, it is not a sacrifice; if you give it to a worthless stranger, it is. If you give your friend a sum you can afford, it is not a sacrifice; if you give him money at the cost of your own discomfort, it is only a partial virtue, according to this sort of moral standard; if you give him money at the cost of disaster to yourself—that is the virtue of sacrifice in full.

If you renounce all personal desires and dedicate your life to those you love, you do not achieve full virtue: you still retain a value of your own, which is your love. If you devote your life to random strangers, it is an act of greater virtue. If you devote your life to serving men you hate—that is the greatest of the virtues you can practice.

A sacrifice is the surrender of a value. Full sacrifice is full surrender of all values. If you wish to achieve full virtue, you must seek no gratitude in return for your sacrifice, no praise, no love, no admiration, no self-esteem, not even the pride of being virtuous; the faintest trace of any gain dilutes your virtue. If you pursue a course of action that does not taint your life by any joy, that brings you no value in matter, no value in spirit, no gain, no profit, no reward—if you achieve this state of total zero, you have achieved the ideal of moral perfection.

You are told that moral perfection is impossible to man—and, by this standard, it is. You cannot achieve it so long as you live, but the value of your life and of your person is gauged by how closely you succeed in approaching that ideal zero which is death.

If you start, however, as a passionless blank, as a vegetable seeking to be eaten, with no values to reject and no wishes to renounce, you will not win the crown of sacrifice. It is not a sacrifice to renounce the unwanted. It is not a sacrifice to give your life for others, if death is your personal desire. To achieve the virtue of sacrifice, you must want to live, you must love it, you must burn with passion for this earth and for all the splendor it can give you—you must feel the twist of every knife as it slashes your desires away from your reach and drains your love out of your body. It is not mere death that the morality of sacrifice holds out to you as an ideal, but death by slow torture.

Do not remind me that it pertains only to this life on earth. I am concerned with no other. Neither are you.

If you wish to save the last of your dignity, do not call your best actions a “sacrifice”: that term brands you as immoral. If a mother buys food for her hungry child rather than a hat for herself, it is not a sacrifice: she values the child higher than the hat; but it is a sacrifice to the kind of mother whose higher value is the hat, who would prefer her child to starve and feeds him only from a sense of duty. If a man dies fighting for his own freedom, it is not a sacrifice: he is not willing to live as a slave; but it is a sacrifice to the kind of man who’s willing. If a man refuses to sell his convictions, it is not a sacrifice, unless he is the sort of man who has no convictions.

Sacrifice could be proper only for those who have nothing to sacrifice—no values, no standards, no judgment—those whose desires are irrational whims, blindly conceived and lightly surrendered. For a man of moral stature, whose desires are born of rational values, sacrifice is the surrender of the right to the wrong, of the good to the evil.

The creed of sacrifice is a morality for the immoral—a morality that declares its own bankruptcy by confessing that it can’t impart to men any personal stake in virtues or values, and that their souls are sewers of depravity, which they must be taught to sacrifice. By its own confession, it is impotent to teach men to be good and can only subject them to constant punishment.

More...

http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/sacrifice.html
---------------------

The only people I will sacrifice anything for are my husband and 2 children, my own responsibility and no others.
 
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jed turtle

a brother in the Lord
I see a few options:

1. “Resistors” to the “progressive”/Marxist/Islamic agenda need to pool their resource and buy up the lands surrounding their suburbs and turn them into moats containing commercial hog farms.

2. Not too late to escape to the open ocean and learn to live out there before the immigrants “eat you up alive” (maybe not just a metaphor...) and figure out, like our pilgrim ancestors, how to make it in a new and strange environment. At least there are no ticks (and tens of tick-born, government-approved diseases) out there...

3. Prepare to make a last stand against The Beast (Vatican-approved Islam, Marxist revolutionaries). The operative word there is “stand”. As opposed to “kneeling in submission”...

