Anonymous ID: 2dbe67 July 9, 2025, 2:18 p.m. No.23302160   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2165 >>2171 >>2173 >>2181 >>2185 >>2192 >>2195 >>2197 >>2211 >>2377 >>2614

🚨 🚨 BREAKING: Congressman Jamie Raskin is asking Pam Bondi to turn over Epstein files that mention Trump, citing Elon Musk’s deleted post saying the reason the files weren’t released was because Trump was in them.

 

Source: @guardian

 

12:32 PM · Jul 8, 2025

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184.4K

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https://x.com/TheMaineWonk/status/1942622745423970758

Anonymous ID: 2dbe67 July 9, 2025, 2:19 p.m. No.23302171   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2178 >>2197 >>2276 >>2377 >>2614

>>23302160

House Dems Demand Release of Epstein Files in Letter to AG Pam Bondi

 

It is absolutely wild watching some democrats like Jasmine Crockette and Eric Swalwell demand the Epstein files be released…

 

While other prominent top democrats are absolutely silent

 

https://legacy.www.documentcloud.org/documents/2599

 

6:54 PM · Jul 8, 2025

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85K

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https://x.com/MJTruthUltra/status/1942718961101033531

Anonymous ID: 2dbe67 July 9, 2025, 2:47 p.m. No.23302332   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2377 >>2614

California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) announced Tuesday that he had allocated $101 million in new spending on low-income housing in the areas devastated by the Palisades and Eaton Fires, confirming residents’ fears.

Residents have long worried that state and local authorities would use the opportunity provided by the fires to build low-income housing — perhaps even for the homeless population, or for housing for illegal migrants.

When Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass appointed Steve Soboroff as “chief recovery officer,” without any kind of public process, some residents suspected that Soboroff’s role would be to push for “affordable” housing.

Many residents felt that there was already “affordable” housing in the area, whether the trailer park near Pacific Coast Highway, or postwar bungalows that had once been cheap before rising dramatically in value.

Local developer Rick Caruso — who ran against Bass in 2022 — argued that Pacific Palisades should retain its pre-fire character, while Soboroff argued that state law required new low-income housing to be built there.

Some more conspiratorially-minded residents wondered whether the fire had been allowed to spread — or even set deliberately — to allow politicians to build low-income housing on what was once prime real estate.

Last week, Gov. Newsom signed a rollback of environmental regulations to allow low-income housing to be built more easily in urban areas. While hailed by many housing advocates as a deregulatory measure, the new law also paved the way for low-income housing to be built in fire zones.

Tuesday’s announcement by Newsom will add fuel to suspicions that the real goal of state and local leaders is not rebuilding, but redistribution.

The Center Square reported:

Six months after the devastating Palisades and Eaton fires, California Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled $101 million in funding Tuesday for “multifamily low-income housing development” that will “contribute to a more equitable and resilient Los Angeles.” The priority is for “geographic proximity to the fire perimeters of the Eaton, Hughes, and Palisades fires.”

Earlier this year, The Center Square broke news that California state law and a local Los Angeles ordinance require fire-destroyed rent-protected housing — which includes all apartments in the city built before October 1978 — be replaced with low-income housing. Because the affordability requirements use county-level income data, not more local incomes, definitions for “low” and “very low” income housing reflect much lower incomes than the norm for the affluent Palisades community.

“Thousands of families – from Pacific Palisades to Altadena to Malibu – are still displaced, and we owe it to them to help,” said Newsom in a statement. “The funding we’re announcing today will accelerate the development of affordable multifamily rental housing so that those rebuilding their lives after this tragedy have access to a safe, affordable place to come home to.”

 

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2025/07/09/it-begins-newsom-allocates-101-million-for-low-income-housing-in-fire-zones/