00:46. Those are the fixes to the no-fault compensation programs to treat them as we do, and as we should, as veterans in the war against disease.
The next area that will open up will be using state laws. And most of the winds that have been happening here, and kudos to everybody here who's doing the employment cases, most of the wins are coming in Title VII, state versions of Title VII, and the other procedures, like writs and mandate. So I think there was very, very good success in getting people's jobs back and in use of the direct Constitutional theories under Section 1983 and directly under the first amendment for the federal and state employees, and whether State action where the government orders a hospital to have a vaccine mandate that makes the hospital estate actor and you can sue them under Section 1983. Set since the Constitution generally replies only two actions only the government takes we are now in his closet fastest era of government industry collaborate and what are the things we saw with coded one of the lessons is we really can't do much about private industry employment cases are the exception to fill that gab States are going to have to pass laws basically a mending there existing civil rights laws to include either and narrow protection for vaccine status or abroad protection for banning discrimination again any kind of medical condition.
If these agencies actually combatted homelessness, they’d be out of work. --Martin Armstrong
Thank you to Martin Armstrong @ Armstrong Economics.
California’s programs to combat homelessness have been utterly ineffective.
California’s homeless crisis proves the public sector is a welfare program and political tool. The California State Auditor released a report this month that reveals California’s programs to combat homelessness have been utterly ineffective. Nine agencies funded by the state have received billions from 2018 to 2023, but homelessness is rapidly rising and California hosts the largest homeless population in the nation. What have these public agencies done with the $24 BILLION they were awarded to combat homelessness?
Homelessness has risen by 56.7% in California since 2015. The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has been used to funnel money to smaller state entities under the impression that they would use the money to assist the people. California Interagency Council on Homelessness (Cal ICH) takes the funding from HUD to coordinate with these main 9 failed programs, but the audit found that CAL ICH has failed to consistently track where this money has gone and has zero methods in place for gathering data on the success of these federally funded initiatives.
CAL ICH has failed to consistently track where this money has gone and has zero methods in place for gathering data on the success of these federally funded initiatives.
“Cal ICH’s statutory goals give it specific responsibilities as the State’s primary resource for homelessness policy coordination and accountability. However, it has also been directly managing multiple large grant programs as mandated by statute, including the multibillion‑dollar HHAP program and the more‑than‑$700 million ERF program,” the study found.
The audit could “not determine the cost-effectiveness” of any of the programs funded by HUD through Cal ICH as they have “not collected complete outcome data for this program, and the expenditure data it has collected may be unreliable.”
This means that the federal government permitted the state of California to squander $24 BILLION in taxpayer funds in a mere five years. They were provided this money with no strings attached and were not required to prove that their agencies were working. As Argentina’s Javier Milei said, “The origins of our evils is the cancer called the public sector.” There are people within these non-profit agencies making a lot of money to do absolutely nothing. The public sector has largely become a form of government welfare as they produce nothing but expect everything. If these agencies actually combatted homelessness, they’d be out of work.
For example, CEO of Dignity Health, Lloyd H. Dean of California was the highest-paid nonprofit executive in 2022 after taking home $35.5 million when his agency made a revenue of $9.5 billion. Second in line was Gregory Adams of Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, who earned $15.6 million with a revenue of $68.1 billion. The third highest-paid non-profit role went to Teresa Campbell of San Diego County Credit Union, who earned $11.8 million on a revenue of $305.2 million. Their organizations are largely tax-exempt since they’re not for profit.
The audit concluded that the state should be held accountable and have some form of reporting standards in place. “To promote transparency, accountability, and effective decision‑making related to the State’s efforts to address homelessness, Cal ICH should request that state agencies responsible for administering state‑funded homelessness programs provide spending‑ and outcome‑related information for people entering, experiencing, and exiting homelessness,” the audit concluded.
They should completely eliminate these agencies. The $24 billion was certainly enough to see that these agencies are merely leeching off of society, preying upon the most vulnerable in our nation. How could homelessness have more than doubled since these agencies were implemented? Simple. The people in control of the money are misusing the funds.
Those who want socialism or social justice fail to realize that this is precisely what happens to entire nations when the public sector becomes the supreme leader. They create useless agencies that continue to grow like cancerous cells, multiplying in size and in funding. THEY PRODUCE NOTHING! The federal government provides them funding without expecting results. This is a dirty game that the federal government plays with its pet state, and in the end, we the people always lose.
The state wants itself to be the primary loyalty. Not the family, and certainly not God.
So state "policies" set out to atomize the family. Divide and conquer.
Every individual alone and isolated, perpetually terrified by state propaganda; looking to state "experts" for salvation.
The family is a bulwark against state power.
The state wants itself to be the primary loyalty. Not the family, and certainly not God.
So state "policies" set out to atomize the family. Divide and conquer.
Every individual alone and isolated, perpetually terrified by state… https://t.co/VbI6mvoSXi
[RG911Team] If you want to go deep and discover what really happened in New York on 9/11, watch our top-rated documentary, “9/11: Explosive Evidence - Experts Speak Out”.
We will be posting it on X this week as a multi-part series. Part 1 is below. pic.twitter.com/5dQBrgvD7q
— Richard Gage, AIA, Architect (@RichardGage_911) April 17, 2024
Our world changed that day . . .
2,744 lives lost in New York . . . and counting
1 million lives lost in Afghanistan and Iraq . . . and counting
6,000 U.S. troops lost in the War on Terror . . . and counting
$4.5 trillion War on Terror cost to U.S. taxpayer
Precious civil liberties removed by the PATRIOT Act . . .