Anonymous ID: e24d6c Nov. 16, 2023, 7:04 a.m. No.19925593   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Freeway Fire

FF

16

 

Los Angeles criticized for its handling of homelessness after 16 homeless people escape freeway fire

 

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The fire erupted after midnight where 16 people were living under the Los Angeles freeway, including a pregnant woman who was only weeks from giving birth.

 

As the flames engulfed the storage yard and the inferno's heat melted some of the thoroughfare's steel guardrails and concrete pillars, rescue crews were able to get everyone out safely. But the disaster has brought renewed criticism over officials' inability to get homeless residents off the street, leaving tens of thousands living in perilous locations across the nation's second-largest city.

 

Three years ago, as part of a court order related to a yearslong lawsuit accusing the city and county of Los Angeles of not doing enough to address homelessness, a judge wrote he was concerned about 7,000 people living under freeways, calling it “unreasonably dangerous.” County supervisor Hilda Solis said officials have since set aside nearly $300 million to create 6,700 shelter beds, but rows of tents and makeshift shelters are still a common sight under overpasses and along highway ramps.

 

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and California Gov. Gavin Newsom are now under pressure to not only reopen the section of Interstate 10 as fast as possible, but to find out who started the fire and what oversight the state had on the property. Bass has warned repeatedly against assumptions that homeless residents started the blaze, but that hasn't stopped speculation and blame.

 

Late Wednesday, an attorney for Apex Development Inc., the company that leased the property, said the company had complained to city officials numerous times about fires started by homeless people on or near the property. Newsom has called the company a “bad actor," and the state is in litigation with Apex seeking $78,000 in back rent for the property and saying Apex sublet to unauthorized tenants.

 

“It is unfortunate that Governor Gavin Newsom and Mayor Karen Bass have used this incident to speculate and mischaracterize Apex and its principals as ‘bad actors’ to excuse their own failures to adequately address the public safety issues caused by the unhoused,” attorney Mainak D'Attaray said in an emailed statement.

 

A spokesperson for the governor disagreed with D'Attaray. The California Department of Forestry and Protection “currently believes the fire was caused by arson — the criminal act of deliberately setting fire to property — in a fenced-off area that Apex was responsible for maintaining while they continued to assert rights under the lease,” Izzy Gardon said.

 

A federally required January count estimated that on any given night there were more than 75,500 unhoused people in the county, with well over 46,000 of them in the Los Angeles city limits. Since 2015, homelessness has increased by 70% in the county and 80% in the city. Advocates over the years have sued the city and county to demand more action.

 

Investigators have made a preliminary determination that the blaze was intentionally set behind a fence where businesses were storing materials under I-10, but they said they do not know yet who started it.

 

Mel Tillekeratne, an advocate for homeless people and founder of nonprofit The Shower Of Hope, said Saturday's blaze could have been a horrible human catastrophe.

 

“We were lucky there that nobody got hurt," he said. “But something like this could happen at any other encampment at any other time. It’s just a tragedy waiting to happen.”

 

Tillekeratne said he hopes disasters like this shine a light on how homeless resources and facilities need to be staged in more neighborhoods to keep people away from highways, where pollution from exhaust and traffic accidents are major hazards.

 

“We’re talking about one of the busiest freeways in the U.S.,” he said, speaking of I-10.

 

Solis, who represents the area where the fire began, said, “We know that more resources are needed in this area to help overcome the consequences of structural and systemic inequalities.”

 

Of those evacuated during Saturday’s fire, eight moved into interim housing, three went to stay with friends and one was reconnected with a homeless services program, Solis said Wednesday.

 

Business owners who subleased the storage properties said they voiced concerns for years about fire danger and other hazards related to camps in an industrial zone under I-10.

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/los-angeles-criticized-handling-homelessness-052014400.html

Anonymous ID: e24d6c Nov. 16, 2023, 9:08 a.m. No.19926141   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19926125

Yeah, sure.

I remember when the false narrative was that it was "Russian Bots" doing it.

 

So, it's really just another rouse of control, to say it's only to curb "Chinese and Iranian's," when what they really mean is it's anyone who isn't a brainwashed sheep.

Anonymous ID: e24d6c Nov. 16, 2023, 9:13 a.m. No.19926169   🗄️.is 🔗kun

HH

 

Longtime NASCAR announcer Ken Squier dies

 

Longtime NASCAR announcer Ken Squier died Wednesday. He was 88.

 

Squier is the most recognizable voice and face in NASCAR television history. He was the announcer for the 1979 Daytona 500, the race that put NASCAR on the national map.

