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Thread: Liberal cities across America are collapsing into Third World status, including Seatt

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  1. #51
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    If you're gonna fight, fight like you're the third monkey on the ramp to Noah's Ark... and brother its starting to rain. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #52
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    Oakland is a DUMP, taken over by illegal aliens. They have turned it into the cesspool they left. They are doing this all across America.

    There are live videos on Twitter. Piles of garbage they throw out the front door, in the alleys, the streets. They stuff 20 people into one home to live cheap. They breed like rats and get on the welfare and food stamps. Generation of them. They steal RV's and campers and park them in the backyards, the streets, in the driveways to stuff more people on the property.

    The law enforcement should scan those plates and see if they come up stolen!

    The Fire Marshall needs to go out and inspect these properties, find out how many are in one home, the fire hazards, and fine the owners or condemn the property and DRIVE them out of our neighborhoods and out of our country.
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

  3. #53
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    OPERATION CLEAN OUT





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  4. #54
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    California descending to Third World status with planned electricity blackouts for up to a week

    The elites who run California like to pretend they have a better way.

    May 13, 2019
    By Thomas Lifson

    The elites who run California like to pretend they have a better way. The highest taxes in the nation have not killed (yet) the current success of the high tech sector in the Bay Area, generating immense tax revenues that can be squandered on a useless "high speed" train line that will never be completed and still leave a budget surplus.
    Money, good weather, great food, amazing scenery, and other amenities make for The Good Life, such that the political and business elites who seem to never get tired of congratulating themselves for creating the closest thing to paradise. The fact that this leaves behind the non-coastal areas of the state, and the taxes and cost of living (especially housing that is in short supply due to zoning and other land use restrictions) make life difficult for middle-class Californians everywhere is of no concern.
    But this summer, in the wake of disastrous wildfires sparked by poorly sited and maintained power lines, the deep thinkers running the state have come up with plan that can't be papered over: to stop the wildfires when the wind blows, just shut off the juice. Bloomberg reports:
    A plan by California's biggest utility to cut power on high-wind days during the onrushing wildfire season could plunge millions of residents into darkness. And the vast majority isn't ready for it.
    The plan by PG&E Corp. comes after the bankrupt utility said a transmission line that snapped in windy weather probably started last year's Camp Fire, the deadliest in state history. While the plan may end one problem, it creates another as Californians seek ways to deal with what some fear could be days and days of blackouts.
    Hapless Californians will have to lay out a lot of money if they want to try to insulate themselves from going back to life before electricity:
    Some residents are turning to other power sources, a boon for home battery systems marketed by Sunrun Inc., Tesla Inc. and Vivint Solar Inc. But the numbers of those systems in use are relatively small when compared with PG&E's 5.4 million customers. Meanwhile, Governor Gavin Newsom said he's budgeting $75 million to help communities deal with the threat.
    "I'm worried," Newsom said Thursday during a budget briefing in Sacramento. "We're all worried about it for the elderly. We're worried about it because we could see people's power shut off not for a day or two but potentially a week."
    Newsom should stop sending good money after bad and completely abandon the ongoing expenditure of billions on the high-speed rail system, just to save face for Jerry Brown's pet project. Nobody is going to want to take a half-fast train from Merced to Bakersfield, which is the plan now that running from L.A. to S.F. is obviously financially impossible. That money could go to an emergency plan to safeguard power lines in wooded areas.
    While the rich Californians right along the coast may not experience a lot of hundred-degree days, the inland parts of the state do get extreme heat in the summer and now may have a week or longer without electricity — and without television, charging stations for cell phones, and of course for medical devices powered by electricity.
    A stable, reliable electric power grid is one of the essentials to be regarded as a first-world country. So now, in addition to the vast gap between the wealthy and the poor and beggars everywhere (San Francisco is now like Calcutta, it seems, in that respect), the state will face third-world electricity supplies.
    My spidey sense tells me that Silicon Valley and San Francisco will continue to be supplied, along with Sacramento and L.A. and San Diego. But for the folks laboring in the agricultural fields of the Central Valley, life will get a lot closer to Bangladesh.

