RESTORED 8/22/22
This addition to the original article is comprised primarily of one article from the American Thinker. It is so profound and well written I felt compelled to share it. It paints a very clear picture of what is happening to our Nation.
From my own personal experience, I have learned a lot about how we are losing our right to our own personal abodes. It is shocking to say the least. God allowed me to experience things in my life to help me understand the big picture.
As a young adult growing a family, I started to observe a lot about available housing. This started back in the 70s and 80s. My husband loved to house hunt. He was intent on accumulating wealth and retiring at an early age, in comfort. He loved to dream about home ownership and the type and style of house he desired. He made a comfortable living, so he was not looking at the lower end of the housing market.
I began to notice there were two types of construction that dominated the industry. One was multi-family apartments and condominiums, and the other was walled communities full of luxury, extremely large homes. I would call them MANSIONS. It was a strange juxtaposition. I rarely saw new construction of what I would call “affordable, single family homes”. Even more curious, was the fact that they continued to build new multi-family housing projects while existing ones in the same areas were being abandoned. I often wondered how so many people could afford those humungous homes that seemed to be dominating the landscape. This gave the illusion that Americans were becoming a nation of extreme wealth. Which of course, was a total lie.
I found the entire interest rate manipulation to be curiously arbitrary. That puzzled and upset me.
After my divorce, I was exploring various employment options in search of financial security. I took a position as a Loan Officer, and quickly found myself promoted to Loan Processor. Those two positions provided me with great first-hand revelation of what was happening in the Real Estate industry. I was so disgusted and terrified of what I learned that I quickly packed my things and abandoned that world. I did not want anything to do with the corruption of that industry.
Here are some of the things that I observed.
Updated 9/27/19
Are you ready to be strong armed by the LAW? How would you react to something like this? Maybe we all need a camera in our car! Just for our protection.
UPDATE 9/13/19
You need to understand that the NWO intend to take EVERYTHING away from you! To make you TOTALLY DEPENDENT ON THE STATE! No JOB, NO HOME, NO CAR, NO FREEDOM! In order to stay alive you will be FORCED to take the MARK and become the property of the NWO! That is what this WEATHER WARFARE is all about. DESTRUCTION of your PERSONAL PROPERTY!
WAKE UP! THE NIGHTMARE IS AT YOUR DOOR!
Here’s the Video with the full story! Don’t forget to subscribe and share!
There is so few words I can find to describe the deplorable agenda behind the article we are about to uncover. There wasn’t even an effort made to hide their intentions. Almost as if they are laughing in the face of each of every one of us because we’re not intelligent enough to understand their direction!
If you ever needed a clearer example of what they want for our Country, let this be that example. When you read the words and see the references it will all become crystal clear. They will stop at nothing to re-shape America into ANYTHING but what it is and they will steal our Liberty, our Freedom and our Rights to do it!
Watch the broadcast for all the information and thank you again for helping to spread the word about my Justus Knight Broadcasts!!
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God Speed and God Bless,
Justus
For More Information (references) See:
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Update 9/10/19
Published on Sep 9, 2019
Reading the SB 714 legislation, all the threats posed, the heavy burden filling out exemption form, & not being able to charge for exemption renewals, I’d be surprised if even one doctor will be willing to write exemptions.
2 years, 11 months ago
NY To Kick Unvaccinated Kids Out Of School, So Parents Storm Gov Building, Bust Thru Barricade
Published on Sep 9, 2019
Update 9/5/19
Published on Sep 4, 2019
THE TRUTH ABOUT GUNS
The Federal Threat Assessment, Prevention and Safety (TAPS) Act – A Complete Analysis
Bigstock
By Andrew TuohyI first learned of the Threat Assessment, Prevention, and Safety (TAPS) Act (H.R. 838) when I saw a tweet by Texas representative Dan Crenshaw. Because he mentioned it in the same tweet as state red flag laws, I immediately assumed it was some sort of federal red flag law. Since I have constitutional concerns about red flag laws, my initial impression of the TAPS Act was thus not an entirely positive one.
The first thing I did was to Google it and came up with a one-page PDF from the office of Rep. Brian Babin, who introduced the Act, along with the full text of the bill and also several blog articles and Facebook posts which did not hold back anything in their vitriolic criticism of the TAPS Act. After reading all of these sources, spending several days researching the issue, and reaching out to both sides for comment, I was ready to sit down and write this article.
This is not intended to advocate for or against the TAPS Act – only to provide an analysis of each section in order to explain what it means and what it does. I encourage you to read the full text of the TAPS Act. It’s not terribly long…in fact, this article is longer, by word count, than the Act itself.
Section 1 – The Title
Section 1 of the TAPS Act simply gives us an explanation of the name. TAPS stands for “Threat Assessment, Prevention, and Safety.”
Section 2 – “Sense of Congress”
Section 2 is the part of the bill where Congress explains why the bill exists. There is nothing functional or impactful here – just an expression that something should be done about indiscriminate incidents of targeted violence, that the US can do something about it, and that one way to do something about it is to get all the different levels of government together to talk about how to do something.
Section 3 – Definitions
Section 3 is a long one, because it defines all the various terms used in the bill. Most of these are pretty benign, like defining “educational entities” and “mental health service professional.” This section also defines “state” to include DC, the US Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Guam, the (American) Marianas, and American Samoa.
There is, however, one very important definition in this section. That is §3(2), “Behavioral Threat Assessment and Management,” which I will refer to as BTAM throughout this article. It describes this process as identifying people who exhibit “patterns of concerning behavior that indicate an interest, motive, intention, or capability of carrying out an act of violence.”
It says that BTAM involves “investigating and gathering information from multiple sources to assess” whether such people “pose a threat based on articulable facts.” Finally, it includes “the subsequent management of such a threat, if necessary.”
