People Are Laughing At Celebrities Crying About The LA Fires

Robbie3000

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This is the internet there will always be enablers. People pick and choose what is important in they lives. I’m not trying to come at you for expressing how you feel on this. I get it it’s just me personally I don’t choose to put my energy to this because it doesn’t serve me.

But yet here you are running interference for one of the nastiest cacs in media. A man whose first instinct is to blame black people for a climate change disaster.

Think about that for a second, his first instinct is to blame what is at the root a climate change disaster on black folks.

The cowardice of Some of you nikkas really makes me sick.
 

SNG

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And when enablers are legitimatize by people offline and mainstream is how you get Q Anon and MAGA ruining making this country worse than what it was. Thinking batshyt theories will just wither away on its own has proven to be an erroneous way of thinking because just letting a spark flourish eventually turns into an untamable wildfire.

Ok but there’s cacs that don’t believe black people should get repairations you and I both think we should if a white person strongly believes that I’m
not going to waste my energy on it. I can give my perspective on it an intelligent way but if he’s strong in that I’m not going to waste anymore energy explaining it to them when there are some that get it and understand it.
 

SNG

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But yet here you are running interference for one of the nastiest cacs in media. A man whose first instinct is to blame black people for a climate change disaster.

Think about that for a second, his first instinct is to blame what is at the root a climate change disaster on black folks.

The cowardice of Some of you nikkas really makes me sick.

Are you going to show up to this man’s door and tell this man all this while his house is cooking? No you’re not your just going to post I’m a coward because I don’t share the same perspective as you.
 

bnew

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its because a lot of people on the internet are unhappy

for example guaranteed The Coli is going to make this thread political for no reason...
just like the right wing dummies on Twitter

yeah this has nothing to do with politics at all :rudy:




LA Gave More Money to Cops While Cutting Fire Budgets. Now It’s Burning.​


“The consistent defunding of other city programs in order to give the LAPD billions a year has consequences,” said a local activist.

Schuyler Mitchell

January 8 2025, 7:00 p.m.

A home burns during the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California, on January 8, 2025.

A home burns during the Eaton Fire in Altadena, Calif., on Jan. 8, 2025. Photo: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images

Less than 12 hours after a massive fire began ripping through the Pacific Palisades on Tuesday, the Los Angeles Fire Department made a rare request. All LAFD firefighters, including those off-duty, were asked to phone in their availability. Stoked by high winds, the blaze was growing quickly, and the LAFD was already fighting a losing battle. Such a summons hadn’t been issued in nearly two decades.

As of January 8, the Palisades Fire is 0 percent contained. Two additional wildfires, the Hurst Fire and the Eaton Fire, are also currently at zero containment as they scorch greater Los Angeles County, burning thousands of acres, destroying over 1,100 structures, and killing at least five people. As hundreds of firefighters race to stop the spread, gusting Santa Ana winds and a landscape desiccated by a bone-dry winter — an anomaly linked to broader climate change trends — aren’t the only obstacles the LAFD is facing.

The LAFD makes up about 6 percent of the city’s expense budget; the LAPD receives 15 percent.

In June, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass signed an adopted $12.8 billion budget that cut the fire department’s funding by more than $17.5 million, or around 2 percent of the previous year’s budget of $837 million. It was the second-largest departmental operating cut to come out of the city’s 2024-25 fiscal year budget, which shaved funding from the majority of city departments — but not the police. The Los Angeles Police Department received a funding bump of nearly $126 million. The LAFD makes up about 6 percent of the city’s expense budget; the LAPD receives 15 percent of the funds.

“What is currently happening and unfolding is what we have been warning about,” said Ricci Sergienko, a lawyer and organizer with People’s City Council LA. “The consistent defunding of other city programs in order to give the LAPD billions a year has consequences, and these elected officials do actually have blood on their hands. The city is unprepared to handle this fire, and Los Angeles shouldn’t be in that position.”

Other departments that received major cuts included the Bureau of Street Services, the Bureau of Sanitation, and General Services, for an overall budget decrease of nearly $250 million. Funds for rental support, homelessness services, and street lighting were also reduced.

Only three city councilmembers — Hugo Soto-Martínez, Nithya Raman, and Eunisses Hernandez — voted against the budget last May, noting in a press release that it allocated tens of millions of dollars to fund LAPD positions that would likely remain vacant. That’s because the LAPD has struggled to recruit officers in recent years, even as it continues to request and receive funding for those empty positions.