    The elites who run California like to pretend they have a better way. The highest taxes in the nation have not killed (yet) the current success of the high tech sector in the Bay Area, generating immense tax revenues that can be squandered on a useless "high speed" train line that will never be completed and still leave a budget surplus.
    Money, good weather, great food, amazing scenery, and other amenities make for The Good Life, such that the political and business elites who seem to never get tired of congratulating themselves for creating the closest thing to paradise. The fact that this leaves behind the non-coastal areas of the state, and the taxes and cost of living (especially housing that is in short supply due to zoning and other land use restrictions) make life difficult for middle-class Californians everywhere is of no concern.
    But this summer, in the wake of disastrous wildfires sparked by poorly sited and maintained power lines, the deep thinkers running the state have come up with plan that can't be papered over: to stop the wildfires when the wind blows, just shut off the juice. Bloomberg reports:
    A plan by California's biggest utility to cut power on high-wind days during the onrushing wildfire season could plunge millions of residents into darkness. And the vast majority isn't ready for it.
    The plan by PG&E Corp. comes after the bankrupt utility said a transmission line that snapped in windy weather probably started last year's Camp Fire, the deadliest in state history. While the plan may end one problem, it creates another as Californians seek ways to deal with what some fear could be days and days of blackouts.
    Hapless Californians will have to lay out a lot of money if they want to try to insulate themselves from going back to life before electricity:
    Some residents are turning to other power sources, a boon for home battery systems marketed by Sunrun Inc., Tesla Inc. and Vivint Solar Inc. But the numbers of those systems in use are relatively small when compared with PG&E's 5.4 million customers. Meanwhile, Governor Gavin Newsom said he's budgeting $75 million to help communities deal with the threat.
    "I'm worried," Newsom said Thursday during a budget briefing in Sacramento. "We're all worried about it for the elderly. We're worried about it because we could see people's power shut off not for a day or two but potentially a week."
    Newsom should stop sending good money after bad and completely abandon the ongoing expenditure of billions on the high-speed rail system, just to save face for Jerry Brown's pet project. Nobody is going to want to take a half-fast train from Merced to Bakersfield, which is the plan now that running from L.A. to S.F. is obviously financially impossible. That money could go to an emergency plan to safeguard power lines in wooded areas.
    While the rich Californians right along the coast may not experience a lot of hundred-degree days, the inland parts of the state do get extreme heat in the summer and now may have a week or longer without electricity — and without television, charging stations for cell phones, and of course for medical devices powered by electricity.
    A stable, reliable electric power grid is one of the essentials to be regarded as a first-world country. So now, in addition to the vast gap between the wealthy and the poor and beggars everywhere (San Francisco is now like Calcutta, it seems, in that respect), the state will face third-world electricity supplies.
    My spidey sense tells me that Silicon Valley and San Francisco will continue to be supplied, along with Sacramento and L.A. and San Diego. But for the folks laboring in the agricultural fields of the Central Valley, life will get a lot closer to Bangladesh.

    Follow us: @AmericanThinker on Twitter | AmericanThinker on Facebook

    https://www.americanthinker.com/blog...to_a_week.html
    If you're gonna fight, fight like you're the third monkey on the ramp to Noah's Ark... and brother its starting to rain. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  5. #55
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    this is going to break bad

    Millions Of Californians Will "Plunge Into Darkness" As PG&E Commits To Cut Power During Wildfire Season



    The now bankrupt utility has put a precautionary plan into place that could cause "days and days of blackouts" across California.

    If you're gonna fight, fight like you're the third monkey on the ramp to Noah's Ark... and brother its starting to rain. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  6. #56
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    Pay up Slim Pickens; someone's got to pay for those Illegal Aliens



    Sean Hannity

    **REPORT: Nation's largest cities 'drowning in debt.' NYC tax burden $85K per person, Chicago $119K+.**



    hannity.com

    LIBERAL UTOPIA: Nation’s Largest Cities ‘Drowning in Debt,’ NYC Tax Burden $85K+ PER PERSON | Sean…
    If you're gonna fight, fight like you're the third monkey on the ramp to Noah's Ark... and brother its starting to rain. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  7. #57
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    I am at the point I no longer care; it doesn't faze me to see this suffering and that's the scary part. America has excepted this as well. It is every man, woman and child for themselves

    Homeless population jumps by thousands across the San Francisco Bay Area

    Benjamin Oreskes
    2 hrs ago

    © Ben Margot / Associated Press

    California is spending millions of dollars to stem the tide of homelessness without much to show for it. The latest evidence of that arrived Thursday, when several Bay Area cities and counties reported that their latest tallies of homeless people revealed big increases.

