Friday, June 18, 2021

HOW MANY HOMELESS LIVE IN SAN FRANCISCO? HOME TO THE TROIKA OF CORRUPTION FEINSTEIN, PELOSI AND KAMALA HARRIS? - HOW MANY ILLEGALS LIVE IN S.F.?

 

Gavin Newsom Assaulted by ‘Aggressive’ Homeless Man on Oakland Street

LARKSPUR, CA - JUNE 05: Democratic California gubernatorial candidate Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom (R) talks with reporters after voting at the Masonic Temple Fairfax on June 5, 2018 in Larkspur, California. California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom cast his ballot as California voters are heading to the polls to vote in …
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images, AP Photo/Jeff Chiu
3:11

A man has been arrested on suspicion of assaulting California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) during his visit to downtown Oakland, authorities said Friday.

Newsom was walking to a barbershop and pizzeria on Washington Street in Old Oakland to promote small businesses when he was “approached by an aggressive individual,” said Fran Clader, director of communications for the California Highway Patrol, which provides security for the governor.

Officers removed Newsom from the situation and arrested the 54-year-old man, she said.

Newsom did not appear injured, the East Bay Times reported, and quipped to reporters that different people have different ways of saying hello. The assailant allegedly threw a water bottle at the governor, according to law enforcement sources who spoke to the East Bay Times.

The man was taken to Alameda County jail, where he was booked for investigation of resisting an executive officer and assaulting a public official.

Reached by phone, a woman who identified as the suspect’s sister described him as a homeless man with severe mental health problems. She said the allegation made by authorities was “consistent with his past behavior.”

Friday’s assault highlights the growing homeless problem in California. Last month, Newsom announced a plan to spend $12 billion to combat the homelessness crisis as part of his $100 billion “California Comeback Plan.”

The California Democrat has defended his record on this issue in response to national criticism from Republicans. However, the homeless problem has continued to grow in the Golden State, especially in the San Francisco Bay Area and in Alameda County where Oakland is located. The San Francisco Chronicle reported in 2019 that Oakland’s homeless population rose 47 percent in a two-year period. Last month, a group of Oakland residents built a “community center” at a homeless camp under a highway overpass.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed’s latest budget includes a request for $1 billion to stem the homeless epidemic in the city. The San Francisco city and county website estimated the number of homeless individuals to be over 8,000 in 2019, but some sources have estimated the number to be as high as 17,000, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

Last month it was reported that San Francisco is spending $16.1 million for 262 tents to house the homeless in empty lots around the city in what officials call “safe sleeping villages.” The cost of this endeavor breaks down to $190 a night or $61,000 per tent per year.

California’s homeless crisis has been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic. Last year, San Francisco officials housed the city’s homeless population in city-leased hotels and even distributed alcohol, tobacco, medical marijuana, and other substances in order to keep the quarantined homeless from leaving the hotels to obtain these substances on the street.

The Associated Press contributed to this story. 

Democrats Seek to Slip Amnesty for Illegal Aliens in Infrastructure Deal

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 28: President Joe Biden addresses a joint session of Congress, with Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) on the dais behind him on April 28, 2021 in Washington, DC. On the eve of his 100th day in office, Biden spoke about his …
Melina Mara-Pool/Getty Images
3:42

Senate Democrats are seeking to slip an amnesty for potentially millions of illegal aliens into an infrastructure deal and lobbying President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris to support such a maneuver.

According to the Miami Herald, Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) is urging Harris to get behind a plan by Senate Democrats that would put amnesty provisions for illegal aliens into an infrastructure deal.

