They are rounding people up. It's just not your people yet. It's illegal to be homeless in this country and the poor folks who don't have the sense to keep moving get sent to the camps.
In Colorado there's a branch of law enforcement called the Homeless Outreach Team. Think of 1984's Ministry of Love. They're not there to help the homeless. They're there to put the homeless into those camps. I've seen people by the tens hauled off never to be seen again. There are entire camps that used to be home to thirty plus people standing vacant right now.
It's happening and it's a slow roll. It won't happen all at once. First they will come for the homeless. And there won't be anyone to speak for them. Then they'll come for the radical fringe groups, and you might hear some whisperings of it. But no one will care because "Evil Nazis." Then they will come for you because you posted your opinion on Sup Forums a few times last year.
To avoid click bait: pastebin.com/tUHrF7YH Article explaining what they'll do in plain sight.
You won't find any articles on hauling the homeless off to the camps because they do that to smaller camps. And they do it in the middle of the night. Soon it will be more apparent. Soon it won't just be the homeless.
>they're removing the homeless!! >why did drug crime and breakin-ins drop?
Asher Stewart
I live in CO this state is cucked I wish they would wipe out the street-Nigs.
Dylan Lewis
Trust the fez.
No really shriners are famous for their charity work.
Fun with a purpouse.
Aiden Watson
Wait. I thought libtards WANTED. A gummint big enough to do things for them. What is happening? (LOL)
Grayson Hall
>Didn't read the article >Doesn't understand the slippery slope >doesn't understand that every time they're removed they have to start the cycle again, thus perpetuating the problem of homelessness
They'll come for political dissenters next.
Xavier Brown
Basically, don't fuck up at life or they kidnap you probably for organs and blood. Why let a precious commodity go to waste in grain alcohol and mouthwash?
Jaxon Brown
90% of chronic homeless (people homeless for more than 30 days) are homeless by choice. Most are either wanted fugitives or drug addicts. Fuck the homeless
Wyatt Allen
>They are rounding people up. Not in my fucking city they aren't. These filthy, disgusting, parasitic pieces of shit are everywhere. What can I do to get them rounding these wastes of life sooner?
Mason Smith
I was homeless out west both in CO and in Seattle.
Hate to say it but they need to be rounded up and taken off the streets.
Do you want your little kids picking up used syringes and meth pipes when trying to enjoy a day at the park?
Because that is what comes with the homeless population.
Ive seen it and every city that has a tolerant attitude towards the homless is a degenerate shit hole that is unsafe to raise a family.
Jason Collins
The major city centers of Colorado and Washington are some the most intolerant areas toward the homeless.
I don't think these populations should be left to fester, but I also think they should be treated as people. Rounding up anyone is a step in a very dangerous direction. These people don't have a voice. They need one, badly.
This is a violation of human rights.
Aaron Martin
>Fuck the homeless And a merry Christmas to you too, God bless us, each and every one
Andrew Nelson
I think rounding them up is OK, as long as they're then taken to a place where they're helped to get back on track - drug/alcohol treatment, doctors, help with training for jobs, whatever. I doubt that that's what's happening. They don't have a right to live drunk on the street in cities. If that's the way they want to live, some provision should be made elsewhere.
Jacob Rogers
>wasting time trying to help people who don’t want help During my time at Oxford I saw more homeless people than in any US city, and yet I know for a fact the city puts a ton of resources to trying to help them.
You want to feel warm and fuzzy in your heart? Why don’t you invite them into your 100 square foot apartment, yourself, Ahmed.
Austin Phillips
They kind of do have a right to live drunk on the street. If you're living outside and you're sober you're doing it wrong, but that's my opinion. I've met plenty of homeless who don't do any drugs at all.
When I did it I would find some out of the way spot and get messed up there. Out of sight, out of mind, not bothering the housies.
What's infuriating to me about the whole situation is that these teams are going into camps that have been established, and from what I've seen camps that are away from any roads or stores, and removing them. Then they have the gall to get irritated that they see the homeless population. Because they displaced that homeless population.
Pic related.
Mason White
>During my time at Oxford I saw more homeless people than in any US city I bet they were nearly all Scottish, Oxford and Cambridge are magnets. As a National Socialist I think we have a duty to help our compatriots. If they don't want the help, there's always the gas.
Zachary Sanders
Jews destroy economy while raising the rent and when millions of whites become destitute oy vey what a big problem. let's round up those dirty goyim!
Merry Chrismas you rotten Jew.
Parker Diaz
I have invited them in for a night to get showered and I have been the guy invited in. I've never had a bad experience providing a couch and a shower. I have had bad experiences from housies expecting me to kiss their feet over a shower and a couch, though.