    San Francisco saw a 17% jump in the number of homeless residents over the last two years, according to preliminary results of the city’s point-in-time count.

    In January, volunteers recorded 8,011 homeless people living in shelters and on the streets in the city of roughly 880,000. Their 2017 count logged 6,858 people.

    “The initial results of this count show we have more to do to provide more shelter, more exits from homelessness, and to prevent people from becoming homeless in the first place,” the city’s mayor, London Breed, said in a statement.

    The number of people living in cars and campers grew — a big part of the reason the number of unsheltered people increased, the city said.

    San Francisco has seen rental prices skyrocket, making it a major player in the statewide debate about how to best reduce the number of people living on the streets.

    But Breed did share some good news for her city: Youth and veteran homelessness dipped 10% and 14%, respectively. She also announced that the city’s budget would include $5 million for projects aimed at preventing people from becoming homeless.

    But San Francisco plans to release more extensive findings on homelessness in July that could reveal more troubling trends.

    Farther south in the Bay Area, the number of homeless people living in Santa Clara County increased 31% over the last two years, from 7,394 to 9,706, according to preliminary results released by the county. San Jose saw a surge of 1,822 people, for a total of 6,172 homeless residents living in the county’s largest city.

    "
    We all have a shared responsibility to address this crisis — every city and every neighborhood,” San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said in a statement. “That means we must house homeless neighbors here, not the proverbial ‘somewhere else.’”

    In the East Bay’s Alameda County, the numbers weren’t any better, with a 43% increase since 2017. The homeless population there numbers 8,022, of which 6,312 are unsheltered.

    The full reports for both counties will be released in July as well. The organization that conducted Alameda’s count, EveryOne Home, says that about 1,500 people return to permanent housing every year, but that number is offset by the 3,000 people who fall into homelessness for the first time each year.

    Point-in-time counts are required by the federal government as a way to asses how funding is distributed for homelessness. Statewide, there were an estimated 129,972 homeless people in 2018 — and these increases in homelessness square with a worrisome already trend seen by several counties in Southern California.

    Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties all recorded percent increases in homelessness in the double digits for 2019.

    Los Angeles is expected to release its findings by the end of the month, and local officials are not optimistic that it will show any signs that the problem is abating — even as $619 million was spent last year to grapple with the crisis.

    benjamin.oreskes@latimes.com
    @boreskes


    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ho...cid=spartanntp
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  8. #58
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    Is California ready to ban gas-powered cars? Not yet. But they're thinking about it

    Chris Woodyard
    4 hrs ago

    © Provided by USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Satellite Information Network, Inc. A Los Angeles-area freeway in a file photo. California has notoriously bad traffic and air quality.

    LOS ANGELES — California without gasoline-burning cars? The idea is starting to be floated.


    A top regulator came close Thursday, but ultimately backed away from directly raising the notion of giving the boot to exhaust-belching automobiles, a staple of life in the freeway-happy Golden State for more than a century.

    Speaking at an air-quality workshop in San Diego, Mary Nichols, chair of the California Air Resources Board, was expected to toss in the idea of killing off gas-powered cars based on her prepared remarks. They called for her to list ways in which the state can get tougher on pollution.

    “That might mean, for example, tougher requirements for low-carbon fuels, looking at tighter health-protective regulations on California refineries, doubling down on our enforcement efforts on mobile and stationary sources — and might lead to an outright ban on internal-combustion engines,” according to the remarks obtained by Bloomberg News.

    But when it came to actually delivering the remarks, the direct reference to a gas-engine ban was omitted. In closing the conference, Nichols said if the air can't be cleaned fast enough, tougher measures like "fees, taxes and bans on certain types of vehicles" might be required. She added, "These are things that most of us don't think is the right way to go."

    Nichols wasn't proposing a gas-vehicle ban on a whim, said Simon Mui, senior scientist for the Natural Resources Defense Council. Rather, she was reacting to steps that California may have to take to stay in compliance with toughening federal clean-air regulations. If the state, famous for its smoggy air, were to fall short, it would face sanctions.

    "The feds have clearly put the states into a bind," Mui said after attending the conference.

    In California, a ban on the sale of internal-combustion cars is considered a fanciful idea. In fact, a bill to ban the sale of internal-combustion cars by 2040 was introduced in the California Legislature last year, though it didn't get far.