There are a couple of ways to look at this. As Campaign for Liberty said in their article on the TAPS Act, “How Liberty Dies,” behavioral threat assessment via the TAPS Act “destroys virtually half the Bill of Rights. It allows government bureaucrats to spy on you without a warrant (4th Amendment) and take away your gun rights (2nd Amendment) – without your day in court, due process, or even you knowing about it (5th and 6th Amendments).
“Or at least you will not know about it until a SWAT team kicks in your door, shoots your dog, and stands on your throat at 3:00 a.m. And all of this will be based on a bureaucrat’s assessment that you somehow, in some manner, pose a threat to their Big Government schemes or could fit the profile of a one-day ‘possible’ terrorist.”
Another way to look at it is by researching the history of behavioral threat assessment. One of its foremost advocates is Gavin de Becker, whose book “The Gift of Fear” has long been on the list of books I recommend everyone read. In fact, I gave out two dozen copies of that book to my classmates and friends last fall.
Mr. de Becker states that his MOSAIC threat assessment system “is not profiling in that it is always applied to an actual known individual, and it always explores actual behavior and circumstance.”
Behavioral threat assessment programs are currently used by the Secret Service and US Marshals to weed out garden variety steam-blowing from genuine threats to elected officials and judges. If these programs, in operation for decades, have resulted in blatant 2nd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Amendment violations, I am not aware of them.
Section 4 – Creation of a Task Force
Section 4 is the meat of the bill. It directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to establish something called the “Joint Behavioral Threat Assessment and Management Task Force” within 30 days of the enactment of the act. This “task force” has a goal of coming up with a plan, called a “national strategy,” to prevent targeted violence through behavioral threat assessment and management.
The task force is supposed to consider the different needs of communities across the United States. Perhaps most importantly, the “national strategy” is not to be considered a national standard. The way I read that is that the national standard is just a recommendation which states and local governments are free to follow or ignore as they see fit.
The task force is supposed to have 24 or fewer members from a variety of different backgrounds. Two are supposed to be from non-government organizations that have experience in behavioral threat assessment. Two are supposed to be “mental health service professionals.” One is supposed to be a state or local prosecutor (a Guamanian prosecutor might qualify). Two should come from “educational entities.” The list goes on, including the Secret Service, FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit, US Marshals, VA, DSS, NCIS, and more.
One common thread: all of these people are supposed to be experts in behavioral threat assessment and management. But they can also consult with outside experts who aren’t on the task force.
They aren’t going to be paid more for being on the task force, and they’ll be a part of it until their boss (say, the director of the FBI if they came from the FBI) replaces them.
I saw a comment on Facebook about how the next subsection, §4(d)(1), allowed the task force to make up whatever rule they wanted in order to “deal with” someone identified as a threat. That subsection reads, in full:
(d) Operating Rules and Procedures.–
(1) Rules and procedures.–Any member of the Task Force may
propose to develop or change existing operating rules and
procedures of the Task Force consistent with the functions of
the Task Force. Any change to such operating rules and
procedures shall be adopted upon a majority vote of the Task
Force.Reading this in context, as is appropriate for legal documents, what this means is that if the Task Force originally met on Tuesdays at 7:30 and wanted to switch to Wednesdays at 8, they could vote to do that. Or they could vote to submit their findings in .pdf form instead of .docx format.
Objectively speaking, “Develop or change existing operating rules and procedures of the Task Force consistent with the functions of the Task Force” is not the same as “change the Constitution of the United States of America.”
The next section goes over the staffing for the task force, including a staff director who will make no more than $166,500 at current executive pay rates, and no more than three additional staff who will be paid according to the standard GS scale. They can also hire experts and consultants for “temporary and intermittent” services. Finally, other federal agencies and departments send over personnel to help the task force out, but their services will be reimbursable – as I see it, out of the task force’s budget.
There’s a short blurb about the powers of the task force – how any member of the task force, if authorized, can take any action which the task force is authorized by this section. What are the powers of the task force? We’re getting to that.
Under subsection (g), the Task Force is supposed to “secure directly” from federal departments or agencies the “official data” necessary to accomplish its duties. This data is supposed to be “subject to applicable privacy laws and regulations.” As with the definition of behavioral threat assessment and management, there is likely a less sinister definition of “official data” than some might believe, especially as the data is coming from federal agencies and not, say, social media companies providing a list of everyone who likes the NRA on Facebook.
The next two subsections are very boring and deal with acquiring administrative services and contracting with government and private entities for other necessary services. Nothing to see here, move along.
Suddenly, we’ve arrived at the Report subsection, §4(j). It says that no later than 120 days after the “enactment of the Act,” the Task Force will submit its report to the appropriate committees of Congress and the DHS Secretary. The report will include recommendations on the “national strategy” and how to develop and implement said national strategy. Finally, in §4(k), we learn that the Task Force will “terminate” 180 days after the “enactment of the Act” and in §4(l) that the Task Force will have one million dollars to carry out everything described in Section 4.
For those of you counting the days, the numbers mean that if the Task Force is organized at the end of its allowed one month after the Act becomes law, it has three months to come up with its report, then it dissolves two months after that. From these deadlines I derive that the Task Force is not an ongoing group or council intended to pass judgment on individuals but a bunch of eggheads who get together to write a report and then go back to their old jobs. But let’s take a look at what the report needs to contain. That’s section 5 of the act.
Section 5 – What Does the Task Force Report Have to Contain?
Rather than let the Task Force come up with whatever report it decided to submit, the bill requires some pretty specific things be included. All of them must be part of that §4(j) report submitted within 120 days of the “enactment of the Act.”
First up is the use of “existing… infrastructure, workforce, and experience including the use of personnel, communication channels, and information sharing capabilities of fusion centers” and “a model behavioral threat assessment and management process.” The way I read this section is that they’re saying, “hey, let’s not reinvent the wheel here – how can we best use the people and networks and facilities we have to get the right information to the people who need it now?”
