To Michael
Communities across the United States are being taken over by huge homeless encampments, and we should believe this is perfectly normal. I am trying very hard to convince all of us. Currently doing mass layoffs Challenger, Gray & Christmas says the number of job cuts has increased in the first three months of the year, 396 percent compared to the same period last year. Much like 2008 and his 2009, many people without jobs or businesses are forced to live on the streets, resulting in an explosion of homeless encampments from coast to coast. .
Marin County, California is one of the most prosperous areas in the entire country, with an average home price of $1.4 million.
But it’s also home to huge hordes of homeless people. In fact, one of Marin County’s largest homeless encampments is now over 2 miles long…
Hundreds of locals in one of San Francisco’s wealthiest counties have been forced to pack their lives into RVs and trailers after being kicked out of the housing market.
Shocking photos show an ever-growing line of trucks and other vehicles along the 101 highway. The line now stretches over two miles into one of the largest encampments in the country.
The Federal Reserve knew that throwing huge amounts of money into the system would make the rich richer, but it also wanted some of that wealth to end up flowing into the poor. .
Sadly, it never really happened.
Instead, the gap between the rich and the poor is wider than ever before, and we are witnessing it now. like this Nationwide…
The people who live there are trying to make the most of it. In fact, one woman who recently “moved in” compared it this way: “weather”…
“My life here … is fine with me. Really relaxing. No harassment,” Shelley G. told The Post.
Sherry, 53, moved from Petaluma to Binford Road in early April to join her friend Terry.
Sherri sat in a covered area in the back of a green car, holding her small dog, Bailey, and talking to the post.
“This is heaven,” she continued.
No, you don’t live in “heaven”.
You are 53 years old and live in a car on the side of the road.
But I give her credit for trying to put a positive twist on her very dire situation.
Of course, she is not alone. More than 500,000 Americans are homeless today, and the number will inevitably grow.
Many would argue that the problem is even worse in Southern California. The San of Beverly Grove The homeless encampment along Vicente Boulevard continues to expand and this leaves him stranded one doctor. to the breaking point…
Dr. Kenneth Wright, a physician and surgeon, has worked in the office for nearly 22 years.
“There have been camps on either side of our office building for the last year and a half to two years. Patients are afraid to come in. Many of them have psychiatric or drug problems. They are holding and shouting profanity. [unhoused people] Defecate in the planter, defecate in the parking lot, to the point where I have to leave. People in my office are scary. They are afraid to come to the office. They come in pairs,” Wright said.
I feel very sorry for him.
But at least he has the option of moving offices.
Other types of businesses cannot relocate so easily.
Unfortunately, in some cities, escaping this crisis has become nearly impossible.
At this point, the entire city of Portland is essentially one huge homeless encampmentAs a result, countless businesses have fled in search of greener pastures.
Yes, some of the people who live in these homeless camps are drug addicts and criminals, but there are also many hard working people who have just had bad luck.
Most of the population is barely making ends meet these days, and inflation is driving up housing costs. to an extremely high level…
Americans face one of the toughest markets in years. Some cities have a maximum of 20 prospective tenants per apartment.
The Northeast is ground zero in the battle for new apartments. Inflation, rising interest rates, and cost-of-living pressures are crushing the homeownership dreams of many millennials and Gen Zers.
Nearly half of the 20 most competitive rental markets in 2023 will be in the Northeast, with North Jersey topping the list, according to Rent Café, which analyzed 134 markets across the United States.
I can hardly believe what a landlord wants these days.
In New York City, the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment is now $5,000 a month…
That high demand may be a result of New York renters being shocked by the exorbitant renewal rates for shoeboxes in the city, where a one-bedroom now averages $5,000 a month.
Can you imagine paying $5,000 a month for a one bedroom apartment?
it’s insanity.
But thanks to the Federal Reserve, this is our country now.
And as the economy worsens, the number of Americans being forced out of rentals is soaring…
Overall, landlords have filed nearly 970,000 eviction lawsuits across the sites tracked by ETS, a 78.6% increase compared to 2021.
The person running things cannot fix this.
In the coming months, more Americans will lose their jobs and more Americans will be forced out of their homes.
This means more people will join the ranks of the homeless, and homeless encampments will continue to grow rapidly across the country.
Do not look down on people who end up in homeless camps.
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