Henry Mitchell
I think setting up camps with water, electricity, medical care etc would be good, but I worry that in no time they'd be absolutely teeming with foreigners. Yes, if they don't bother anybody then that's fine. The poor will always be with us.
James Wood
They can't haul you into a shelter if you live in a van
Adrian Moore
I'm not surprised that most of the rightfags are fine with this. Rounding up people we don't like is ok, BUT DON'T TAKE MUH GUNS AWAY!
Nathan Reyes
If you interact with the homeless enough you lose sympathy for them. Sure there's a few that are mentally ill and should be institutionalized, but the ones that have a coherent thought process are just generally pieces of shit. They will take everything you have and then demand more.
Fundamentally they're broken. They decided to stop producing and only to take from others.
Christopher Williams
You can kill yourself and leave a note. Should do the trick. They might even call your move brave.
Jonathan Myers
You might have a million dollar idea right there. The reason I kept moving was that I couldn't keep my devices charged and my body clean without hopping from truck stop to truck stop. If I had had access to a camp with running water at least part of the day and electricity I would have been able to stay stationary and find a regular job. We dig wells for the poor in Africa all the time. Maybe we should dig some for our own people.
Xavier Morgan
I used to work with the homeless, and I largely agree. I don't think anybody is beyond redemption though. Perhaps some sort of compulsory labour corps might be a solution? These people's lives need structure and discipline. It's no coincidence that a disproportionate number of homeless are veterans - as well as the simple fact that they have the skills to sleep outdoors, they simply can't cope without the structure.
Ian Scott
>Fundamentally they're broken.
I wonder who broke them. I wonder who keeps kicking them when they're down.
Angel Rivera
Hey, Tamwise.
Daniel Reyes
Sounds like a modern day workhouse though. I was researching my family tree, found my great-great-grandfather died in a workhouse in 1911, he must have been one of the last people to do so. But yes, something needs to be done, it's a problem everybody ignores.
Matthew Reyes
The homeless that don't do drugs are true saints. how many selfish people do you know would break if they didn't have their modern conveniences? I see homeless that get beat up and literally only eat, drink, and sleep. They don't even beg. I have seen the kind that do drugs and almost all of them has a fucked up past. Very rarely do I see people pretending to be homeless and you can spot them from a mile away.
The homeless that just are and never bother you outside of you seeing them are more saint than anyone who dares to criticize them. I dare say that those that do criticize them are the type that would begin to commit to crimes to "survive", but they're the first to say get rid of them. The irony in it all is they're setting themselves up to fall into the same pit.
Justice will be served then, but not be served as well.
Jackson Rivera
Checked, and I agree, it isn't a crime to be poor
Ryan Cooper
They're never gonna get it and they're the ones driving the country into it's hypocritical mess. Save your energy for something that matters.
Adrian Peterson
Anecdotal: I used to hang out under a particular bridge when it snowed or rained. When the bridge flooded I had to dart to higher ground.
One day I was down there with some degenerates, yes I do recognize that there are those who deserve what they get, and a housie threw some kind of explosive device down there to flush us out. Those are the people kicking them while they're down. The people who take it upon themselves to light the homeless on fire, to throw molotovs at camps, to hurl pipe bombs under bridges.
I'll have to read about work houses. Never heard of them before, but I expect you have to pay exorbitant amount of rent to stay there? Kind of like a halfway house with twelve people crammed into a two bedroom and all of them paying two thirds of their pay checks to live there?
No, I see a tent city with running water and electricity. You can onmly live there if you show check stubs. You wouldn't have to pay rent, you would just have to show that you work a regular job and are taxed on your job. That is a social saftey net I would like to see.
Isaiah Barnes
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workhouse It wasn't a bad idea in itself, but inhumane in execution. I like the sound of your idea, but what would happen to people who aren't working?
Kevin Sanders
Jews drove this country into the state it's in today. What OP is talking about is a repeat of the Great Depression in America, about 7 million whites were victim of democide.
You simply can't save everyone. But this would be a step in the right direction. It would help if the utility camps were within walking distance of a day labor resource.
Or possibly for those who can't work because the day labor is filled up, volunteering a set amount of hours a week at some establishment.
And there's your structure. I think it would be an ideal stepping stone to self sufficiency.
Captcha: select the bridges.
Leo Barnes
This all sounds good. I'm sure a sensible, humane and relatively inexpensive solution exists (although not a perfect one), when you look at what our societies can accomplish it's terrible that people are sleeping in the street.
Jordan Allen
So the same people supposedly rounding up homeless and putting them in camps are going to come after "Nazis" next? That makes no sense. Putting people in camps is a right-wing thing, so why would they round up their own?