Next there’s the “unit support program,” which has the goal of helping out “government agencies and private entities in the implementation of” behavioral threat assessment and management units, consulting on real-world complex behavioral threat assessment and management cases or programs, promote coordination between government agencies and private entities with protective public safety responsibilities, and support collaboration between the BTAM units of various government agencies at all levels.
As I see it, the Unit Support Program is the potatoes to the Task Force’s meat. This is where the strategies developed would be disseminated, where local units could consult with the head honchos who have more experience, and where people would make sure that critical information didn’t disappear into a data vacuum.
There are also, under §5(3) and §5(4), a Training Program and a School Violence Prevention Program. The former, as the name implies, is intended to help lower level agencies spin up their own behavioral threat assessment units, while the latter is basically a copy of the Unit Support Program described above but with a focus on schools.
Section 5 closes out with the requirement that the report include recommendations about how to keep mental health support professionals in the loop during the behavioral threat assessment process, subject to federal and state laws.
Section 6 – Congress Gets a Say
Section 6 says that the DHS Secretary will develop the national strategy and “consider” the recommendations made by the Task Force under the previous section in developing the strategy, but also consider the “diverse needs and existing resources of different communities.” I’m not quite sure that needed to be in there – it’s doubtful that a one-size-fits-all solution would make sense – but I suppose it might placate rural sheriffs’ offices who don’t want to have a program designed for urban police departments foisted upon them.
The second half of §6 is the important bit. It says that the national strategy shall take effect 180 days after the “enactment of the act” (I love that phrase for some reason) unless Congress enacts a joint resolution of disapproval of the national strategy during that 180-day period.
So if (most likely between the 120-day report deadline and the 180-day implementation deadline) Congress decides that it doesn’t want the gun owner reeducation camps proposed by the Task Force, Congress can make the whole thing come to a screeching halt through a joint resolution – that is, both houses of Congress.
There are no gun owner reeducation camps, of course, comrade. I’ll hold your rifle for safekeeping while you hop in the back of this deuce-and-a-half headed for the Berkeley Wellness Center for Freedom from Firearms.
Section 7 – Implementation
Section 7 is where the rubber meets the road. While it may have seemed like we were talking about implementation in Section 5, that was a list of requirements of what needed to be in the “national strategy” recommendation report – Section 7 is the lodestar for making it happen. Basically, the DHS Secretary is going to put the plan in motion and begin assisting agencies at all levels of government, plus private entities “with protective or public safety responsibilities”, with information and training services.
There’s going to be a senior official within DHS who is put in charge of running the program, and they’re going to need to make sure everyone involved – those agencies and entities – are talking to each other about the program, plus they’ll have to be mindful of the finances and budgeting involved as well as what else is going on at the federal level related to the “national strategy.” If that sounds like a lot for one person, it is, and I’m sure this is going to involve an office with some staff.
Or maybe not. The next section says the Secretary can enter into contracts with public and private organizations which have BTAM expertise to “assist with the implementation” of the national strategy. There are several such organizations out there, and I’m sure they’ll be jockeying for federal contract dollars when the time comes. I foresee a bid protest.
The program has to have a website! The website has to be interactive. It has to have data. Wow. Sadly, the website can’t have “classified or law enforcement sensitive data or processes and sources.” I guess that means no Uber-like user interface showing how close your FEMA bus is to the camp.
There must be an annual report to Congress and it has to include (1) information on how many people are working on the program, (2) how many contracts have been entered into, (3, 4, 5, 6) how many states, agencies, and entities (including educational entities) are participating, (7, 8) a formal evaluation of how the program is working (or not working) and how well all the different feds are getting along, (9) a look at how things might change in the future regarding threats, and (10) accounting of waivers under §8(d), which we’ll get to later. Finally, there has to be an annual briefing to Congressional committees, at which I presume details of the annual report will be discussed.
Section 8 – Grants, But No, Not For Affordable Housing
To get cash-strapped state, tribal, local, educational, and NGO types to stand up their own BTAM units, the feds are helpfully going to throw money at the problem. “Eligible entities,” which I just gave a list of in the previous sentence, can apply for grants by providing information required by DHS. The entity must provide matching funds, but not on a 50/50 basis – only “not less than” 10 percent of the amount of the grant. Will some agencies choose to pay more than 10 percent? I doubt it.
What if they can’t come up with any matching funds? That’s where the §8(d) waivers come in. If an entity demonstrates a need for a waiver or reduction in the matching funds amount, DHS “may” grant their request.
Section 9 – $$$
This section is important because it not only outlines how many dollars can be spent administering the bill, but how those dollars may not be spent.
The program, including implementation (§7) and grants (§8), has a $25 million budget for each of the four fiscal years it would be in operation. That money cannot be spent “to train any individual in the use of a firearm”, but more importantly, it cannot be spent to “encourage or discourage the otherwise legal ownership and use of firearms.”
The way I interpret this phrase, that means the behavioral threat assessment management units couldn’t, for example, go out and start teaching school kids to inform on their parents’ AR-15s. Nor could they do a host of other things that would lead to anti-gun results. On the other hand, they also can’t advocate for people to go out and buy their own guns.
Finally, this section says that just because its dollars can’t be spent on firearms training, that doesn’t have any effect on other laws which authorize providing firearms or training. Fairly self-explanatory.
Summary
To write this article, I read the entire bill three times. I spent several days parsing the details of various sections. I reached out to a Congressional office and to Campaign for Liberty and to conservative social media personality John Burk (both CFL and John Burk have spoken out against the bill). I asked the Congressional office how the bill might contain Constitutional violations, the specific meaning of §4(d)(1), and why certain agencies were listed as sources of experts while others were not. I asked CFL and John Burk to identify which sections of the bill, specifically, they felt were violations of the Bill of Rights.
While I received a very rapid response from a Congressional staffer speaking on background, I did not receive a response from either Campaign for Liberty or John Burk.