The Herald reports:

Sen. Bob Menendez pressed Vice President Kamala Harris in a private meeting this week to include a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants in legislation that includes the Biden administration’s infrastructure proposal. [Emphasis added]

Menendez, who is a lead sponsor in Congress of President Joe Biden’s immigration agenda, made a “big push” to Harris on Tuesday to include the citizenship measure in emerging infrastructure legislation, according to a participant in the meeting. A spokesperson for the New Jersey Democrat confirmed that characterization. [Emphasis added]

Menendez would like to see the immigration proposal attached to any bill that lawmakers and Biden decide to move forward, his spokesperson said. [Emphasis added]

Likewise, the Associated Press (AP) reported this week that Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Senate Democrats of the Senate Budget Committee are working on an infrastructure plan that would include giving amnesty to:

  • Illegal aliens enrolled and eligible for the DACA [Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals] program
  • Illegal aliens considered “essential” to the American economy
  • Illegal aliens enrolled in Temporary Protected Status (TPS)

“I am optimistic,” Sen. Alex Padilla (D-CA) told the AP of the amnesty provisions.

The Senate Democrats are seemingly taking marching orders for amnesty from corporate interests, including Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s FWD.us which lobbies for an endless stream of foreign workers to take white-collar American jobs.

Last month, FWD.us hired a former assistant Senate parliamentarian to craft a plan for Democrats that would pass amnesty for illegal aliens through a little-known “reconciliation” rule.

Democrats, along with some House Republicans, have the support of a large amnesty coalition led by former President George W. Bush, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Business Roundtable, and a number of Koch brothers-backed organizations.

Already, current immigration levels put downward pressure on U.S. wages while redistributing about $500 billion in wealth away from America’s working and middle class and towards employers and new arrivals, research by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine has found.

Similarly, peer-reviewed research by economist Christoph Albert acknowledges that “as immigrants accept lower wages, they are preferably chosen by firms and therefore have higher job finding rates than natives, consistent with evidence found in U.S. data.” Albert’s research also finds that immigration “raises competition” for native-born Americans in the labor market.

Every year, 1.2 million legal immigrants are given green cards to permanently resettle in the U.S. In addition, 1.4 million foreign nationals are given visas to take American jobs while hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens enter the U.S. annually.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him at jbinder@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter here

Bloomberg: Tech Workers Happy to Take Pay Cut to Escape Democrat-Controlled Cities

A pedestrian walks past tents and trash on a sidewalk in downtown Los Angeles on May 30, 2019. - The city of Los Angeles on May 29 agreed to allow homeless people on Skid Row to keep their property and not have it seized, providing the items are not bulky …
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images
2:30

A recent report from Bloomberg claims that tech workers at payment processor Stripe are opting to take a ten percent cut to their salary in order to work remotely full time. The goal for most of these workers is to move out of Democrat strongholds like New York City and the San Francisco Bay Area to live and work in more affordable and safer areas.

Bloomberg reports in an article titled “Stripe Saw Major Uptake of Staff Offer to Move With 10% Pay Cut,” that payment processor Stripe saw a surprisingly “major uptake” of a recent offer the company made to staff: Leave cities like New York and San Francisco, work remotely full-time and take a $20,000 bonus, but receive a 10 percent pay cut to their base compensation.
John Collison, Stripe’s co-founder and president, said on Tuesday on Bloomberg Television: “We saw pretty major uptake. There were a lot of people where they took advantage of all the remote working that was going on last year to be able to move to be closer to their families, to somewhere they wanted to move previously.”

Stripe, which is dually headquartered in Dublin, Ireland and San Franciso, has been considered a leader among other Silicon Valley firms in its embrace of remote work. The company began hiring engineers working remotely from home as early as 2013 and six years later opened a fully remote engineering hub.

“We have not come to our ultimate stance or ultimate decision of what the exact mix of in-office versus remote will be,” Collison said. “Everyone has been working remotely during a pandemic but I think that’s going to be very different from the steady state of working remotely.”

The payment processor became the most valuable U.S. startup in March, drawing a $95 billion valuation after raising $600 million in a fundraising round. But Collison and his brother Patrick, a Stripe co-founder and current CEO, are not focused on an initial public offering just yet.

“We still have no plans to IPO,” Collison said. “We’re having lots of fun building Stripe. Maybe we do, maybe we don’t someday but right now we have no plans.”
Read more at Bloomberg here.

Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship. Follow him on Twitter @LucasNolan or contact via secure email at the address lucasnolan@protonmail.com

24 Migrants Rescued in California, Texas Border Sectors over Weekend

Border Patrol agents rescue a distressed migrant woman. (File Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Barry Bahler)
File Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Barry Bahler
4:14

Border Patrol agents at opposite ends of the country rescued at least 24 migrants who became injured or distressed after illegally crossing from Mexico. Some sustained injuries while others fell prey to the increasing summer heat along the U.S.-Mexico Border.

El Centro Sector agents rescued nine migrants in three separate incidents over the weekend. Those rescued included four tender-age children.

Mid-Friday afternoon, El Centro Station agents received a call from Mexican officials regarding four people who became lost after illegally crossing the border in the mountains near Ocotillo, California. Agents responded to the area and found two migrant mothers and their children.

Agents determined one of the women needed medical attention due to a knee injury. An ambulance came and transported the woman and her child to a nearby hospital. Officials identified the migrants as a 26-year-old Guatemalan woman and her two-year-old daughter and a 24-year-old woman traveling with her four-year-old son.

At about the same time, El Centro Sector officials operating Remote Video Surveillance Systems (RVSS) received information about an adult migrant woman who became lost in the desert with three children. Dispatchers sent agents to the desert area near Calexico, California.

The agents found the migrant family about 45 minutes later and conducted medical evaluations on the 28-year-old Ecuadorian woman, her two-year-old daughter, 10-year-old son, and 14-year-old son. All were determined to be in good health. Agents transported them to the station for processing.

California Highway Patrol officials relayed a 911 call to the El Sector Sector Radio Dispatch office on Sunday morning at about 10:15 regarding a man who illegally crossed the border with no water and became lost, officials reported. An El Centro Sector Border Search, Trauma, and Rescue (BORSTAR) team immediately began a search and rescue operation.

About three hours later, the rescue team found the man and identified him as a 42-year-old Mexican national. The man injured his knee and required EMS transportation to an area hospital.

El Centro Sector officials report their agents successfully rescued more than 150 migrants so far this fiscal year, which began on October 1, 2020.

At the other end of the border, Rio Grande Valley Sector agents rescued another 15 migrants in two incidents near the Texas-Mexico border. The rescues came after migrants triggered rescue beacons.

On Sunday, Fort Brown Station agents apprehended a group of 13 near Brownsville, Texas. Agents observed two of the female migrants fading in and out of consciousness, officials reported. Agents quickly provided medical assistance to the women and requested an ambulance to transport them to a hospital for further medical evaluation.

Further inland, Kingsville Station agents responded to two emergency beacons and found two migrants in the brush. The agents provided medical assistance to the migrants.

Rio Grande Valley Sector officials rescued more than 100 migrants suffering heat-related illness during the past 45 days. That number is expected to increase as the Texas summer heat kicks into full gear.

Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior news contributor for the Breitbart Texas-Border team. He is an original member of the Breitbart Texas team. Price is a regular panelist on Fox 26 Houston’s What’s Your Point? Sunday-morning talk show. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.

San Francisco Supervisor: ‘We’re Putting More Resources’ into Police Because Police Presence Decreases Crime ‘Dramatically’

1:09

On Friday’s “CNN Newsroom,” San Francisco Board of Supervisors member Ahsha Safai discussed the retail theft problems in the city and said that “when we do have police in those areas, the crime drops dramatically.” And that’s why “We’re putting more resources back into our police department to ensure that they have the appropriate staffing levels.”

Safai said that the bulk of retail theft in the city is organized retail theft, and that these thefts are “not being prosecuted on the level that I think they need to be.”

Safai also stated that the city has called on Walgreens “to invest more resources.” And “I am also on the Budget Committee. We’re putting more resources back into our police department to ensure that they have the appropriate staffing levels. Because when we do have police in those areas, the crime drops dramatically.”

He added that the shoplifting sprees are, “in some cases” due to a lack of police.

Follow Ian Hanchett on Twitter @IanHanchett

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