EducationPolitics

Blue city debates $750 million ‘climate investment’ amid rampant homelessness, crime, drugs +

BEFORE the ‘climate investment’ scheme is duly exposed within Portland, Oregon (with others yet to be revealed), it is imperative to draw a straight-line nexus between the full-on, multi-pronged censorship within academia — that which generates and assists the verbal jujitsu, yes, the vomit spewed within the insanity of blue-captured cities/states — to the captured media; the back-benchers. Inexorably, an unrelenting war is bent upon a scorched-earth outcome — and it is not the result of so-called climate change!

IN fact, back in the Fall of 2016, this (with co-author Joe Newby) investigative journalist’s book, BANNED: How Facebook Enables Militant Islamic Jihad devoted Chapter 3 to the above nexus: “What Does The Obama Administration, The “Fourth Estate”, And Academia Have In Common?”

WITH the aforementioned in mind, start your educational journey with the below link. Afterwards, proceed to the madness destroying/enveloping Portland, Oregon via its ‘governance’ and contributing factors.

ONTO the main event.

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WND | By The Western Journal | September 22, 2023

For those of you who haven’t taken notice, Portland, Oregon, is a mess.

Homelessness is rampant. So are open-air drug use and overdoses. Antifa radicals still maintain a notable presence in the city. Crime is so bad that even the company most people associate with the state of Oregon — Nike — is closing one of its stores in Portland because safety and shoplifting concerns have made its continued operation impossible.

So, the City Council is all set to do something and put $750 million behind it. Except the money won’t address crime or homelessness or drug abuse. Oh, no. Instead, the council is spending three-quarters of a billion dollars on “advancing an equitable, climate-resilient Portland.”

“Portland voters passed the ‘Portland clean energy community benefits fund program’ in November of 2018. The goal is to invest money in community-based projects that address climate change over the next five years,” KPTV-TV reported Thursday.

“This plan represents thousands of hours of engagement by numerous stake holders and sectors,” Portland City Commissioner Carmen Rubio said. “And prioritizes programs that reduces greenhouse gas emissions and strengthens the communities that are hit first and hardest by extreme climate events.”

Unless “fentanyl” and “robbery” count as “extreme climate events,” I think the residents of Portland might be less than impressed by the allocation of resources here.

Alas, a quick readthrough of the second issue of a newsletter by the Portland Clean Energy Community Benefits Fund (or PCEF, because apparently Portland is as good at acronyms as it is at controlling crime, homelessness and drug use) indicates that’s not the case.

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