As I said at the beginning, this article is not intended to advocate for or against the bill. I’ve only sprinkled lame jokes throughout because sitting down to analyze a bill is a very boring endeavor. I’m not telling any of you to call your Congressional representative and ask them to vote for it or vote against it. You should make up your own mind after reading the bill.
What you should not do, however, is assume that the TAPS Act tears up the Bill of Rights. It doesn’t. I pushed and pulled and stretched my interpretation of every sentence of the bill. I can’t see any Constitutional violations. I certainly don’t see any 2nd, 4th, 5th, or 6th Amendment violations. They just aren’t there. I have no idea where those criticisms are coming from. They are simply not based in reality.
We should be evaluating the TAPS Act on the merits of what it actually says, not an emotional reaction to a boogeyman that doesn’t exist. If anyone reading this can identify any part of the TAPS Act that is a violation of our Constitutional rights, please point that out to me. I would like to know – honestly.
The TAPS Act is also not a red flag law, and you shouldn’t confuse the two. What the TAPS Act does is form a group of nerds to make some recommendations on behavioral threat assessment, give Congress the option to take them or not, then give DHS the responsibility of training various agencies and entities in behavioral threat assessment. If you think that’s a good idea, fine. If you think that’s a bad idea, fine. But it doesn’t authorize any specific actions by any government official, at any level, against any private citizen.
This article originally appeared at omahaoutdoors.com and is reprinted here with permission.
Published on May 29, 2019
CENSORED ON YOUTUBE
REPOSTED ON BITCHUTE
SEE BELOW.
Get this video into the hands of EVERYBODY YOU CAN! This is SURREAL. MAKE THIS VIRIAL…this is INSANE!!
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You.. 3 years, 2 months ago
Update 8/23/19
Censorship is out of control. Youtube and Google are censoring all the alternate news and weather channels. I had a very long list of channels that I knew were good reliable sources of information. It grows shorter and shorter every day due to CENSORSHIP. These channels are being blocked, deleted or harassed with interference and digital shenanigans, some are receiving threats of violence against themselves or their families, and some have been arrested. FREEDOM of speech is becoming a thing of the past.
TO WATCH THE VIDEO ON BITCHUTE: CLICK HERE
Screwedtubed men with lipstick
Streamed live 16 hours ago
Published on Aug 21, 2019
Unconventional warfare training being staged in 21 North Carolina counties, Army says
Special warfare exercises kept under the radar in North Carolina
Known as Robin Sage training, the unconventional warfare exercises are like live-action role playing in the extreme, with hostile engagement between Special Forces students, volunteer civilians and soldiers out of Fort Bragg. It begins Aug. 30, 2019.Known as Robin Sage training, the unconventional warfare exercises are like live-action role playing in the extreme, with hostile engagement between Special Forces students, volunteer civilians and soldiers out of Fort Bragg. It begins Aug. 30, 2019.
A series of Special Forces military training exercises — including gunfire with blanks — is being staged across 21 North Carolina counties starting Aug. 30, and the Army is telling the public not to be alarmed at the suspicious-looking activity.
Known as Robin Sage training, the unconventional warfare exercises can be likened to live-action role playing in the extreme, with hostile engagement playing out between Special Forces students, volunteer civilians and soldiers out of Fort Bragg. It continues through Sept. 12, said a press release.
Heavily populated counties like Wake, Cumberland and Union counties are among training sites, according to the U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center at Fort Bragg.
The students will match wits with more seasoned soldiers, who will “act as realistic opposing forces and guerrilla freedom fighters,” officials said in a release.
Advance notice has become a critical part of the annual program, since one soldier was killed and another was wounded in 2002 by a Moore County deputy who mistook Robin Sage exercises for criminal activity.
A similar Fort Bragg military exercise in 1997 created panic in Charlotte, when uptown residents were terrified by the sounds of 100 commandos attacking a warehouse. The “urban warfare” assault incorporated helicopters and “simulated bombs and gunfire,” the Charlotte Observer reported.
The exercises starting next week will involve engagements against a fictitious country known as Pineland, officials said. Staging areas will be largely on private land in 10 of the 21 counties, but the others may feel some impact, officials said.
The 21 counties include Alamance, Anson, Cabarrus, Chatham, Cumberland, Davidson, Davie, Guilford, Harnett, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, Randolph, Richmond, Robeson, Rowan, Scotland, Stanly, Union and Wake counties, officials said.
Local law enforcement agencies and government officials have been alerted, a release said.
“Residents may hear blank gunfire and see occasional flares. Controls are in place to ensure there is no risk to persons or property,” officials said. “Residents with concerns should contact local law enforcement officials, who will immediately contact exercise control officials.”
Update 8/20/19
This is BOGUS and if you believe they are draining these lakes for YOUR protection, I got a bridge in Arizona I want to sell you. This is about AGENDA 2030. This is about taking away more jobs, confiscating your property and forcing you to live at their mercy! Wake up! If you have not been affected yet, you will be. It is coming to you. Whether it is in the shape of a flood, a fire, a dam burst/or removal, a hurricane, high speed tornadoes, wild animals, or robots; you will be forced from jobs, your homes, your cars and herded into FEMA camps or “SMART CITIES”. WAKE UP!
Published on Jul 17, 2019
Update 8/18/19
Published on Aug 17, 2019
Published on Aug 16, 2019
On the first day of school in one Iowa district, there will be some empty desks.
The Hamburg Community School District, hammered by spring flooding, will start Aug. 23 with about 20% fewer students.
“We lost 200 homes, and there’s just nowhere for families to come back to,” Superintendent Mike Wells said.
On the eve of a new school year, Iowa and Nebraska districts in hard-hit areas are dealing with displaced students — both losing and gaining them — and expecting some students will enter school still traumatized by their ordeal.
School leaders say they’re determined to make things as normal as possible for them, aware that for some kids, school can be the most consistent and stable thing in their lives.
Hamburg, a town of 1,200 people, saw families scatter into other communities where housing was available.