4. Pray to go out in a blaze of glory at the imminent Rapture...
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
I recently read an article that blamed the homeless problem of Los Angeles on the suburban homeowners in surrounding municipalities. Why? They have refused to allow the type of housing that would absorb the homeless. My question is, who decided to hand over to developers the neighborhoods that these homeless came from? And why is it the responsibility of surrounding municipalities to fix the problems that LA created?
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Even if the re-zoning had the best intentions in the world unless it was done with the concept of building real neighborhoods (which is easier done from scratch in new zones) with playgrounds, corner shops, garden allotments, public spaces, etc it just isn't going to work.

And even Sweden, where this model used to work (aka you build a lot of apartments but everyone gets a balcony and/or a garden allotment, you get a small gym, sauna, rec hall, storage area nearly the size of your apartment, corner shops, a courtyard, etc) is starting to fall apart when too many non-Swedes were just dumped in them and left to sink or swim.

A landmark study in the late 1980s showed that outcomes for minority children and families can be improved when a small number who meet certain criteria are placed in a suburb, this totally falls apart when more than three families are moved there at the same time.

Three families or less where there is a good work ethic (or at last Mom is taking serious care of the kids, making sure they go to school, do their homework etc she may have a part-time job etc) no kids already in gangs or other issues will adapt and usually start making friends, joining local churches and civic groups and take on the "ethos" of their suburban (better off) neighbors.

Sadly more than three families in any given area tended to just to recreate another ghetto which is what is very likely to happen if these current plans (listed in the article) are carried out.

It isn't just "white flight" they have to worry about but rather "middle class" flight from people of all races who don't want to live there anymore.
 

Coulter

Veteran Member
Seriously - is there anybody more naïve - stupid - worthless - or evil - than a democrat?

edited to add - worthless - since I believe 75% of all democrats are takers - freeloaders - etc
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
The leftist socialist liberal democraps continue to push their socialistic communist propaganda to a second civil war....

The stench of the democraps is insulting to freedom loving Americans....

The call to war is being sounded by the democraps and when it happens and it will happen for the democraps beg for total control of America with no freedoms except for the elite ruling class....

They will not like what they are pushing....

Are you ready and prepared????

Texican....
Live Free and Die Free....
God, Country, Freedom....
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Even if the re-zoning had the best intentions in the world unless it was done with the concept of building real neighborhoods (which is easier done from scratch in new zones) with playgrounds, corner shops, garden allotments, public spaces, etc it just isn't going to work.

Magic dirt theory.

The core idea is that one’s physical surroundings—the bricks and mortar of the building you’re in, or the actual dirt you are standing on—emit invisible vapors that can change your personality, behavior, and intelligence. Magic Dirt theory is a key component of immigration romanticism, too.
-- alternativeeugene.wordpress.com is no longer available.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I recently read an article that blamed the homeless problem of Los Angeles on the suburban homeowners in surrounding municipalities. Why? They have refused to allow the type of housing that would absorb the homeless. My question is, who decided to hand over to developers the neighborhoods that these homeless came from? And why is it the responsibility of surrounding municipalities to fix the problems that LA created?

You need to earn a minimum of 50K to be able to afford the cheapest rentals in LA. That was on the news here locally last week. Couple this with landlords, in LA, who have hundreds if not thousands of units sitting empty so that they can price gouge rent on the few units they have available, resulting in an entire class of people who cannot afford housing.

I don't have any answers other than we do not have the infrastructure or services available for all of these immigrants out here in the hinterlands. The left knows this and this is just another tool in their arsenal to destroy flyover country.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
It isn't just "white flight" they have to worry about but rather "middle class" flight from people of all races who don't want to live there anymore.

I know a black middle-class couple, been married 30+ years, kids have all been to college and have decent jobs an marriages, that's moving away from Atlanta because where they're currently living is going downhill and fast. I suspect it's for this very reason the city has been moving poor families and are plunking large numbers of them into middle and upper middle-class neighborhoods, but like you said instead of assimilating they're creating a new ghetto in a once viable neighborhood.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
We don't have the infrastructure or services out here to deal with these people

Oh yes we do.