Logan Cooper
You're correct. I think the best way to combat it would be the utility camps. And I think I may have just found my calling.
Anthony Bell
Damn. That's criminal.
Robert Lee
>Boris Borisov
Aaron Morales
Because it sets a nasty precedent that people can be rounded up for living a life that the establishment doesn't agree with. Once that precedent is set, all bets are off. What comes next is thoughtcrime.
Jacob Brown
My grandparents are survivors of this time and it is why I live in the PNW and not North Carolina. My grandfather was in the work camps.
Thomas Campbell
And yet those people who do these horrendous acts won't be held to the same standards as a regular criminal. The homeless are not seen as people. They're seen as trash to be burned.
There's an old green text story about just that. I'll see if I can find it.
Captcha is still sending me bridges. Spooky.
Isaac Gray
It's turned out well for you then. I wasn't implying that the article was wrong (just reading it now), just thought his name was funny given that the thrust of the article is that Russia dindu nuffin in the Holomodor. I think what happened in America in the 1930s has gone down the memory hole.
Ryan Rodriguez
I'm getting bridges as well, I do worry about the captcha and the Google AI
Camden Martin
They'll never believe you.
Blake Brown
Can't find the story but I'll sum it up. >Kid gets kicked out of house >Has to find some safe dry spot to sleep >Wakes up in the middle of the night to warm liquid streaming over him >Starts yelling, the guy pissing on him freaks out and runs off >Realizes the smell isn't piss >It's kerosene
Also anecdotal, but after living out there and seeing what I've seen I know this isn't isolated.
Levi Jenkins
>I think what happened in America in the 1930s has gone down the memory hole.
Along with the rest of (((their))) crimes.
Oliver Myers
I have to try.
Kevin Thompson
Halfway through reading it, I think the idea of American Kulaks is an excellent meme, definitely has legs. Far more should be made of this.
Kevin Carter
Thanks for that. They use the term "rural and suburban retard" now.
Austin Bennett
"American Gulag" for the WPA is also excellent, something could be made out of this
Aaron Collins
>There is another thing which explains the almost demonic likeness between PWA and GULAG. The administration was headed by none other than the 'American Beriya', Secretary of Interior Affairs Harold Ickes, who, starting from 1932, sent more than two million people (!) to youth unemployment camps. Their monthly salary was $30, out of which they were obliged to pay $25 to the state. >Their monthly salary was $30, out of which they were obliged to pay $25 to the state. I don't think any American would think this was OK
Michael Hughes
Check, one two. Is this thing on?
Daniel Gomez
WPA?
William Gutierrez
Godspeed and nice doubledubs.
Cooper Morris
>doubledubs No such thing. The GET is the last set of repeating n*mbers; in his case it's 44
Benjamin Barnes
June 4, 1944 took care of the ones who weren't ok with it.
Juan Sanders
Sorry typo, PWA, the labour camps
Thomas Gomez
Public Works Administration. How Orwellian...
Ryder Roberts
Don't mind the flag.
In the days of the first Great Depression Americans camped on the Whitehouse front lawn. If we could organize a peacful protest on their lawn with "Utility Camps Now" signs, among other things, I think that would be a good start to bringing attention and awareness to this cause.
We could bring back Hoover Flags.
The signs could read, "First water, then power, then work."
Liam Jenkins
>June 4, 1944 took care of the ones who weren't ok with it What happened then? I dread to think what you're going to tell me.
Cooper Davis
You also wouldn't have to be homeless to advocate for this. At the moment I'm housed up. But for the right cause I would drop my comfortable living arrangements and make my way to the Whitehouse Lawn.
This could be an Occupy movement that actually has a purpose.
John Perez
Normandy.
Gabriel Roberts
It wouldn't end well. >Bonus Army was the name for an assemblage of some 43,000 marchers—17,000 U.S. World War I veterans, their families, and affiliated groups—who gathered in Washington, D.C. in the summer of 1932 to demand cash-payment redemption of their service certificates.
Tyler Young
6th, brainlet, the weather stopped them going on the 4th. I'm loving this article, it brings up a whole "Secret History of America" thing
Mason Baker
Political dissenters are free to arm up, retarded if they don't. 2nd amendment and all that. Perhaps the retard anti-gunners will finally realize it has jack shit to do with hunting and punching paper.
Camden Gray
It may not, but this is the first cause I've ever had much of a personal stake in. It's time someone give these people a voice.
Sebastian Torres
Shit. The 6th.
