Anonymous wrote:They’ve run out of hotel rooms, are kicking kids out of school for illegal housing and now they want your homes too.
How much more evidence do we need that Washington is orchestrating an invasion of this country?
This issue, more than any other, shows Washington’s commitment to national security and the safety and prosperity of its citizens to be a sham, but above all, it exposes the fraud of “our democracy.”
Mass immigration not only puts enormous strain on public services and the labor market—rendering the progressive agenda a farce—but it dilutes the political power of the average citizen. Like war, mass immigration enriches donors, reinforces patronage, and insulates government officials from democratic challenges. Mass immigration is a betrayal, for it severs the connection between elected officials and their voters, relieving lawmakers of their promises and obligations and redistributing the power of the electorate to a managed constituency. Mass immigration allows corrupt and derelict leaders to rely on suffrage to shield them from reform. If you have any doubts, just take a look at the once-great State of California.
This manufactured crisis is an assault on our sovereignty, our way of life, and the last remains of our democratic system. Clearly Washington fears the US electorate and hopes to stave off any threat of reform by importing another.
This may be the greatest betrayal our country has ever seen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The Constitution says you can’t be forced to house government soldiers. Doesn’t say they can’t make you house illegal aliens. Here it comes.
It really shouldn’t be that hard. Step one would be identifying owners who have misused property. Step two would be performing background checks on this owners to ensure the migrants are not housed in a potentially unsafe environment. Step three would be assigning migrant families to the appropriate home - close to strong schools, services, transportation, and retail. Finally, the city should provide some sort of monetary stipend to owners of selected underutilized properties to cover the cost of feeding the migrants, laundering, transporting them, assisting with migrant child care if needed, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The difference in coverage between the New York Post and the New York Daily News on this issue is remarkable. NYP discusses the impact on students, DN ignores the issue and talks about 60 day evictions for migrants.
The NY Daily News article focused almost exclusively on the impact this has on the migrants - those here illegally.
https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/01/09/city-hall-orders-migrants-at-floyd-bennett-to-be-evacuated-to-brooklyn-high-school/
Same with the NY Times.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/09/nyregion/migrant-families-floyd-bennett-tent-evacuation-rain.html
Amazing, really. The citizens who live in the city and pay exorbitant taxes that pay for education and are forced to educate children remotely are ignored by these publications.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is going to be in every Republican campaign ad until Election Day.
As it should be.
It's awesome to see people living with the consequences of their votes. Chicago too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The Constitution says you can’t be forced to house government soldiers. Doesn’t say they can’t make you house illegal aliens. Here it comes.
It really shouldn’t be that hard. Step one would be identifying owners who have misused property. Step two would be performing background checks on this owners to ensure the migrants are not housed in a potentially unsafe environment. Step three would be assigning migrant families to the appropriate home - close to strong schools, services, transportation, and retail. Finally, the city should provide some sort of monetary stipend to owners of selected underutilized properties to cover the cost of feeding the migrants, laundering, transporting them, assisting with migrant child care if needed, etc.
How about vetting the migrants themselves to ensure they are not a threat? We could end up with stories like this......
A better solution is to prevent these migrants from entering the US in the first place. We know that 90% of them are not asylum-eligible.
You are suggesting making the American public at large responsible for millions of migrants who have not been vetted, should not be here to begin with, and who are creating economic and security instability in our country.
Waahh..Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NYC is a sanctuary city. I don’t understand how this could be an emergency.
because a bunch were dumped on them by another state who had no authority to do that. Those governors lied to the people and were basically human traffickers for a political stunt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The Constitution says you can’t be forced to house government soldiers. Doesn’t say they can’t make you house illegal aliens. Here it comes.
It really shouldn’t be that hard. Step one would be identifying owners who have misused property. Step two would be performing background checks on this owners to ensure the migrants are not housed in a potentially unsafe environment. Step three would be assigning migrant families to the appropriate home - close to strong schools, services, transportation, and retail. Finally, the city should provide some sort of monetary stipend to owners of selected underutilized properties to cover the cost of feeding the migrants, laundering, transporting them, assisting with migrant child care if needed, etc.
This all makes sense, is quite doable, and is an equitable solution; exactly what a responsible government should be doing.