2004_john_deere_160c_lc_excavator_construction_tractor_crawler_machine_track_hoe_1_lgw.jpg
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Even if the re-zoning had the best intentions in the world unless it was done with the concept of building real neighborhoods (which is easier done from scratch in new zones) with playgrounds, corner shops, garden allotments, public spaces, etc it just isn't going to work.

Magic dirt theory.

The core idea is that one’s physical surroundings—the bricks and mortar of the building you’re in, or the actual dirt you are standing on—emit invisible vapors that can change your personality, behavior, and intelligence. Magic Dirt theory is a key component of immigration romanticism, too.
-- alternativeeugene.wordpress.com is no longer available.

True, but decades of actual studies also show that if you take any group of people (even really decent folks) and throw them into a rat hole then things tend to break down pretty quickly.

I was not meaning to imply that buy building neighborhood you automatically get great results if you take a bunch of gang members and low lives and throw them in there.

On the other hand, if you carefully search out the folks that one black businessman used to build homes for (with a high success rate) whom he pointed outlive in "every" bad neighborhood who go to work every day (or night) then come home and lock their doors shivering behind them and/or the elderly who are trying to grow tiny gardens on vacant lots and care for their grandkids; you might get somewhere.

"Social engineering" of any type gets really complicated and such problem is often more easily solved on the local level even if non-local money is needed to make them work.

For example, Dublin Ireland now has a terrible homeless crisis on its hand but the reviews on the ground are showing the majority of those people HAD homes and even jobs, but became homeless when their landlords kicked them out (then legally) to turn their apartments into tourist rentals or get higher-paying tenants brought in by the high tech firms.

That is a very DIFFERENT problem from hordes of drug-addicted people and alcoholics who may not be able to handle living outside a tent or a safe-house/assisted living program.

There are some of those people in the Dublin population but the majority of the homeless there seem to be families (often single parents) who had homes/apartments until recently and whose salaries or rental subsidies are not enough to pay for the deposits and monthly rents now required at their former locations (many of which until last month were not let to real renters anyway but short-term to tourists via "nub" thingyings).

So the LOCAL solution in Dublin Ireland is likely to be very different from say urban Chicago, Seattle or Minneapolis; in general local people have a much better idea of what their local situation is; though there isn't always enough money, resources or even sometimes interest to try and solve it.

The original problem in Sweden was simply a lack of housing after WWII for a rapidly growing population along with a move towards the cities, so the massive (and rather ugly) apartment complexes were built but they did OK because of all the public spaces, shared laundries, playgrounds, parks, allotments etc.

Not to mention that people used to living in villages adopted a "village model" when it came to their apartment neighbors - that totally broke down when thousands of folks from the third world were just dropped there to sink or swim.

Who didn't know how to use or even respect the public spaces and so their deteriorated badly which is what is happening today - again local problem needs a local solution.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Dublin is kind of going through a miniature version of that problem of needing 50,000 a year to even rent an apartment in LA but at the same time (like LA) Dublin still needs secretaries, nurses, janitors, or even police and fire-fighters who can no longer afford to live there.

So the people who can get jobs elsewhere move away and the others first double up with family and friends, then perhaps work from their cars and then may fall out of the job market into total homelessness after a few months.

When I was in Seattle a highly educated friend who had worked in the medical field explained how this nearly happened to her own family when her husband came down with a fatal disease and she had to take care of him.

She said the only thing that kept her and her family (including a grown daughter who shares costs with them) from joining the folks she pointed out under the freeway was an unexpected inheritance from a relative.

Otherwise, it was "there for the grace of..." you get the picture.
 

mistaken1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
NYT: Middle-Class Americans Must Sacrifice Their Suburbs to Aid Poor Immigrants

snip

Why?

