NRA a "terrorist organization" says San Francisco

Budley Doright

Well-Known Member
Yer not alone, that's why a bunk goes for $1400 a fucking month there, a bunk in a room with a half dozen strangers! A lot would rather shit on the streets, or more correctly would have to. Affordable housing is another thing the government should look into, works here in Canada, though it could work better. Mental health policy is another thing they should change and stop letting the cops and prisons deal with it, Many of the homeless suffer from mental illness.
What goal posts are you using to say affordable housing works here? Shelters overflowing and at capacity, thousands on waiting lists, more people every day losing stable housing. Huge non sub stainable deficits in public housing repairs. I’m not sure I would say it is working as much as it’s falling apart as we watch :(. Huge funding gaps that politicians are to scared to actually tackle due to possible lost votes.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
What goal posts are you using to say affordable housing works here? Shelters overflowing and at capacity, thousands on waiting lists, more people every day losing stable housing. Huge non sub stainable deficits in public housing repairs. I’m not sure I would say it is working as much as it’s falling apart as we watch :(. Huge funding gaps that politicians are to scared to actually tackle due to possible lost votes.
I'm not too sure this thread is the best spot to discuss Canadian political issues. I don't follow that particular policy issue too closely and figure the usual issues of the economically disadvantaged are at play, namely low on the list of politicians. Our political system has many of the same problems and issues as the Americans do and I don't want to give the impression we're living in some kind of Goddamn utopia! In NS we have lots of public housing, mostly for 55 plus people, it's usually in the form of private non profit groups getting government funding and it costs tenants a third of their income for rent. Much more needs to be done here and in the states to address this issue and reduce homelessness
 

Budley Doright

Well-Known Member
I'm not too sure this thread is the best spot to discuss Canadian political issues. I don't follow that particular policy issue too closely and figure the usual issues of the economically disadvantaged are at play, namely low on the list of politicians. Our political system has many of the same problems and issues as the Americans do and I don't want to give the impression we're living in some kind of Goddamn utopia! In NS we have lots of public housing, mostly for 55 plus people, it's usually in the form of private non profit groups getting government funding and it costs tenants a third of their income for rent. Much more needs to be done here and in the states to address this issue and reduce homelessness
Nova Scotia is to fucking cold to live outside ;) they all head west. I know I would lol.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Nova Scotia is to fucking cold to live outside ;) they all head west. I know I would lol.
We got a hurricane coming too! The springs are late and the fall long here and the winter temperatures are mild, we can go nearly until Christmas most years with out any snow, lately.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/article/business-government-and-politics-gun-politics-bankruptcy-fraud-3daa77a71a949814b362bcf6a6367298Screen Shot 2021-07-11 at 2.31.45 PM.png
NEW YORK (AP) — Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer on Sunday called on the Justice Department to investigate the National Rifle Association for bankruptcy fraud, saying the financially stable gun-rights group abused the system when it sought bankruptcy protection in the wake of a New York lawsuit seeking to put it out of business.

A judge rejected the NRA’s bankruptcy case in May, ruling the non-profit organization had not acted in good faith. NRA leaders made clear that the organization was “in its strongest financial condition in years” and was seeking bankruptcy protection so it could changes its state of incorporation from New York to gun-friendly Texas.

Schumer, D-N.Y., said the NRA’s continued heavy spending on advertising criticizing proposed gun control measures and the nomination of gun control lobbyist David Chipman to run the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Firearms and Explosives is further evidence that its bankruptcy filing was inspired by legal, not financial, concerns.

“They recently told the judicial branch of government that they are bankrupt after the lawsuit by Tish James, and at the same time they’re saying they’re bankrupt, they’re spending millions of dollars on ads to stop universal background checks,” Schumer said. “That demands an investigation by the Justice Department.”

The NRA said it was working on a statement. The Justice Department didn’t immediately comment on Schumer’s request.

The organization filed for bankruptcy protection in January, months after New York Attorney General Letitia James sued the NRA, seeking its dissolution over claims that top executives illegally diverted tens of millions of dollars for lavish personal trips, no-show contracts for associates and other questionable expenditures. That lawsuit is ongoing.

In dismissing the NRA’s bankruptcy case, Judge Harlin Hale wrote that it appeared “less like a traditional bankruptcy case in which a debtor is faced with financial difficulties or a judgment that it cannot satisfy and more like cases in which courts have found bankruptcy was filed to gain an unfair advantage in litigation or to avoid a regulatory scheme.”

Schumer, speaking to reporters Sunday, highlighted a $2 million advertising blitz the NRA announced in April, aimed at fighting gun control proposals, while the bankruptcy case was still pending. The organization said it was placing ads on TV and digital platforms, sending out mailers and holding town hall meetings in at least 12 states.

In West Virginia, Schumer said, the organization spent $250,000 on TV ads encouraging people to call Sen. Joe Manchin, a Democrat, and tell him to reject Chipman’s confirmation.

“How can you say you’re bankrupt at the same time you have millions of dollars to spend on ads throughout the country trying to prevent universal background checks fundraising and other things that will stop the killings on the streets,” Schumer said.

“The bottom line is the NRA shot itself in the foot when they declared bankruptcy and still have millions of dollars,” he said.
 
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