So as per AOC we're supposed to present anyone with work documents, benefits, and a path to citizenship. https://www.instagram.com/p/C1rzzt_gpSf/
Then we're supposed to "adopt" a migrant or a family of migrants and get a small payment from the feds to feed, house, do their laundry, provide transportation, and childcare. What am I? Their parent or grandparent? This is not what a respnsible government does. So urban housing in the USSR - govt decided who lived where and now you people think just like that. Govt controlled residency in private housing whether owned or rented. https://kommunalka.colgate.edu/cfm/essays.cfm?ClipID=376
There’s a lot of homes with empty nesters that can be used for the purpose of housing migrants. Unused bedrooms can house three to four people. As for assistance with adjusting, providing nutritious meals, transportation, and cleaning I think given most Americans’ humble immigrant beginnings, it would be an honor to help the newest Americans.
Remember this would only be a temporary set of measures until the migrants received work permits and found suitable homes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The Constitution says you can’t be forced to house government soldiers. Doesn’t say they can’t make you house illegal aliens. Here it comes.
It really shouldn’t be that hard. Step one would be identifying owners who have misused property. Step two would be performing background checks on this owners to ensure the migrants are not housed in a potentially unsafe environment. Step three would be assigning migrant families to the appropriate home - close to strong schools, services, transportation, and retail. Finally, the city should provide some sort of monetary stipend to owners of selected underutilized properties to cover the cost of feeding the migrants, laundering, transporting them, assisting with migrant child care if needed, etc.
This person is clearly mentally challenged. No bureaucrat is coming over to people's houses, trumping up violations of misuse and then assigning individuals or families to your house.
Long before that happens, the second amendment takes hold (which is exactly why you need it - for control freaks like the poster).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The Constitution says you can’t be forced to house government soldiers. Doesn’t say they can’t make you house illegal aliens. Here it comes.
It really shouldn’t be that hard. Step one would be identifying owners who have misused property. Step two would be performing background checks on this owners to ensure the migrants are not housed in a potentially unsafe environment. Step three would be assigning migrant families to the appropriate home - close to strong schools, services, transportation, and retail. Finally, the city should provide some sort of monetary stipend to owners of selected underutilized properties to cover the cost of feeding the migrants, laundering, transporting them, assisting with migrant child care if needed, etc.
This all makes sense, is quite doable, and is an equitable solution; exactly what a responsible government should be doing.
So as per AOC we're supposed to present anyone with work documents, benefits, and a path to citizenship. https://www.instagram.com/p/C1rzzt_gpSf/
Then we're supposed to "adopt" a migrant or a family of migrants and get a small payment from the feds to feed, house, do their laundry, provide transportation, and childcare. What am I? Their parent or grandparent? This is not what a respnsible government does. So urban housing in the USSR - govt decided who lived where and now you people think just like that. Govt controlled residency in private housing whether owned or rented. https://kommunalka.colgate.edu/cfm/essays.cfm?ClipID=376
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are the libs still talking about Trump? He’s not even in office anymore. The Dems just want to deflect from the problems they caused. You don’t hear conservatives going on and on about Obama. Who the f cares about anyone who’s no longer in office?
They never even try to fix anything. It’s all protests & finger pointing. They have no plans, they only have slogans screamed into bullhorns.
Anonymous wrote:This is going to be in every Republican campaign ad until Election Day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The Constitution says you can’t be forced to house government soldiers. Doesn’t say they can’t make you house illegal aliens. Here it comes.
It really shouldn’t be that hard. Step one would be identifying owners who have misused property. Step two would be performing background checks on this owners to ensure the migrants are not housed in a potentially unsafe environment. Step three would be assigning migrant families to the appropriate home - close to strong schools, services, transportation, and retail. Finally, the city should provide some sort of monetary stipend to owners of selected underutilized properties to cover the cost of feeding the migrants, laundering, transporting them, assisting with migrant child care if needed, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The Constitution says you can’t be forced to house government soldiers. Doesn’t say they can’t make you house illegal aliens. Here it comes.
It really shouldn’t be that hard. Step one would be identifying owners who have misused property. Step two would be performing background checks on this owners to ensure the migrants are not housed in a potentially unsafe environment. Step three would be assigning migrant families to the appropriate home - close to strong schools, services, transportation, and retail. Finally, the city should provide some sort of monetary stipend to owners of selected underutilized properties to cover the cost of feeding the migrants, laundering, transporting them, assisting with migrant child care if needed, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The Constitution says you can’t be forced to house government soldiers. Doesn’t say they can’t make you house illegal aliens. Here it comes.
It really shouldn’t be that hard. Step one would be identifying owners who have misused property. Step two would be performing background checks on this owners to ensure the migrants are not housed in a potentially unsafe environment. Step three would be assigning migrant families to the appropriate home - close to strong schools, services, transportation, and retail. Finally, the city should provide some sort of monetary stipend to owners of selected underutilized properties to cover the cost of feeding the migrants, laundering, transporting them, assisting with migrant child care if needed, etc.