 

The famous race was the first NASCAR race to be broadcast live on television in its entirety. As a massive snowstorm had hit much of the United States, 16 million people watched Richard Petty’s win as Donnie Allison and Cale Yarborough crashed while racing for the lead on the final lap.

 

It’s Squier who viewers hear exclaim “and there’s a fight, between Cale Yarborough and Donnie Allison” as the two drivers tangled near their crashed cars. The moment is one of the most iconic in NASCAR history.

 

"Though he never sat behind the wheel of a stock car, Ken Squier contributed to the growth of NASCAR as much as any competitor," NASCAR chairman Jim France said in a statement. "Ken was a superb storyteller and his unmistakable voice is the soundtrack to many of NASCAR's greatest moments. His calls on TV and radio brought fans closer to the sport, and for that he was a fan favorite. Ken knew no strangers, and he will be missed by all. On behalf of the France family and all of NASCAR, I offer my condolences to the family and friends of Ken Squier."

 

Squier served as the voice of CBS’ NASCAR coverage from 1979 through 1997 before current NASCAR on Fox announcer Mike Joy took over. Thursday morning, tributes to Squier from fellow NASCAR Hall of Famers started pouring in on social media.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/sports/longtime-nascar-announcer-ken-squier-dies-133445290.html

Anonymous ID: e24d6c Nov. 16, 2023, 9:16 a.m. No.19926198   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6241

The Bush-Obama Blueprint That Gives Biden Hope for ’24

 

Well before Election Day in 2004, President George W. Bush was warned by strategists that he would face a tough campaign battle because of voter distress over the war in Iraq and over the economy — two issues he had once hoped to ride to a second term.

 

Bush’s aides moved quickly to retool the campaign. They turned attention away from the president and his record and set out to portray his likely Democratic opponent, Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, a Vietnam War veteran, as a flip-flopper, unreliable on national security and unfit to lead a nation still reeling from the terror attacks of Sept. 11.

 

“We saw a weakness we knew we could exploit to our advantage in what was going to be a close election,” said Karl Rove, Bush’s longtime senior political adviser.

 

Eight years later, aides to another sitting president, Barack Obama, reviewing public and private polls, concluded that concern among voters about the lingering effects of the Great Recession and the direction of the nation could derail his hopes for a second term.

 

Taking a lesson from Bush, Obama recast his campaign away from his first-term record and set out to discredit his opponent, Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, as a wealthy businessperson unsympathetic to working-class Americans.

 

President Joe Biden is hardly the first president during this era of division and polarization to be confronted with polling data suggesting his reelection was at risk. But the reelection campaigns rolled out by Bush and Obama, who both returned to second terms in the White House, stand today as reminders that polls this early are not predictions of what will happen on Election Day. In the hands of a nimble candidate, they can even be a road map for turning around a struggling campaign.

 

Bush and Obama were different candidates facing different obstacles: a quagmire of a war for Bush, a domestic economy shaken by the global financial crisis of 2008 for Obama. But both moved to transform their reelection campaigns from a referendum on the incumbent into a contrast with an opponent they defined, with slashing television advertisements, months before either Romney or Kerry were nominated at their party conventions.

 

By contrast, a modern-day Republican president who lost a bid for a second term, George H.W. Bush in 1992, failed to heed polls showing voters distressed about the economy and ready for a change after 12 years of Republicans in the White House.

 

The elder Bush, his aides said in recent interviews, was lulled by the accolades for leading the coalition that repelled Saddam Hussein and Iraq out of Kuwait, and contempt for his opponent, a young Democratic governor who had avoided the draft and had a history of extramarital liaisons.

 

“Biden has a very high degree of difficulty but I think the race is winnable,” said David Plouffe, who was a senior adviser to Obama’s reelection campaign. “Listen, I have sympathy for an incumbent president or governor who says, ‘people need to know more about my accomplishments.’ That is true, but at the end of the day this is a comparative exercise. That’s the one thing we learned.”

 

The Biden White House has dismissed polls — including a New York Times/Siena College poll released last week — as meaningless this far before Election Day. The president’s advisers pointed to Democratic gains in this month’s elections as evidence that the party and its standard-bearer are in fine shape.

 

more bullshit

https://www.yahoo.com/news/bush-obama-blueprint-gives-biden-135043899.html

Anonymous ID: e24d6c Nov. 16, 2023, 9:28 a.m. No.19926258   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6269

>>19926231

There are certain "storylines" that are SO OLD they have far past Cringe

 

J6 is one.

 

Tired of hearing it. Tire of that ever dangling carrot that the truth is gonna blow minds.

 

PFFFFT.