An LAPD spokesperson reached by The Intercept said that they could not respond to questions by the time of publication.

The controversial cuts were ostensibly made to help close the city’s budget deficit. Critics, however, have noted that defunding the fire department is a recipe for disaster as the climate crisis brings increasingly devastating fires to the drought-stricken region. While it’s unclear that any amount of staffing could have fully contained the fires raging across Los Angeles this week, the call for help — and the firefighters traveling in to assist from across California and nearby states — shows that any additional capacity could have been useful.

A spokesperson for Los Angeles’s chief auditor, City Controller Kenneth Mejia, said that the most recent LAFD budget cuts included a reduction in sworn payroll, reduced funds for operating supplies, and cuts to 58 positions. In December, the Board of Fire Commissioners sent a report to Bass and the City Council outlining how the funding cuts had adversely impacted the department’s crucial services.

“The Los Angeles City Fire Department (LAFD) is facing unprecedented operational challenges due to the elimination of critical civilian positions and a $7 million reduction in Overtime Variable Staffing Hours,” wrote Fire Chief Kristin Crowley. “These budgetary reductions have adversely affected the Department’s ability to maintain core operations, such as technology and communication infrastructure, payroll processing, training, fire prevention, and community education.”

The LAFD’s Fire Prevention Bureau, for instance, had six of its roles cut and its overtime hours reduced. Crowley wrote that the decrease in overtime hours created an “inability to complete required brush clearance inspections, which are crucial for mitigating fire risks in high-hazard areas.”

While most departments received cuts, LAPD’s budget continues to bloat, and Mejia has pointed to overspending on police liability claims as one major source of the city’s deficit. The city spent more than double its annual liability payouts budget in the first six months of this fiscal year, with the LAPD leading the spending at more than $100 million in legal settlements. Recent payouts include a $17.7 million settlement with the family of a mentally disabled man who was fatally shot by an off-duty officer inside a Costco, and a $11.8 million payout to a man who sustained a traumatic brain injury in a car accident when an LAPD detective ran a red light.

Diana Chang, Mejia’s communications director, highlighted two forces that are driving a rise in liability payouts, most of which are made from the city’s General Fund rather than department-specific appropriations. Departments are either “not held accountable for liabilities they give rise to,” Chang wrote, or they are “underfunded / understaffed and cannot keep up with the necessary demands and needs of the City.”

“We just give more money to the police, who then end up costing us more money, due to all of these settlements. It’s a never-ending loop.”

Sergienko, of People’s City Council LA, bristled at the use of taxpayer money to fund police abuse settlements. “We’re paying for state-sanctioned violence instead of having money to deal with the climate crisis,” he said. “We just give more money to the police, who then end up costing us more money, due to all of these settlements. It’s a never-ending loop.”

Looking ahead, the LAPD has already requested another increase for the 2025-26 fiscal year. In November, the LA Board of Police Commissioners approved a spending package that included a request for an additional $160.5 million from the city’s budget — an increase of more than 8 percent. Bass is currently reviewing the proposal; she’s expected to unveil the city’s next budget plan in late April.

Bass’s office, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment, has publicly clashed with Mejia over his criticism of the city budget. Last spring, after Mejia called the deductions to public services “short-sighted,” Bass spokesperson Zach Seidl dismissed the remarks as “theatrical exaggeration and doomsday projections.”

For many Angelenos, that doomsday is now here. The fires burning across the county are already the most destructive in modern LA history, forcing more than 80,000 evacuations with no signs of abating. Whole blocks in the Palisades are leveled. The Eaton fire is eating its way through Altadena, Pasadena and the surrounding communities, taking at least five lives so far.

Los Angeles is no stranger to wildfires, but a January disaster is unusual. Studies show that climate change is contributing to longer, more destructive fire seasons. Still, in 2020, LA’s then-Mayor Eric Garcetti cut another $500,000 in funds set aside for a Climate Emergency Mobilization Office.

“The impact of this catastrophic event will be felt by our community well past today, but we hope that our City’s coordinated efforts will provide assistance to ensure the smoothest recovery possible,” Chang wrote in a statement. “As always, we support putting resources and meaningful investments toward saving lives through emergency preparedness, wildfire prevention, and serious climate action, and encourage the City’s decisionmakers to prioritize these resources and investments.”