Kevin Hill
>Be me >live in area with tons of homeless >never give a single penny to homeless blacks but do give to homeless whites >car breaks down in shitty area >don’t know anything about cars >old homeless white man with big beard helps me fix car >I give him some money as thanks >he tells me he has been living in the woods for decades, occasionally makes trips to town to buy supplies like toilet paper >wizened old man who wanders the woods and has big beard and carried a walking staff >possibly was Odin wandering Midgard >I gave him money on Yule >mfw I met Odin
Camden Perez
>It's time someone give these people a voice.
They voice they need is not the voice they want.
Noah Taylor
>t. getless faggot
Elijah Green
Sounds familiar.
>Raining, find an awning to sleep under >Write on cardboard, "Just keeping dry" >Hold up to camera >Lights immediately cut off like someone was watching >Getting my bedroll ready when I see car lights up ahead >Guy's car is broken down >Help him push >He lets me hang out in his car until the rain stops >Become friends >Trade stories >He's an editor for a publishing company >I'm a writer, although unpublished >Gives me his contact information
Joseph Thompson
If only you knew why those fezes are red
Eli Jones
Please tell.
Hunter Roberts
Something to do with the Muslims overrunning the Christians, it looks like. But if that's not it I am curious.
Lincoln Parker
>I think rounding them up is OK, as long as they're then taken to a place where they're helped to get back on track The problem with such a policy, if it were to exist at all, is that it will be used as a smokescreen for organ harvesting and forced labor, just like the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and Child Protection Services are smokescreens for child sex trafficking.
Xavier Bailey
Precisely. And constantly moving them just for the simple fact that no one wants to see a tent city anywhere just sends them back to square one. Some of them have work set up near by, have places to shower, places to do laundry, but now they have to start all over again every time the housies flush them out or the city floods the sewers.
Pauli Murray, who would later become a lawyer, writer, black civil rights activist and episcopal priest, arrived at Camp Tera on the advice of her doctor at the end of 1933. Living on the edge of poverty and diagnosed with pleurisy, her time there was cut short after she clashed with the camp's director, Miss Mills. An ambulance driver during World War I and an authoritarian, Mills attempted to run the camp on semi-military lines. Murray had a copy of 'Das Kapital' in her bags and when director Mills found it, she ejected her from the camp. Murray would later become a close friend of ER.
I think what I'll do is go into the local camps where I am now so I can get an idea of their particular struggle. Then pitch the idea to a local paper.
If the paper doesn't pick it up, and it probably won't, I'll throw it on Vocal or Pastebin. I see a problem and a viable solution to at least part of that problem.
If you were me, how would you go about doing this?
Nolan Jenkins
Are you homeless? What's your situation? There should be some though put into this. Not sure how to proceed.
Caleb Moore
Story's been told a hundred thousand times at least. Vagrancy has always been frowned on.
Elijah Wright
>Putting people in camps is a right-wing thing
Maoist china alone had more individuals in forced labor camps than the rest of the world combined.
Ryder Collins
>homeless are gone Maybe because your government is doing its job and finding them something to do so they're not homeless anymore?
God you tinfoils are cringy. What next? They're being used a livestock for vampires? Get real or get help. Take your pills
Blake James
This. There's no such things as vampires sacrificing droves of people to awaken Hm'knichas.
Liam Roberts
You're right. LARPfags need to be hauled in camps if you ask me. fucking lunatics I swear
Henry Butler
This. Take your pills you schizos
Robert Garcia
Don't bother Sup Forums is reddit now Boomers and normies ruined this place with their autism
Hunter Edwards
Retard why are you talking to yourself?
Luis Rogers
/thread
Jason Butler
I was for years. That's why I want to do what I can to give back. A utility camp seems like the best possible way to do it. Before a utility camp can be established awareness has to be raised. But not awareness from an outside looking in perspective.
The way I see it, many of these people need ways to work and keep their bodies clean.
Four posts by this ID. You're calling someone else a schitzo while talking to yourself. Thanks for the bumps, though.
Christopher Collins
I'll tell you what happened-- a bunch of homeless folk got three hots and a cot for a couple days in county lockup, told they'll catch aggravated tresspass if they go back, and released from county to find a new spot. Those with warrants will sit longer, almost everybody caught new charges and is on probation for their possessions like drugs and knives, etc.
The only camp they went to is county jail.
t. homeless dude.
Ethan Watson
Oh fuck
Do I delete my posts from my google account settings?
Tyler Cooper
I know where you're coming from. This is different. This is alarming. This is the start of something that could affect more than just the homeless population and it needs to be stopped in its tracks.
Gabriel Campbell
I forgot about IDs lol I haven't been on Sup Forums for years . How to delete posts again? I forgot.
Angel Parker
>it has jack shit to do with hunting and punching paper.
I mean it has a little bit to do with it, it's just a secondary function of it instead of the primary function
Who gives a fuck about the homeless? Produce or die, our society has no room for parasites.