Last spring, in the immediate aftermath of the flooding, Hamburg, the Bellevue Public Schools and other districts tried to keep things normal. They sent buses into other districts to transport students made homeless by the flooding back to their home school. But since then, as those families take up stable residence elsewhere and lose their homeless status, transporting them from a neighboring district is no longer possible.
“They’re out of luck,” Wells said. “If they want to come to our school, they’re going to have to transport themselves. And a lot of those families lost their cars and lost their homes. They don’t have means to get back and forth, so they’ll be forced to go to other schools, which is sad. Sad for our kids.”
While displaced families are the most serious challenge for Hamburg schools, there are lesser concerns.
From March through July 19, the school served as the supply center for Fremont County flood relief.
“We basically had a Walmart set up in our gym, and in our shop area was our food bank,” Wells said.
The gym floor was damaged from the coming and going of pallets of supplies and from workers’ boots carrying in gravel.
Only last week were workers able to begin sanding down and sealing the floor.
“That will delay us at least a week for junior high volleyball,” he said.
Carpet and tiles needed replacing, too, he said.
Flooding also forced the Hamburg Fire Department to relocate its trucks and pumpers to the school’s gravel parking lot.
In mid-July, the waters receded and the trucks were removed, but the lot is “in shambles,” he said.
Some area roads are still closed, making bus routes longer.
On the positive side, he said, the Hamburg schools have a great teaching staff.
And the schools have gotten enough donations that every student can have free school supplies, he said.
Shenandoah Iowa Community Schools Superintendent Kerri Nelson said it’s still too early to tell how many displaced Hamburg students may have moved to her district.
Shenandoah, about 25 miles from Hamburg, was lucky, she said. The flooding only nipped at its edges.
“Those kids are going somewhere,” Nelson said. “It’s whether they’re going to land in Sidney or Shenandoah or even some in Council Bluffs.”
She said her district will welcome families and try to understand their circumstances and assist them.
“I really feel for the families because they’re in a difficult position, she said. “Schools are pretty resilient. We tend to find ways to serve students and tend to find ways to adjust and overcome. But families, they need a lot of support right now.”
Devin Embray, superintendent of the Glenwood Community School District, said he won’t know for a couple of weeks how the severe flooding in Pacific Junction will affect his enrollment.
He said 144 students were displaced.
“We think we’re going to be as normal as we can be,” he said.
In the Fremont Public Schools in Nebraska, 550 students were displaced, 10% of enrollment, Superintendent Mark Shepard said.
Some were displaced only for a few days, some longer, he said.
He said Fremont officials were encouraged by the high summer school attendance at a school serving the flooded area, Washington Elementary.
“We have not had additional requests for transfer paperwork or student records to be forwarded on to another district, which is always the key indicator as to whether or not you’re losing students,” he said.
Shepard said a bigger concern is students suffering from lingering stress.
After the flood last spring, he said, the first rainstorm caused students at one elementary school to cry, worried that the river would flood again.
People in the towns of Genoa and Silver Creek can get back and forth on a temporary “shoo-fly” road that runs around the collapsed Highway 39 bridge.
Last spring, officials in the Twin River district serving those towns had to set up a makeshift school in Silver Creek where students learned via teleconferencing on laptops.
In Niobrara, school starts next week, and folks were still waiting Tuesday for Highway 12 west of town to reopen.
Margaret Sandoz, superintendent of the Niobrara Public Schools, said everyone’s eager to see the town reconnected with Niobrara State Park, an important contributor to the local economy.
“That’s going to really boost spirits and hopefully get people feeling better about the future and how we can continue to move forward from that catastrophic event that occurred in March,” Sandoz said.
(Reuters) – Missouri farmer Richard Oswald needs a lot of help to recover from flooding that left his home and farm looking like a manmade island in an inland sea.
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DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Farmer Jeff Jorgenson looks out over 750 acres of cropland submerged beneath the swollen Missouri River, and he knows he probably won’t plant this year.
But that’s not his biggest worry. He and other farmers have worked until midnight for days to move grain, equipment and fuel barrels away from the floodwaters fed by heavy rain and snowmelt. The rising water that has damaged hundreds of homes and been blamed for three deaths has also taken a heavy toll on agriculture, inundating thousands of acres, threatening stockpiled grain and killing livestock.
The Floods Ravaging the Midwest Will Wreak Havoc in Housing Markets, Too
Update 7/2/19
THEIR GOAL IS THE COMPLETE END OF PRIVATE PROPERTY…
Published on Jul 2, 2019
HUD FORECLOSURES/BANK REPOs:
First of all, it was mind-boggling the number of repossessions that were occurring. There was an overabundance of these available at all times and new lists popping up continually.
SUBPRIME LENDING: (should be called buying a home you can’t afford)
This was something I became familiar with very quickly as a loan officer and then as a processor. SubPrime lending was a scam on the lower and middle class. Due to the fact that housing was becoming so outrageously expensive, lenders were encouraging people to buy beyond their means. Assuring them that it was scientific. That the numbers prove that their income will only increase, so they could set their payments low at the current time, and they would be set to automatically increase later when they would likely be making much more money. NOT! To me, at the time, this seemed to be misleading and unscrupulous and deceitful. This placed clients in a very precarious position now and a freighting place in their future. Especially those who were not aware of the hidden costs of home ownership.
Builder Spec Homes (Speculation)
This was a very interesting practice, to say the least. I learned that builders were heavily into the practice of building fabulous, expensive houses in speculation that there will be buyers interested in purchasing them. In other words, they were spending absorbadent amounts of money to construct homes on a hunch that they would recoup their investment. That does not sound like good business practice to me. And just how could they make that happen? Well, first of all someone had to front that money, secondly, once the homes were finished, they would put people in them to make them look occupied, then they would sell these “occupied” homes to “INVESTORS” who would buy them on the understanding that they would continue to receive the rental income from the tenants. These “INVESTORS” by the way would receive a large amount of “cash” on closing.
