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   alt.censorship      All matters of censorship in society      12,782 messages   

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   Message 12,189 of 12,782   
   D. Ray to All   
   =?UTF-8?Q?=E2=80=98Busloads=E2=80=99=20o   
   06 Jun 23 12:35:01   
   
   XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, talk.politics.misc   
   XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.politics.nationalism.white   
   From: d@ray   
      
   Salina, New York – Busloads of foreign migrants who have overwhelmed the   
   social services of New York City continue to threaten many upstate   
   communities. The threat of replacement continues to loom despite court   
   orders that seek to bar migrants from being offloaded by New York City   
   Mayor Eric Adams.   
      
   Adams’s plan—to offer profitable city contracts to hotels all over the   
   Empire State in exchange for housing the migrants—directly threatens   
   native-born American citizens with homelessness and economic precarity. One   
   predatory hotel has even resorted to alleged intimidation, harassment, and   
   theft, to evict its long-term residents and create vacancies illegally,   
   according to reports.   
      
   The Candlewood Suites Hotel in Salina, New York, a 93.8% White suburb of   
   central New York’s most prominent city, Syracuse, has become the eye of an   
   NYC-led storm of migrant controversy. Situated just outside the Syracuse   
   Airport, the 2-star hotel is known for offering “affordable” long-term   
   stays inside one of its 79 rooms earmarked for disenfranchised locals who   
   couldn’t afford a full apartment.   
      
   “SAVE HUNDREDS EVERY MONTH! NO LEASE – move out when it fits your   
   schedule!” Read just some of the advertisements Candlewood had posted to   
   Craigslist, which specifically targeted families already on the precipice   
   of homelessness. “NO DEPOSIT – move in anytime. NO CREDIT CHECK – no   
   credit, bad credit? No problem! FREE UTILITIES!”   
      
   According to some residents interviewed by Syracuse.com, they were charged   
   up to $2100 a month to live in meager-sized rooms with intermittent   
   electrical services and a myriad of poor conditions. Despite the apparent   
   disregard for standard maintenance and poor online reviews, many families,   
   including a nurse battling cancer, and an elderly Vietnam veteran, continue   
   to rely on Candlewood, knowing full well that homelessness in New York   
   State presents a far worse proposition.   
      
   This all changed, however, when the hotel’s owners, Churchwick Partners, a   
   New York City-based investment firm—tied to a mysterious developer named   
   Asaf Fligelman—cut a deal with the city of New York. In exchange for a   
   government contract, Fligelman and Churchwick would allegedly attempt to   
   turn Candlewood into a for-profit migrant housing facility, ready and   
   willing to take in Adams’s army of fighting-age foreigners. To make the   
   scheme a reality, they’re now asking their already desperate tenants to   
   leave.   
      
   The news came as a sudden shock. Residents that refused early attempts that   
   coercion have alleged that hotel brass has resorted to more unscrupulous   
   means. The staff has allegedly begun to deny issuing room keys, withhold   
   certain hotel amenities, employed a corporate security firm to patrol the   
   halls, and even resorted to stealing personal property, according to   
   reports.   
      
   The aggressive strategy by corporate has sent some residents scrambling to   
   find housing elsewhere. Desperate, some have hunkered down in their rooms   
   in fear of physical removal, while others have resorted to sleeping in   
   their cars. Still, more defiant residents have taken it one step further by   
   filing court papers asserting that Candlewood is attempting to evict them   
   from their long-established homes illegally.   
      
   While the area might stand as a lily-White preserve for the state’s   
   dwindling-yet-defiant White population, the systemically anti-White   
   policies imposed on areas like Salina and the Candlewood Suites broadly   
   defy race. White families have felt the sting of demographic replacement   
   hand-in-hand with the region’s historical minority of Black Americans, who   
   now find themselves as unwitting collateral damage caused by the regime and   
   its ongoing mission to dilute human capital across the country.   
      
   Things are not hopeless, however. Many in the region have loudly signaled   
   their support for the residents of Candlewood, including some local   
   politicians. The desperate families have found a fair-weather ally in   
   Republican Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon, who recently signed a   
   tough albeit legally dubious executive order to stop the flow of migrants   
   to county hotels.   
      
   Defiance to the order could see violators incurring massive fines, and it   
   even authorizes Onondaga County Sheriff Toby Shelley and his deputies to   
   pull over vehicles believed to be transporting migrants.   
      
   While strong on paper, the policy is proving toothless in practicality.   
   Fligelman and Churchwick briefly opted to defy the order and accept the   
   migrants anyway. Even Sheriff Shelley stated he would refuse to enforce the   
   order as it allegedly circumvents the concept of “probable cause” and may   
   ask his deputies to violate policies established against racial profiling.   
   Leftist organizations and extremist groups even staged an outrageous   
   protest against McMahon’s “racist” order, demanding that more migrants be   
   allowed in, regardless of the logistics or crippling lack thereof.   
      
   “I don’t think anybody born on this planet is an alien,” said Onondaga   
   County Sheriff Toby Shelley, a man who admits to taking issue with the term   
   in an interview with CNYCentral. “As humans we have an obligation of   
   helping each other. To what extent and how much we can help, that’s beyond   
   the scope of the sheriff.”   
      
   The ineffective move by McMahon is a disappointing-yet-unsurprising   
   development. In the past, the conservative executive enthusiastically   
   expressed his ongoing commitment to turn greater Syracuse into a “refugee   
   resettlement community.” Simultaneously, liberal non-profit organizations   
   working inside the “salt city” are already at maximum capacity, processing   
   a whopping 1,900 foreign migrants safely within Onondaga County.   
      
   “We made very public commitments to be a refugee resettlement community,”   
   McMahon said in an interview with local news media. “We have to live up to   
   what that means and find housing and supportive services.”   
      
   If anything, the order increasingly appears to be a convenient political   
   move, allowing McMahon to fecklessly signal to his conservative base while   
   also keeping away powerful civil rights groups like the ACLU—who have begun   
   suing upstate counties who don’t acquiesce to the regime’s demographic   
   replacement schemes. On the other side of the political spectrum, however,   
   McMahon can continue to appease corporate interests that would stand to   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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