Colion Noir takes a look at deep blue Seattle’s rampant heroin epidemic, where citizens wake up every morning to find used needles littering their streets and parks.
A few sobering takeaways:
Someone dies of a heroin or opioid overdose every 36 hours in King County.
Seattle gave homeless junkies a small encampment to live in. Result? 103% increase in area crime.
Jewish cemetery had problems with addicts and prostitutes, so they hired security guards. Suddenly, city officials took notice…of people having guns. “Jews with guns? Can’t have that!”
The police want to enforce the law, but elected official won’t let them.
“Seattle stopped enforcing their own laws.”
“I lived in New York under Giuliani, and I watched the broken windows thing in action. It showed how you can clean up a city.”
“MS-13 has moved into Seattle because they know no one is going to do anything about them.”
Homeless people walk into the local supermarket, grab stuff off the shelf, and walk out, and employees are instructed not to intervene.
“If you want to be a criminal, Seattle is a very good place to be.”
Keep in mind that the last Republican Mayor of Seattle was James d’Orma Braman, who left office March 23, 1969.
This entry was posted on Saturday, November 10th, 2018 at 10:49 AM and is filed under Crime, Democrats, Guns, video. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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“the last Republican Mayor of Seattle was James d’Orma Braman, who left office March 23, 1969.”
That’s a stark reminder and warning. Once these people take power, there’s no getting rid of them. And it’s not because they’re good leaders, rather, because they rig the system.
[…] Unlike some of LaPierre’s other flailing moves, this one can largely be written off as a straight-forward cost-saving measure and an inevitably byproduct of the Ackerman McQueen lawsuit. There’s also probably some truth to the “focus” angle as well, though from a self-interested “free blogging content good” perspective, I liked a good deal of what they were doing, such as Noir’s look at the astounding rate of homeless crime in Seattle. […]
[…] Are there parallels between the Anchor-Outs and the homeless plaguing Austin? A few. But there doesn’t appear to be a large crime problem, the people in the boats don’t appear to be dealing drugs, and if they’re on boats, they’re not panhandling or breaking into people’s houses, so the parallels to Adlers seem minimal. Also, if they haul their own garbage (as the video states), they’re not leaving the needles on public streets (or floating in the bay), so there also seems to be little parallel with Seattle’s dystopian RV drug culture. […]
“the last Republican Mayor of Seattle was James d’Orma Braman, who left office March 23, 1969.”
That’s a stark reminder and warning. Once these people take power, there’s no getting rid of them. And it’s not because they’re good leaders, rather, because they rig the system.
“I’ve lost friends and family to stigma and judgement.”
Get a clue. Living in an abandoned house and shooting up is bad, stupid, horrible, dumb,…
But what about their self-esteem???
[…] Unlike some of LaPierre’s other flailing moves, this one can largely be written off as a straight-forward cost-saving measure and an inevitably byproduct of the Ackerman McQueen lawsuit. There’s also probably some truth to the “focus” angle as well, though from a self-interested “free blogging content good” perspective, I liked a good deal of what they were doing, such as Noir’s look at the astounding rate of homeless crime in Seattle. […]
[…] it’s not just New York. Seattle, Portland, Los Angeles, and any other Democrat-run city that’s allowed antifa/#BlackLivesMatter […]
[…] Are there parallels between the Anchor-Outs and the homeless plaguing Austin? A few. But there doesn’t appear to be a large crime problem, the people in the boats don’t appear to be dealing drugs, and if they’re on boats, they’re not panhandling or breaking into people’s houses, so the parallels to Adlers seem minimal. Also, if they haul their own garbage (as the video states), they’re not leaving the needles on public streets (or floating in the bay), so there also seems to be little parallel with Seattle’s dystopian RV drug culture. […]
[…] (Previously.)(Hat tip: Director Blue.) […]