Little Haiti is up for grabs. Will gentrification trample it

loyola llothta

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I feel for miami natives ...the same shyt is happening in fort lauderdale fast ass hell near the downtown área in the Black zones (regal t./6tunk/ sunland/east)

In one of the oldest Black neighborhood called 6trunk, the Caucasians fool the people by having cacs pull up with RBG flags celebrating the historical black neighborhood anniversary parade... Two years later after that gentrification hotels, and high-rises projects


I didnt fall for it like some other black people did. unlike Little Haiti the cacs rename parts of 6trunk. Sad shyt
 

KyokushinKarateMan

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I always wondered why the local residents of these types of old tight knit neighborhoods don’t terrorize the developers into thinking otherwise. And I really mean that; why don’t they TERRORIZE them into thinking otherwise and looking elsewhere? Or at least, cause so many setbacks that the developers lose interest or can no longer afford to continue.

There should be enough of an organized criminal element in little Haiti to accomplish this. When they leave construction equipment out overnight, torch it.

Pop shots at them from discreet vantage points while they’re out there surveying and/or actually building. Don’t have to actually hit one of them, gunfire and bullets whizzing By sends the message loud and clear. But if one gets popped, even louder and clearer the message.

Torch what they HAVE built already. And when insurance payouts allow them to start rebuilding, torch it back down to ashes.

Is this harder than what I’m making it sound?

If I were a resident, especially if I’m in a local gang(blood/crip whatever) and have many able bodied men around me, I’m organizing a plan to forcefully rid the hood of any ideas of “gentrification”.

Maybe I’m just seeing it with hopeful eyes. But it seems like this is what Italians, Asians, or Africans would do if it was happening to their neighborhoods. Why not the Haitians in Miami or #ADOS in Bedstuy Brooklyn? Just need to be organized.
 
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get these nets

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I always wondered why the local residents of these types of old tight knit neighborhoods don’t terrorize the developers into thinking otherwise. And I really mean that; why don’t they TERRORIZE them into thinking otherwise and looking elsewhere? Or at least, cause so many setbacks that the developers lose interest or can no longer afford to continue.

There should be enough of an organized criminal element in little Haiti to accomplish this. When they leave construction equipment out overnight, torch it.

Pop shots at them from discreet vantage points while they’re out there surveying and/or actually building. Don’t have to actually hit one of them, gunfire and bullets whizzing By sends the message loud and clear. But if one gets popped, even louder and clearer the message.

Torch what they HAVE built already. And when insurance payouts allow them to start rebuilding, torch it back down to ashes.

Is this harder than what I’m making it sound?

If I were a resident, especially if I’m in a local gang(blood/crip whatever) and have many able bodied men around me, I’m organizing a plan to forcefully rid the hood of any ideas of “gentrification”.

Maybe I’m just seeing it with hopeful eyes. But it seems like this is what Italians, Asians, or Africans would do if it was happening to their neighborhoods. Why not the Haitians in Miami or #ADOS in Bedstuy Brooklyn? Just need to be organized.
criminal element will just move elsewhere and sell their drugs/gun there.

Older ones in these organizations understand that the areas used to be low priority for law enforcement but now they are high priority. Construction worker or developer gets shot at, local,county,state police will flood area and make it impossible for the streets to make a dime.
 

mannyrs13

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I always wondered why the local residents of these types of old tight knit neighborhoods don’t terrorize the developers into thinking otherwise. And I really mean that; why don’t they TERRORIZE them into thinking otherwise and looking elsewhere? Or at least, cause so many setbacks that the developers lose interest or can no longer afford to continue.

There should be enough of an organized criminal element in little Haiti to accomplish this. When they leave construction equipment out overnight, torch it.

Pop shots at them from discreet vantage points while they’re out there surveying and/or actually building. Don’t have to actually hit one of them, gunfire and bullets whizzing By sends the message loud and clear. But if one gets popped, even louder and clearer the message.

Torch what they HAVE built already. And when insurance payouts allow them to start rebuilding, torch it back down to ashes.

Is this harder than what I’m making it sound?

If I were a resident, especially if I’m in a local gang(blood/crip whatever) and have many able bodied men around me, I’m organizing a plan to forcefully rid the hood of any ideas of “gentrification”.

Maybe I’m just seeing it with hopeful eyes. But it seems like this is what Italians, Asians, or Africans would do if it was happening to their neighborhoods. Why not the Haitians in Miami or #ADOS in Bedstuy Brooklyn? Just need to be organized.

You can't rid gentrification out of somewhere that you don't own. Plus the developers are all insured so any minor setbacks can be easily handled.
 
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