Anonymous ID: 22f417 May 1, 2020, 11:17 p.m. No.8996984   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7108 >>7143 >>7262 >>7338 >>7441 >>7519

City Dumps 2,000 Pounds of Chicken Manure To Keep Citizens from Gathering, Funds It with Their Tax Money

 

For those of us who think that personal responsibility is the best way to defeat coronavirus without crushing the economy, the Swedish model has become a go-to talking point. Sweden didn’t shut everything down when the virus hit. There were no stay-at-home orders. Instead, Swedish authorities trusted their people to make correct decisions about what to do and how to socially distance.

 

The success of this is debatable (President Donald Trump isn’t a fan, saying they’re “paying heavily” for the decision not to lock down) and some of what makes Sweden’s path doable is cultural, meaning it’s not entirely applicable here. And there’s also the fact that not all Swedish officials are onboard with this laissez-faire thinking.

 

Take officials in the city of Lund, a university town with a population of around 91,000. It’s a short 20-minute drive from Malmö and also home to a major Walpurgis Night celebration. That’s a night of revelry that was originally supposed to be about the canonization of Saint Walburga, although it’s become something a bit more secular these days.

 

“At midnight, the official start of spring is heralded by setting off fireworks, dancing and playing loud music — all said to drive the witches and winter spirits away,” Germany’s The Local reported in 2014. “But not for long, exactly six months later the spooks will return for the start of winter on All Hallow’s Eve.

 

“Nowadays Walpurgisnacht has also become an excuse for causing mayhem.” Anyway, one way to ward off coronavirus-related “mayhem” in Lund was apparently to spread 2,200 pounds of taxpayer-funded chicken manure in the city’s central park in order to stop people from gathering when Walpurgis Night happened on Thursday.

Mayor Philip Sandberg told a Swedish outlet it would “not be a pleasant experience … to sit in a park that stinks of chicken manure. But it will be good for the lawns, as chicken manure contains a lot of phosphorus and nitrogen, so we’ll get a really nice park for the summer.”

“Lund could very well become an epicenter for the spread of the coronavirus on the last night in April, [so] I think it was a good initiative,” Gustav Lundblad, chairman of the city council’s environment committee, added, according to the U.K. Guardian.

“We get the opportunity to fertilize the lawns, and at the same time it will stink and so it may not be so nice to sit and drink beer in the park,” Lundblad said.

 

Lund couldn’t actually ban the festival because of coronavirus concerns, given that it’s a spontaneous happening. While they have a ban in place on gatherings of 50 or more people, this was their solution — which Lundblad admitted might have a slight drawback.

 

“I am not a fertilizer expert, but as I understand it, it is clear that it might smell a bit outside the park as well,” Lundblad said. “These are chicken droppings, after all. I cannot guarantee that the rest of the city will be odorless. But the point is to keep people out of the city park.”

 

And I’m sure people around the park are going to stay in their domiciles when those domiciles reek of bird feces. It would not be a pleasant experience to sit in an apartment that stinks of chicken manure the same way that it would not be a pleasant experience to sit in a park that stinks of chicken manure. Good work.

 

https://www.westernjournal.com/city-dumps-2000-pounds-chicken-manure-keep-citizens-gathering-funds-tax-money

Anonymous ID: 22f417 May 1, 2020, 11:27 p.m. No.8997050   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8997023

hospitals are being paid by the head for covid, records wrong to begin with. don't trust the CDC-say kids with MRSA can't be kept out of school, just can't touch other kids–fkn nuts

Anonymous ID: 22f417 May 2, 2020, 12:24 a.m. No.8997340   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7346 >>7376 >>7402 >>7441 >>7519

As Citizens Try To Scrape By During Pandemic, Dem Mayor Tries 32% Property Tax Hike

By Carmine Sabia Published April 30, 2020 at 7:10pm

 

Democrats never miss an opportunity to stick it to the American people with taxes — no matter the situation.

And that is precisely what the mayor of Nashville, Tennessee, proposed doing while many of his constituents are out of work.

Mayor John Cooper pushed for a 31.7 percent property tax increase and major cuts because, he said, the city is faced with “the greatest financial challenge” it has had in a lifetime, the Tennessean reported.

“This is a crisis budget,” he said as he gave a frightening outlook for the financial future of the city.

And he is correct: This is likely the “greatest financial challenge” the city has faced in modern history.

ut it is also the greatest financial challenge many of his city’s residents have faced in a lifetime, and raising taxes on them to that degree is not going to help.

 

“Cooper’s $2.44 billion budget proposal is about $115 million more than this year’s budget,” the Tennessean reported.

“After two deals to bring in a quick influx of cash faltered last year, Nashville’s house of cards collapsed, leading to a $42 million shortfall.” Nashville was in a financial hole before it was hit with a major storm and then the coronavirus pandemic.

 

City grants to nonprofits would bear the brunt of Cooper’s proposed new budget, the Tennessean reported. The mayor had ruled out cuts to cost-of-living adjustments for city employees.

“In the end, hard, hard decisions have to be made,” he said. “Everybody is sacrificing in this budget.”

 

But while city employees will be keeping their jobs, property-owning taxpayers will be taken to the woodshed by the proposed budget.

“It’s an insult to small businesses in Nashville that are literally at best on their knees, but most are on the ground. It’s like getting kicked in the gut with a steel-toed boot,” local restaurant owner Will Newman told WKRN-TV.

 

“This will absolutely crush whatever restaurants are left, crush it. Small businesses in Nashville are on life support and you know our plea now is to metro council: Do the right thing and propose an alternate budget that is balanced in its approach and not shocking to the core.”

 

District 19 Councilman Freddie O’Connell said he has received many calls from restaurant owners who are concerned about the proposed increase.

 

“Thinking about a sharp property tax increase right now is really, really troubling to me,” he said. “A small business by sometime next year is probably going to see their rent increase as they also try and deal with an economy that’s struggling to regain its footing.”

 

No one who lives in a city with a Democratic mayor should ever be surprised when tax increases are proposed.

The simple solution to eliminate that issue is to stop voting for Democrats.

 

https://www.westernjournal.com/citizens-try-scrape-pandemic-dem-mayor-tries-32-property-tax-hike