Fighting for Anthony: The Struggle to Save Portland, Oregon

The city has long grappled with street homelessness and a shortage of housing. Now fentanyl has turned a perennial problem into a deadly crisis and a challenge to the city’s progressive identity.

Come to Portland, his sister said. It’s green and beautiful, people are friendly and there are plenty of jobs.

In 2018, Anthony Saldana took his sister’s advice. He left Las Vegas, where he was working in a casino, and moved to a Portland suburb.

He rented an apartment and got a job at Home Depot. Mr. Saldana, though, never quite found his footing. By early 2021, he was living in a tent, under a tree on the edge of a highway in Portland.

Yoo Hoo NYTimes! Homelessness and fentanyl are what mark Portland as a progressive paradise.

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Olivia Chow asks Toronto residents to open homes to refugees

Toronto is asking residents to open up their homes and offer available rental units to asylum seekers as more than 200 people remain temporarily sheltered at two North York churches.

The city added 250 additional shelter spaces within the last week, through hotels and an existing emergency shelter, but these spaces are already full.


One of the first things predicted to happen after Chow was elected was the escalation of the homeless crisis and the commencement of unending demands for more and more funding that somehow never solves the “crisis.”

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Ottawa can’t wash its hands of Toronto’s refugee crisis

Here’s a short list of things that Ottawa spends money on but has no constitutional responsibility for: health care, child care, new fridges for big grocery companies, and Gen Y tech consultants for small businesses.

Not on that list, however, is full-fledged support to pay for the rapidly mounting costs of immigration – borders and immigration being, when last we checked, within the ambit of the federal government.

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Idiot housing minister doubles down on mass immigration

Canada’s new housing and infrastructure minister says closing the door to newcomers is not the solution to the country’s housing woes, and has instead endorsed building more homes to accommodate higher immigration flows.

Sean Fraser, who previously served as immigration minister, was sworn in Wednesday morning as part of a Liberal government cabinet shuffle aimed at showcasing a fresh team ahead of the next federal election.

Strong population growth through immigration is adding pressure to housing demand at a time when the country is struggling with an affordability crisis.


Canada’s home building capacity is at it’s limit and no you aren’t going to find enough carpenters to import.

There is no way enough new homes can be built to ward off the coming catastrophe.

The crisis in housing affordabily will have severe and lasting consequences for many families and singles not to mention seniors on fixed incomes.

This assault on our economic security will only get worse and tragically none of it had to happen.

Was there no one in Ottawa able to point out to the idiots that mass immigration is a primary cause of the housing shortage?

That mass immigration is not a magic pill able to solve all problems?

I am convinced they want the homeless crisis.

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As home prices soar, Habitat for Humanity helps higher-income Canadians buy properties

After decades of helping low-income Canadians get into homes, Habitat for Humanity is witnessing a profound change in who it is assisting.

The charity is increasingly backstopping mortgage loans for higher-income households, including those earning about $100,000 a year, in yet another sign of how unaffordable Canada has become.

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A return to order: Canada is crumbling—And our leaders’ solutions are delusionally wrong

Allowing chaos and criminality is not compassion, no matter what the governing class pretends

Even the dwindling number of partisans who still bristle at the claim that Canada is broken must admit that it sure looks and feels that way. Life in Canadian cities is noticeably coarser, uglier, and more violent than it was just a few years ago. Places once known for their civic beauty like Victoria, where I grew up, are now defaced by parks and city blocks that would be considered embarrassing in the third world. It doesn’t help that this street-level squalor has spread incongruously in the shadow of gleaming new glass and steel apartment towers, which contribute in their own way to a growing feel of social division and alienation in what was, until very recently, still mostly a city of wood, stone, and brick built on a human scale.

h/t CK

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From a one-way flight to sleeping in a parking lot: Diary of a California dream gone sour

Andrew Truelove needs a belt and a pair of socks.

He takes his time getting up from the mattress he slept on the night before in the parking lot behind a Torrance shopping center. He smokes his first Lucky Strike of the day, then takes a Lyft to San Pedro, where he’s heard he may be able to get into a tiny house community.