INVESTOR PURCHASING PROMOTED IN CLASSES ON HOW TO Flip Properties
Mortgage companies began to hold classes on “Investment Real Estate Deals.” Classes on “Flipping Properties” as a means of creating wealth were popping up all over the place. People of all levels of income were encouraged to pursue this practice. They were taught how to manipulate the system so that they could buy a property (often a REPO) but really any type of property, make a few improvements and turn around a sell it at a greatly inflated price. Now, I am no genius. but I could clearly see that this meant disaster for the homeowner and the home buyers. These practices were artificially inflating the prices of homes and causing Real Estate taxes to mushroom. This would eventually price the average person out of the housing market altogether.
GRANT MONEY
Around this same time, there were also courses and even TV advertised Books on how to get FREE MONEY from the Government. (remember, we the people are footing the bill) These courses advised people how to get their hands on tax dollars that were available through grants and scholarships. Unfortunately, in order to get this money you had to maneuver your way through tons of red tape, legal jargon and complicated document submissions. You really would need to have legal advice or the assistance of a “GRANT WRITER” to be approved and awarded funds. So, naturally, who benefited most from these programs. THE WEALTHY, without question enabling them to work on our dime to expand their already bulging bank rolls.
Collusion between builders, loan companies, Inspectors, Appraisers, Title Companies and Realtors.
As a loan officer, and as a Processor, I worked hard to try to solve my clients’ issues and get them into a home or out of a property that was draining their finances. Through the process of trying to help them, I learned about all of the aforementioned practices. It did not take long for me to realize that the only way these things could be occurring is if ALL of the entities involved were in collusion. You can’t tell me that the Investors who were walking away with THOUSANDS of DOLLARS in CASH when closing on a property they were buying did not realize there was something not quite Kosher about that. You can’t tell me that Appraisers did not know the real value of those properties, and recognize there was something wrong. There is no way that Builders can pretend that they were not lying through their teeth and working crooked deals right and left. I learned that Mortgage companies were falsifying people’s credit reports because even with SUBPRIME lending, they still would not qualify for the homes they were buying. You can’t tell me that Title Companies had clean hands when it was their responsibility to assure that everything was on the up and up. And don’t even get me started on Real Estate Agents…I would find it hard to control my emotions… I put them in the same category as Insurance Agents. And probably every SALES person on the face of the earth, and LAWYERS. All professional LIARS. Parasites.
CREDIT REPAIR
A whole new industry developed during this time frame. So many Credit Companies sprung up to help people find ways to manipulate the system so their credit would allow them to find a lender. The entire credit system seems so arbitrary to me. It is not very accurate, the reports do not fairly represent the truth about a person’s situation, the reporting system is not very well monitored or protected and people can have their credit stolen and corrupted without their knowledge. But, your credit score determines so much about your life and what you are “allowed” to do, buy, participate in, or become.
PROPERTY TAXES
The property tax which became uniform in 1834, was the end of prosperity and land ownership. No longer did the land you live on belong to you to be left as an inheritance to your children. Now, the land belongs to the state and you are allowed to inhabit it as long as you pay your taxes and follow the rules established by the state. Through the methods shown above those taxes have become a burden the people can no longer bear.
I find it very interesting, that now that ONLY the RICH can afford to own a home, now they are wanting to establish laws that prevent property taxes from increasing. Now that the RICH own all the properties through “INVESTMENT”.
That, my friends, is how so many millions of Americans have lost their homes and lost hope. If you do not even have a place you can call home, how can you feel safe and secure?
I hope you read and enjoy the article… I pray it opens your eyes.
Illegal immigration, Liberal Elites, and Obama
Millions of Hispanics, mostly poor and uneducated, have immigrated to America illegally since the early 1990s. Most are Mexicans and most of them are high school dropouts. Compared to what they might have had in a slum or impoverished rural area of Mexico or Central America, these immigrants have done well here.
It has been different story for their neighbors — middle-class Americans. For them, illegal immigration has often meant a deterioration of their neighborhoods, public schools, and their quality of life — especially across America’s Southwest.Some have watched their culture erode: It’s not uncommon to see Mexican flags flying in Spanish-speaking enclaves in towns and cities from Texas to California. This includes “sanctuary cities” like Austin, the Texas state capital, where until recently I’d lived for the past few years.Most middle-class Americans are fed up with illegal immigration. They get no sympathy from liberal elites, however, including the open-borders elites at that lofty bastion of American journalism, the agenda-setting New York Times.There is some amusing liberal hypocrisy going on here when you consider where top editorial staffers and executives at the Times and many of their affluent readers live. It’s in trendy parts of New York City: places like gentrified Brooklyn and SoHo and Manhattan’s posh Upper East Side. You definitely won’t find any Mexicans crowding into low-rent apartments in those areas, creating Spanish-speaking enclaves resembling shabby parts of Mexico.Some Times readers and top staffers don’t live in the city but in the suburbs — in pleasant “bedroom communities” boasting first-rate public schools, safe neighborhoods, and a high quality of life. In exclusive towns like Westport, Connecticut (pop. 27,000), a place I’m familiar with. It’s composed almost entirely of very expensive single-family houses. Oh, and something else about Westport: It’s overwhelmingly white.Stroll down Westport’s boutique-lined Main Street, and you’ll see mostly well-to-do white folks and maybe a few Asians. There are plenty of Mercedes and BMWs on Main Street. But you won’t see any pick-ups racing about with an illegal alien at the wheel, driving without a license and liability insurance — acommon problem in Texas. In Westport, homes have not become flop houses for large numbers of illegal immigrants. There are no menacing Hispanic gangs. In Austin, which prides itself on being inclusive, multicultural and diverse, gang activity is surging, say police. However, Austin’s politically correct media tiptoes around the Hispanic character of