Under the radar from the prying eyes of the public, South Carolina
made it legal to get rid of their homeless problem. The people were
given a choice, FEMA Camps or jail. The irony of it all was this
happened right at the 50th Anniversary of Civil Liberties in August. The
bad part is different cities from Boston to New York are shipping off
their homeless, and no one cares. Is this coming to a town near you?
In August the city of Colombia, South Carolina, had a problem. A
festival honoring the 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Movement was
coming to town. They couldn’t be seen with all the homeless when guests
arrived from all parts of the United States. So the city council held a
vote and made homelessness a crime.The Columbia City Council unanimously approved the plan, creating special police patrols that would enforce “quality of life” laws involving loitering, public urination and other crimes not necessarily restricted to the homeless population. Those officers would then offer the homeless a choice: Go to jail for their homelessness or be shuffled to a 240-bed, 24-hour shelter on the outskirts of town, which they wouldn’t be allowed to easily leave.Despite some news from the Main Stream Media, and Glenn Beck, it looks like the city went out of their way to begin staffing the 240 bed, 24 hour, razor wire topped FEMA camp that was supposed to be used in case of a disaster according to FEMA. Remember, these areas do not exist according to the news media. However the FEMA site has the plans and the implementations of them. FEMA has even built them for cities such as Galeston, Houston, New York, Boston, New Orleans, and even Colombia. Strange for areas that don’t exist.
That second option isn’t jail, mind you, because the homeless are being confined with the help of a local charitable organization. It’s charitable incarceration, you see. The homeless can leave, but they need to set up an appointment and be shuttled by a van.”~Microsoft Media Net Money
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'Hawaii lawmaker ‘solves’ homeless problem
by destroying their stuff with a sledgehammer'
by destroying their stuff with a sledgehammer'
“I got tired of telling people I’m trying to pass laws,” state Rep. Tom Brower told Hawaii News Now. “I want to do something practical that will really clean up the streets.”
Brower showed the TV News crew how he scours streets for shopping carts that homeless people use to transport their belongings and then uses a sledgehammer to destroy them.’
Read more: Hawaii lawmaker ‘solves’ homeless problem by destroying their stuff with a sledgehammer
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