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    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 6 10:07:31 2023
    XPost: or.politics, seattle.politics, ca.politics
    XPost: alt.law-enforcement, alt.economics

    from https://nypost.com/2023/12/05/opinion/nycs-migrant-crisis-is-one-of-its-own-making-we-cannot-house-the-world/

    NYC’s migrant ‘crisis’ is one of its own making — we cannot house the world
    By Social Links forSeth Barron
    Published Dec. 5, 2023, 7:34 p.m. ET

    Migrants wait outside building
    Migrants wait in the cold to go into a shuttered Catholic School on the
    Lower East Side.
    Kevin C. Downs for NY Post
    MORE ON:
    MIGRANTS
    Bipartisan City Council duo call for more transparency on migrant spending
    NYC Comptroller Brad Lander keeps grandstanding on migrants, making
    crisis worse
    Well-dressed Chinese migrants look like tourists on California border,
    as lawyer says asylum-seekers are ‘at least middle class’
    Mayor Adams once again heading to DC for meetings on worsening migrant
    crisis —after last trip cut short by FBI raid
    New York City’s migrant crisis is turning into something out of a Marx Brothers movie, only it’s not funny and has no end in sight.

    The city is facing a massive hotel and food bill for its “newest
    neighbors” at the same time tax revenue has plummeted.

    But instead of pulling in the welcome mat and saying, “Sorry, no vacancies,” we are getting ready to cut spending on police, libraries
    and other municipal services.

    Calling the situation a “crisis” is a misnomer. A crisis comes from something unexpected, like an illness or a widespread financial collapse.

    But New York City’s problem — accepting hundreds of thousands of
    migrants from around the world and taking on the responsibility of
    feeding and housing them indefinitely — is totally self-imposed.

    It’s like lighting your bed on fire and wondering why the house burned down.

    Almost a half-century ago New York, facing a series of public-interest lawsuits, agreed to provide shelter to a few hundred homeless hard cases.

    That original consent decree mushroomed into the multibillion-dollar
    shelter system that, until just a few years ago, cared mostly for local
    New Yorkers — especially single mothers and their children — who
    couldn’t afford a place to live.

    The “right to shelter” is totally unique in America. Until recently, no other jurisdiction accepted the premise it is the public’s
    responsibility to house and feed anyone who demands it.

    The possibility of abuse has always existed, of course, but was balanced
    by the fact the shelter system was inconvenient and relatively unpleasant.

    Nobody, the thinking went, was going to take advantage of the city’s generosity who didn’t absolutely need it as a last resort.

    That was until Joe Biden came to the White House promising to reverse
    his predecessor’s supposedly harsh immigration policies.

    His Day One promise to suspend deportations of illegal immigrants and
    end the “Remain in Mexico” rule prompted a rush of migrants parroting
    bogus claims of “well-founded” persecution.

    Millions of people from all corners of the globe have streamed across
    the southern border, and a solid percentage of them have headed straight
    to New York City, where we were foolish enough to rent entire hotels in
    the middle of Manhattan to shelter these migrants.

    SEE ALSO
    Brad Lander
    EDITORIAL
    NYC Comptroller Brad Lander keeps grandstanding on migrants, making
    crisis worse
    News quickly spread down the line that New York City — where we cared
    enough to make sure that the free food was “culturally appropriate” and
    the Internet and laundry service were prompt — was the place to come.

    There’s an old saying that a luxury indulged in twice soon becomes a necessity. That applies to social services, too.

    Once the city established a high standard of accommodation for the
    “newest New Yorkers,” any cuts to the program were regarded as inhumane.

    Mayor Adams’ efforts to draw reasonable limits around migrants’ expectations have failed miserably, as advocates and elected officials
    condemn time limits on shelter stays as a human-rights violation.

    Progressives latch onto proposed solutions that achieve nothing. Turning
    Floyd Bennett Field into a migrant-housing center was hailed by Gov.
    Hochul as a slam dunk, but migrants have refused to move there, and the
    Legal Aid Society calls the facility “not humane.”

    Expedited work authorizations were supposed to solve the problem, but it
    turns out few migrants have applied for them. Why should they?

    New York is a sanctuary city, after all, and has always tolerated people working “off the books.” Why sign up to pay taxes when you can work for cash, and there’s no penalty for doing so?

    Mayor Adams and the rest of the city’s elected leadership have begged
    the White House to cover the cost of housing the migrants, but the Biden administration’s attitude is that this end of the mess is our
    responsibility.

    101
    What do you think? Post a comment.
    And it isn’t wrong about that. Nobody forced New York to promise to
    house, feed and clothe the world’s poor, in the middle of the most
    desirable real estate on Earth, forever.

    Adams has the right idea in limiting shelter stays. But until the city
    ditches the outdated “right to shelter” requirement it has imposed on itself, the trend is totally unsustainable.

    The old paradox has finally been realized: You can’t have open borders
    and a welfare state without collapsing the system.

    Seth Barron is managing editor of The American Mind and author of “The
    Last Days of New York.”

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    101
    FILED UNDER ERIC ADAMS ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS IMMIGRATION KATHY HOCHUL
    MIGRANTS 12/5/23
    READ NEXT
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    tippytoes
    17 hours ago

    Adams has been talking about amending the Right to Shelter since last
    Spring. He's not doing much besides dangling the solution and taking as
    many opposing arguments as possible. Even IF the Right to Shelter
    remained unchanged (which it should NOT), Adams has no basis to apply it
    to non-US citizens...

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    DJM123
    7 hours ago

    So perhaps it is time to accept that blather for the mouths of NYC
    politicians is just that - unless you have to believe what they say.
    Stop electing these people.


    Reply

    15

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    T O
    4 hours ago

    Stop electing these people is correct but in doing so voters need to
    start at the foundation by not re-electing Biden.

    Reply


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    Zeno
    4 hours ago

    He did acquire many new fancy clothes and a diamond ear stud.


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    Kim Mary
    4 hours ago

    Here in Texas we are shipping illegals up to nyc as fast as possible. Especially the single males with face tats. You are welcome.


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    2

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    Tun O'Reilly
    9 hours ago

    Why should NY City get Federal money? That would mean millions of
    Americans across the country end up paying for New York's failed
    policies and keeping their mayor in office. We never voted for their
    mayor; New Yorkers did. So the billions of dollars it will take to
    support the migrants should c...

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    Leeann
    7 hours ago

    Did you vote for Biden who created this mess?

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    1 reply
    Kxyzzy
    6 hours ago

    I am against giving FED Money to any Sanctuary City. It was their
    choice, not the rest of the nation's and to force us to finance their
    decisions is unacceptable. If NYC goes into bankruptcy then it will be necessary for the administration to detail how they plan to get in good
    fiscal shape. It ...

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