gang violence.It’s not as if Connecticut has no illegal immigrants; it does. The working-class city of Danbury just north of Westport — a 40-minute drive away — is home to thousands of illegal immigrants from Ecuador and Brazil. They comprise an estimated 20 percent of the 80,000 population.Angry residents blame the invasion for straining the city’s schools and social services and lowering its quality of life. Above all, homeowners are outraged at seeing their property values decline. “They’re blue-collar workers and their whole life savings is tied up in their house and they’re seeing their neighborhood being destroyed,” homeowner Peter Gadiel told Fox News.Zoning Wall of ExclusionSo why has nothing like this happened in Westport? It’s thanks to draconian zoning rules. In Westport, apartments are all but prohibited; there are only a handful of them. Overwhelmingly, Westport consists of very expensive single-family houses; the medium sale price is $1.2 million. Accordingly, housing is too expensive for middle-class Americans to buy or rent and it’s too expensive for unskilled immigrants, too. This prevents them from gaining a foothold in Westport. Instead, they go to working-class and inclusive places like Danbury or to “sanctuary cities” like New Haven, Conn., home to Yale University.Back in the mid-1980s, before illegal immigration was a problem, critics of Westport’s zoning policies accused the town of creating a “zoning wall of exclusion.” As a consequence, middle-class people working in one of Westport’s many office complexes couldn’t afford to live in town; they had to commute from less affluent towns and cities in the region. Westport’s homes also were too expensive for policemen and firemen, school teachers, and social workers.Yet that’s exactly what Westporters wanted: exclusivity. Accordingly, they created a Planning & Zoning Commission, hired a town planner, and elected fellow Westporters to that body to enforce their will: maintain the town’s character, property values, and resist calls to allow “affordable” apartments and even condominiums.In other affluent bedroom communities in the northeast’s blue states, that’s how they do things. “Nobody has the right to live anywhere. They have a right to earn the right to live anywhere,” an influential member of Westport’s powerful Planning & Zoning Commission, a Democrat, told me in June, 1985.I was a young journalist at the time, writing a freelance piece about Westport’s lack of “affordable” housing for the Connecticut section of the Sunday New York Times. I was a Democrat back then, and affordable housing seemed like a darn good idea to me, one everybody would surely rally behind.Yet at spirited town meetings, I was shocked to see red-faced Westporters shout and hiss at proposals to allow affordable housing and even rent-controlled condos. Now, I think I understand: People change a lot when they get married, buy houses, and put down stakes in their communities. Some Democrats even become Republicans. I’ve known at least two Times staffers who lived in Westport.In the suburbs outside New York City, there are lots of towns like Westport, situated within an hour’s train ride from the heart of New York City. They’re popular abodes for well-to-do liberals, people who earn six figure salaries in business and finance, and even in big-time journalism. This is not to say that there are not some open-borders Republican elites living in these places, too.Memories of Westport and its affluent and civic-minded residents drifted back to me while reading an article in the New York Times: “Texas Mayor Caught in Deportation Furor.” The article was part of the Times‘ ongoing “Remade in America” series on immigration, and it focused on efforts in Irving, a Dallas suburb, to crack down on illegal immigration.Spinning its story around an open-borders agenda, the Times portrays Irving’s residents (its white residents) as narrow-minded hicks. Yet even the Times cannot ignore some of the changes that have happened in Irving due to illegal immigration, primarily from Mexico. Residents of Danbury should pay close attention.Back in 1970, Irving had a population of 100,000; 95 percent of its residents were white. Now, whites are a minority, as they are in Texas. Hispanics comprise 45 percent or more of the population of 200,000 – and according to city officials, 20 percent of them may be illegal immigrants, noted the Times.Hispanic birthrates have been explosive in Irving and across the nation. Many of these children are the offspring from millions of illegal immigrants whom Congress allowed to stay under an amnesty in the 1990s. Today, Irving’s future may be found in its public schools: 70 percent of kids enrolled in kindergarten through fifth grade are Hispanic, notes the Times. More than a few experts on immigration have expressed concern that the sons and daughters of these immigrants tend to do poorly in school, and dropout up until the fourth generation. Indeed, compared to other immigrant groups, the children of Hispanic immigrant groups have the highest dropout rates, say experts.All of which underscores that culture is a powerful thing: It does not change easily, especially in sanctuary cities where “diversity” and “multiculturalism” are presumed to be virtues. “The people who come here illegally across the border are not educated people. They don’t have any culture or any respect for ours,” Sue Richardson, vice president of the Greater Irving Republican Club, tells theTimes.America is experiencing massive levels of immigration that are unprecedented in scale and fact that many of the newcomers are from the Third World, not Europe as in the past. The impact of this flood of immigrants is the subject of the Timesseries “Remade in America.” Its underlying theme is that America is remaking the immigrants. But that’s certainly not the case in Irving, parts of which now have the shabby look of Mexico.Residents Fight BackTwo years ago, Irving’s residents decided enough was enough; they demanded that America’s immigration laws be upheld. Naturally, the Times is outraged.So what did all those rubes in Irving do that was so shocking? Did they give the KKK a permit to march through town or ban people who look Hispanic from sitting at lunch counters? Have the city’s rednecks and “white trash” been racing around in pick-ups? Shouting lewd insults at hapless Mexican women? Roughing up shabby-looking Mexicans? Or torching Mexican-American business?No, it’s much worse.Irving Mayor Herbert A. Gears — a well-known supporter of Hispanic groups and causes in the past — did something truly despicable in what the Times calls a “once welcoming” city. The formerly “immigrant friendly Democrat” ordered Irving’s police to start running “immigration checks” on everybody whom they arrested and tossed into Irving’s lockup. Suspects found to be in the country illegally were turned over to immigration authorities and deported.What’s the upshot of all this? Last year, Irving’s crime last dropped to a record-low level. And illegal immigrants appear to be steering clear of Irving. Following the immigration checks, Mexico’s council in Dallas issued a warning advising its citizens to avoid Irving.Yet to Irving’s “Hispanic leaders” and open-borders defenders with whom theTimes sympathizes, the immigration checks are unconscionable. Irving has abrogated a federal responsibility, they complain. Even worse, the deportations are “breaking up families.” It’s an argument the Times highlights by focusing sympathetically on the plight of a hapless 35-year-old Mexican, Oscar Urbina.Last summer, Urbina’s life as an allegedly model citizen unraveled when he ran into what the Times called “paperwork” problems when buying a Dodge Ram pickup. Urbina, it turns outs, had been using a false Social Security number since immigrating illegally to America in 1993. Until then, he’d been a “portrait of domestic stability” — a man “with a nice home, a thriving family and a steady contracting job,” the Times claims.Now, he faces deportation.Ah yes, “breaking up families:” It’s a familiar complaint among open-borders liberals. Yet oddly, they never seem to decry anti-family polices in places like Castro’s Cuba. It’s a regime that’s broken up countless families — either by tossing family members in jail for political reasons, or by even killing them on occasion.The Times belittles Irving’s lower crime statistics, suggesting immigration checks and deportations are mostly rounding up illegals guilty of minor offenses such as identify theft. A closer look at those statistics reveals much about the Timesbiases and values. As the Times itself notes:As of early March, of the 4,074 people whose arrest led to their being handed over to immigration officials, 129 had been charged with violent crimes or illegal possession of weapons, and 714 with other types of serious felonies. In addition, 579 had been charged with driving while intoxicated. The other 2,625 had been arrested for lesser offenses; the largest categories were public intoxication and not having a driver’s license or insurance.All in all, the immigration checks are producing some terrific results. Yet theTimes portrays Mayor Gears as being a conflicted man for having imposed such a morally problematic policy as immigration checks. “I’m the hero of every redneck in America,” the Times quotes him as saying, while noting he speaks only “scant Spanish.” It’s interesting that the Times used that “redneck” quote in what must have been a lengthy and wide-ranging interview, one filled with lots of good quotes.You have to wonder how liberal elites at the Times would feel if such problems suddenly visited their neighborhoods — drunken illegal aliens stumbling about in the street. Driving without a license and insurance. Or contemplating their next violent crime?Interestingly, the Times notes that many of Irving’s “Hispanics” don’t vote. Well, so much for their civic engagement values, a hallmark of Americans whose self-reliant European ancestors immigrated to America, learned English and reinvented themselves as Americans. Today, these folks are not hyphenated Americans, as are the Hispanic-Americans to which the Times refers; they’re just Americans.Along similar lines, it’s interesting that the Times does not interview one group of Texans in Irving — Americans of Mexican ancestry whose roots go back for generations in Texas; people who are members of the solid middle-class and who do not reflexively think of themselves as hyphenated Americans. There are plenty of people like that in Texas.Social Class — not raceWhy do liberal elites at the New York Times find it so much easier to identify with illegal immigrants than with middle-class Americans? Two things obsess them: race and ethnicity; so that’s how they define the immigration debate. Accordingly, ordinary Americans upset over illegal Hispanic immigrants must be “racist” and “xenophobic.” Indeed, that’s how former Mexico president Vincente Fox, during a visit to this country, described Americans opposing illegal immigration from Mexico. Fox got away with that remark until he went head-to-head with Fox’s Bill O’Reilly on the national airwaves.What in fact upsets residents in Irving and other communities are issues revolving around social class, bad behavior, and quality-of-life considerations. Like most Americans, they expect the law to be obeyed. Illegal immigration from Mexico and Central America would be a non-issue if it consisted of an orderly flow of immigrants with middle-class backgrounds; people settling in the country legally and learning to speak English. Asian immigrants have this sort of background, and there is no backlash against them — and no wonder. Their children do well in school. They Anglicize their names and learn English.President Obama, for his part, seems determined to give 11 million illegal immigrants, mostly poor and uneducated Hispanics, a path to citizenship. No doubt, he believes this will again demonstrate America’s “moral authority” to an audience whose opinions matter to him: anti-Americans elites in Mexico, Europe, and the Third World. And no matter if his immigration plan changes the nation’s culture for the worse for ordinary Americans; or at least for ordinary Americans who don’t holler and applaud at Sunday church services when their minister yells, “God damn America!”On his recent visit to Mexico, President Obama spent much time hobnobbing with that country’s elites. He also should talk with ordinary middle-class people in Latin America, outside of Mexico, to get their opinion on illegal immigration. Most have no sympathy for gate-crashing Mexicans and other illegal Hispanic immigrants.The President will have no trouble finding these folks who are solidly middle-class. They form long lines starting early in the morning outside the gates of U.S. Embassies across Latin America. They’re eyes are pensive as they clutch carefully prepared applications for visas and work permits. They wait patently in the hot sun. Most will be disappointed by the decision of the Embassy official behind the glass window. But those whom I’ve met vow to try their luck again some other day.To them, America is about more than economic opportunities and social programs. They admire America’s culture: believe it’s a place with a rule of law that applies to everybody, whether you’re Kenneth Lay or Martha Stewart. And they believe it’s a place in which ordinary people obey little social courtesies, like going to the back of a line at a bank, rather than bribing a security guard to let them go to the front; that’s how it’s done in parts of Latin America I’ve visited.In America, you stop your car at a red light, even when no cops are around; that’s the sort of civic culture that foreigners admire who are from dysfunctional countries without a civic culture. Accordingly, gate-crashing Mexicans who are deported get little sympathy from them.The impact of uncontrolled immigration, especially from Mexico, promoted the late Harvard political scientist Samuel P. Huntington to pose a troubling question:“Will the United States remain a country with a single national language and a core Anglo-Protestant culture? By ignoring this question, Americans acquiesce to their eventual transformation into two peoples with two cultures (Anglo and Hispanic) and two languages (English and Spanish).”David Paulin is an American Thinker contributor. He blogs at The Big Carnival.