They won't answerMost NYCers can't even afford to buy property in their own neighborhoods why would "poor" people be mobilized if all we talk about is middle class brehs like ourselves
Yea that’s long term problems that need to be fixed. Adding another one where you literally bleeding money to feed and house migrants is another that you don’t need.Yeah not the real estate development and lack of real public resources. Do you know the NYC police is the size or a small nations army?
shyt would have been 100% but it's going to take years to win non voters back.
Are you really asking why the people that need government assistance the most and are hurt or helped most by politics are not "mobilized"? If i was poor i am damn sure focusing on politics because my existence currently would be affected by who gets into office.Most NYCers can't even afford to buy property in their own neighborhoods why would "poor" people be mobilized if all we talk about is middle class brehs like ourselves
Well how does not voting help that? How does not voting solve massive rent increases, housing affordability, etc... Can you answer that?They won't answer
Voting doesn't help that eitherWell how does not voting help that? How does not voting solve massive rent increases, housing affordability, etc... Can you answer that?
They sure did get Cuomo out the way.Our only hope is if Andrew Cuomo runs
Sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do. Not everyone is built for prison.Sold out
Voting doesn't help that either
Proposition 33, which 62% of voters opposed in vote totals this morning, would have given cities more freedom to limit how much landlords can raise rent. It would have repealed a state law known as the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act that bars local governments from regulating rent on single-family homes, apartments built since 1995, and units where there’s a new tenant.
Lawmakers in Illinois passed several significant new statewide tenant protections during the spring to increase housing affordability and stability for renters across the state. Expected to be signed into law soon by Governor J. B. Pritzker, the new pieces of legislation – “House Bill 4206,” “House Bill 4926,” “House Bill 4768,” and “Senate Bill 3652” – support low-income and marginalized renters by limiting unnecessary rental fees, prohibiting retaliatory evictions, and informing survivors of domestic and sexual violence of their housing rights. With the passage of the state’s new renter protections, Illinois becomes one of five states – including Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, and Rhode Island – to have passed legislation this year addressing excessive rental fees in the private rental market, as well as one of three states – including Minnesota and New Hampshire – to have passed protections for victims of domestic and sexual violence in 2024.
The Turks paid him, and he did pro Turk shyt in exchange. That's corruption.
And the investigation began before the immigration row.
Also, these charges aren't being dropped with prejudice, showing this is just something Trump can hang over Adams to assure loyalty.