Why must I sacrifice anything for anyone?

Hey new york slimes stop shoving your leftist religion down my throat.

I can guarantee the limousine communists will never allow their gated communities to be infiltrated by low income housing.
 

SSTemplar

Veteran Member
When we are all equally poor,unarmed and underfed it will be easier to reduce the population to a sustainable 500 million.
 

Bardou

Veteran Member
I recently read an article that blamed the homeless problem of Los Angeles on the suburban homeowners in surrounding municipalities. Why? They have refused to allow the type of housing that would absorb the homeless. My question is, who decided to hand over to developers the neighborhoods that these homeless came from? And why is it the responsibility of surrounding municipalities to fix the problems that LA created?

I believe one reason the homeless left here was due to the fire. The fire displaced people, no housing was available and what was went up in price 25%. Some were fortunate enough to get a trailer, some were forced to leave with $25,000 of taxpayer money in their pocket. Nothing social was left for the homeless, so they were given one-way tickets on a Greyhound out of Butte County. There might be a few stragglers around, but not like it was since November. I see more and more less tolerant of even the fire victims - especially the ones not insured.
 

Bardou

Veteran Member
When we are all equally poor,unarmed and underfed it will be easier to reduce the population to a sustainable 500 million.

Those 500 million better know how to grow food, fix machinery, manufacture, know medicine, etc. Money won't sustain anyone.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
"From each according to his ability; to each according to his need."


The Communist rulebook

Yup. And of course if they were to pull this off they would express shock in the actual outcome.

Yes in CA and heavy urban areas housing costs are a definite issue, but it didn't develop within a vacuum. As for a "fix", particularly in DNC "single party" states and regions, don't hold your breath.
 

SAPPHIRE

Veteran Member
DAMNABLE...…...along front range CO our rents are sky high too......we live on one of the lowest rungs and landlord just raised our rent this week by 10%......it could of been 15%...how will we on limited income cope...…….eat less quality???

these cretins in governments posts, no matter where in USA.....don't give a damn about the true citizens...….hope these officials are forced to live in the middle of the c#ap that's ahead...…...
 

jward

passin' thru
Every time I read something like this, I am more glad that I left Minnesota when I did!

That nonsense is being pushed everywhere. Even here in the heart of flyover country we have to keep an eagle eye on those willing to squander my quality of life for the good of the thems, most of whom can lay no claim to the community or it's resources, other than we have and they don't, but want it.

I've lost track of how many times I have had to explain that rezoning creates more problems than it could ever hope to solve. That little things like infrastructure matter, and we couldn't handle the extra demands that would be put upon the systems.

Society has always grappled with scarce resources. Migration remains a solution as far as i am concerned. I'm as compassionate as they come, but I ve given all I intend to. As far as NY and other congested failed cities, perhaps the businesses need to be tasked with providing housing. Wouldn't be the first company towns. Migration is always an option too. I get you want the amenities of the city that never sleeps, but, everyone has to make choices and sacrifices.
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
Hard to limit one's discussion as so many things overlap, and overwhelm the systems, by design.
The idea you have to be growing or your dieing is a lie. There is an optimum number for some things, like population.
The globalists are overwhelming our societies with foreigners and paying them to entrench, with cheap apartments. Built by contractors who get sweetheart deals in the process via local state and federal government programs...all by design. Cheap apartments are going up everywhere, and many are in middle class neighborhoods.....all by design. Root out the deep state globalists, the perverts, etc...but I repeat myself.
 

byronandkathy2003

Veteran Member
Don't know that this little reminder should make any more impact than others we see regularly. It is one thing to give the foreign gibsmedats printed FRNs. Also, if some rich, self-loathing FatCat wants to give away his money instead of leaving it to his/her miserable heirs, Who Cares.

When the assaults on J6P and podunk, reach critical mass, watch out. Ugliness follows.

Off to buy more bullets.

you forgot the beans need plenty of those also
 
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