WAIT! BEFORE YOU GO on about your day, ask yourself: How likely is it that the story you just read would have been produced by a different news outlet if The Intercept hadn’t done it?

Consider what the world of media would look like without The Intercept. Who would hold party elites accountable to the values they proclaim to have? How many covert wars, miscarriages of justice, and dystopian technologies would remain hidden if our reporters weren’t on the beat?

The kind of reporting we do is essential to democracy, but it is not easy, cheap, or profitable. The Intercept is an independent nonprofit news outlet. We don’t have ads, so we depend on our members to help us hold the powerful to account. Joining is simple and doesn’t need to cost a lot: You can become a sustaining member for as little as $3 or $5 a month. That’s all it takes to support the journalism you rely on.
 

Robbie3000

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Are you going to show up to this man’s door and tell this man all this while his house is cooking? No you’re not your just going to post I’m a coward because I don’t share the same perspective as you.

You are a coward because you are afraid to call out bad actors and you have been defending this racist cac in this thread like he is your uncle. :scust:
 

2 Up 2 Down

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Ok but there’s cacs that don’t believe black people should get repairations you and I both think we should if a white person strongly believes that I’m
not going to waste my energy on it. I can give my perspective on it an intelligent way but if he’s strong in that I’m not going to waste anymore energy explaining it to them when there are some that get it and understand it.
Ultimately, we aren't getting harmed and losing rights if we don't get reparations. Allowing the spread of racist and sexist based misinformation does
 

SNG

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You are a coward because you are afraid to call out bad actors and you have been defending this racist cac in this thread like he is your uncle. :scust:

I’m not defending anything all I said was it sucks that his house got burnt down. Like I don’t know why you got smoke for me because I don’t have the same persepective as you. You feel away I’m not trying to undermine your feelings towards it. This ain’t my uncle he lives in another country and me and this person will never cross path in life. Now if there is someone that I met in real time that’s a different situation it’s affecting me in real time I can look at him face to face. You can call me a coward all you want in reality you wouldn’t say that to me face to face.

Send this dude a DM or message this dude on his socials and tell him how you feel since you putting this amount of energy into it. Be the change you want to see bro. Maybe you can change his perspective.
 
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SNG

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Ultimately, we aren't getting harmed and losing rights if we don't get reparations. Allowing the spread of racist and sexist based misinformation does

This shyt always existed and will still be around when we are dead. Only way you can deal with it is in real time.
 

AngryBaby

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No, not all people think that way including Black people . What's your 'fukk you!' feelings doing to anybody? Nothing but raising your blood pressure. It's not productive, James Woods has no idea who you are.
So I should show sympathy instead? Nobody is implying theres a tangible affect its going to have on his life, but this information informs my personal "care" about his input on the situation. So where are you getting this gaslighting idea that its "raising blood pressure"?. It's a tone of "meh, I dont care about that guy then".

Typically anybody who is having some suspect negative reaction to people saying "meh, screw a guy a like that" is a lowkey #bothsider political ideology that is hiding that through comments like this.

Bet thats you. #bothsides let me guess. Predictable.
 

SNG

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So I should show sympathy instead? Nobody is implying theres a tangible affect its going to have on his life, but this information informs my personal "care" about his input on the situation. So where are you getting this gaslighting idea that its "raising blood pressure"?. It's a tone of "meh, I dont care about that guy then".

Typically anybody who is having some suspect negative reaction to people saying "meh, screw a guy a like that" is a lowkey #bothsider political ideology that is hiding that through comments like this.

Bet thats you. #bothsides let me guess. Predictable.

Send James a DM and tell him how you feel breh.
 

AngryBaby

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I’m actually black but this white man adds no value to my life why should I care about who he’s blaming. His house is cooking mine ain’t.
So you are sympathetic or indifferent? Because i'll ve sympathetic towards good people. Bad people? Meh..indifferent.

Why are you acting like "meh fukk him" means were going to storm his house and write him a letter? Weird. Suspect. Defensive.

You're #bothsides arent you? Lol
 

SNG

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So you are sympathetic or indifferent? Because i'll ve sympathetic towards good people. Bad people? Meh..indifferent.

Why are you acting like "meh fukk him" means were going to storm his house and write him a letter? Weird. Suspect. Defensive.

You're #bothsides arent you? Lol

So you would rather argue with people on here that have different perspective and that you will never meet in your life rather than airing out your grievances to the individual you have smoke for?
 
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