    “It’s time that we clear the path for emissions-free transportation and take significant steps to achieve our ambitious emissions reduction goals," Assemblyman Phil Ting, a San Francisco Democrat, said in a statement at the time.

    The California New Car Dealers Association opposed the measure, saying the state lacked enough public charging stations to keep all those electrics on the road, that the bill didn't take into account the valuable role played by gas-electric hybrid vehicles and that it was too hard to mandate rules on vehicle sales more than 20 years in the future.

    Already, California is the nation's leader in the sale of electric cars. The association says more than 500,000 are on the road.

    Some experts agree the timing isn't yet right to talk about a gasoline-free future.

    "California has always been a visionary when it comes to 'green' cars," said Ron Cogan, publisher of the Green Car Journal.

    "It's not surprising there are elements in government who want to move us away from internal-combustion cars." But "given the high cost of electric cars and that a great majority of entry-level buyers can't afford them, it's too early about talk about taking gas-powered cars off the road," Cogan said.

    Given the charging challenge and other issues, "so many things have to happen before that is financially or fundamentally possible," he added

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Is California ready to ban gas-powered cars? Not yet. But they're thinking about it


    https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mark...cid=spartanntp
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  9. #59
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    Los Angeles mayor, DEMOCRAT Eric Garcetti, and California governor, DEMOCRAT Gavin Newsom, spent the last two years “exploring” a run for president in 2020. Facing the magnitude of his city/state's problem with homelessness, they were forced to conclude that such a run was not in the cards.



    foxnews.com

    Jim Breslo: California homelessness is so out of control, people are turning to boats – Dems are clueless
    If you're gonna fight, fight like you're the third monkey on the ramp to Noah's Ark... and brother its starting to rain. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  10. #60
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    I will NOT be paying for these; these politicians need to be incarcerated for what they have done to these cities and states

    America's Top Cities Swamped In Debt, Chicago Leads The Way





    "Taxpayers are on the hook for the debts accrued by these underlying government entities, but you would not know it just by looking at the reported data for the city,"

    Sat, 05/18/2019 - 22:00
    1SHARES

    Taxpayers in America's ten biggest cities face an average per taxpayer burden of $50,000 in debt incurred by the county, state and or "off-balance-sheet" transactions by city government entities, according to Truth in Accounting (TIA).
    The taxpayer burden, TIA explains, is the amount residents would have to pay to cover all of a government's debt. "When the unfunded debt of these underlying government units is combined with the county, municipal, and state debt, city taxpayers are on the hook for much more than they think," according to TIA.





    The cities are ranked from top to bottom, on net position, explained Bill Bergman, director of research for TIA. "And it's on that basis that Chicago ranks dead last," he said.
    Chicago taxpayer burden equates to $119,110 in debt per taxpayer, a number that includes debt from Chicago Public Schools (CPS) and the state of Illinois. Bergmans said the most significant burdens on taxpayers is from CPS. He added, CPS has separate financial ledgers.
    "As bad as the picture is for the city, you add a significantly higher debt load once you include the Chicago Public Schools," he said.



    The massive debt load could affect Chicago's S&P Global Ratings, was warned several years ago that its rating could sink into junk unless it passes a budget that addresses the fiscal situation.
    "Taxpayers are on the hook for the debts accrued by these underlying government entities, but you would not know it just by looking at the reported data for the city," the report states.

    Following Chicago, New York City's combined Taxpayer Burden: $85,600; Los Angeles' combined Taxpayer Burden: $56,390; Philadelphia's combined Taxpayer Burden: $50,120.



    "The debt facing school districts in Dallas, Houston and San Antonio don't add nearly as much to the total debt burden facing taxpayers in those cities as most others of the largest 10 cities we studied," Bergman added. "Still, one might have expected better overall financial conditions for those Texas cities in light of economic and demographic trends in the last decade."
    For these cities to pay off its debt, each taxpayer would need to fork over around $50,000 each. Zerohedge readers understand, 60% of millennials don't have $500 in savings ahead of the next recession. So obviously this deadbeat generation that is expected to take over the workforce by 2024 won't have the ability to bail out America's deadbeat cities in the next downturn.
    Which leaves us with the question of the day: Will the Federal Reserve bailout heavily indebted cities in the next crisis?



    https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-...cago-leads-way
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