It’s May 17, Truelove’s 32nd day in California. Shortly after he arrived at LAX from his native Virginia, he hitched a ride to Slab City, an eccentric off-grid community in the Sonoran desert. Then he spent a few weeks in the Bay Area and Silicon Valley, pursuing his dream of starting a new social media platform.

Slab City

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‘EWOK VILLAGE’ homeless encampment appears in trees high above Seattle

Seattle vagrants have now constructed a homeless encampment in the trees above the crime-ridden city, prompting one stunned local to liken it to the Ewok Village from Star Wars.

Local journalist Jonathan Choe stumbled across the ramshackle treehouse high in the city’s trees on Friday, and deployed a drone to get a closer look.

The Ewok encampment has a wooden stepladder to let its residents reach the ground below it. Its floor appears to be comprised of foam blocks, with a net supporting the soft material, which likely gives the shelter’s residents a comfortable sleeping experience.

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I watched a major city’s homeless problem vanish. We could do the same

When I moved to London for the second time in my life, in the early 2000s, I was struck by a highly visible change: The street-level misery that had defined the great metropolis in the 1980s had all but vanished. Gone were the bodies huddled under blankets around the edges of Trafalgar Square, the rows of beggars along Oxford Street and the Strand, the encampments beneath the arches of Waterloo Bridge.

It was the first and only time I have seen a serious urban “rough sleeping” problem (as street homelessness is more accurately known in Britain) more or less fully solved, humanely and comprehensively.


Numbers seem to be in dispute … 

This article quotes numbers from a homeless advocacy group so bias is possible, even likelyThe London-only Combined Homelessness and Information Network (Chain) figures are considered to be more accurate than the official one-night count. The most recent annual count showed 10,053 rough sleepers were spotted on London’s streets between April 2022 and March 2023. That was down by a fifth on the 8,329 recorded in the previous year.

This is from the BBCLondon has had the biggest rise of rough sleepers in England according to government figures, with an increase of 34% across a 12-month period.

There were an estimated 858 people sleeping rough in the capital on a single night in autumn 2022, compared to 640 the year before.

The BBC numbers seem light.

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Adam Pankratz: Politicians cower as homeless camps take over Canadian cities

Many cities in Canada are facing a housing and homeless crisis. Whether it be Vancouver, Calgary or Toronto, homeless tent encampments have become a depressingly common sight. For the most part, politicians seem either uninterested or unwilling to act unless forced to do so. After years of inaction, Vancouver’s tent city was only finally removed after a fed-up populous ejected the former mayor and council and swept Ken Sim and his ABC party to power with mandate to change something, anything, about the declining state of the city.


The housing situation calls for a march on Ottawa.

The mass immigration policy favoured by the corporate class and implemented by their lackey pols in the Liberal, NDP & Conservative UNIPARTY is impoverishing Canadians.

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LEVY: Politicians and activists are expanding the homeless industry

Encampments full of drug-addicted residents have returned to one problem Toronto park, which was the subject of two eviction attempts during the Covid pandemic, one of which resulted in violence and several arrests.

Lamport Stadium Park, which is in Toronto’s trendy Distillery District, is now home to at least 30 tents and an equal number of seemingly drug-addicted and abusive residents.

It’s Big Business.

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To buy a home in Metro Vancouver you need to earn at least $235,650 a year

… The jump in Vancouver home prices, combined with higher interest rates and stress tests, means that a buyer would need an annual income of $235,650 to buy a home in Metro Vancouver last month, up from $226,800 in May.

Vancouver’s average home price increase was more than double the rate of the next two cities: Toronto was up $6,900 to an average home price of $1,171,300, and Victoria was up $6,500 to $885,100.

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How bout we just exile the Liberal Party instead?

‘I’m done with Canada’: High cost of living leads some to leave the country

With the Bank of Canada’s recent decision to raise its key interest rate, and the average price of a home rising year-over-year, many Canadians say they are struggling to afford housing. As a result, some have decided to relocate to countries where they will pay less for accommodation and other essential items.

One of those people is Roland Cameron from Hamilton, Ont. Cameron and his wife arrived in Barbados on July 10 and plan to live there permanently. The couple had considered living in other countries before settling on Barbados, where Cameron’s father’s side of the family lives. In search of a lower cost of living, the couple hopes to make the value of their dollar go further, Cameron said.

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Anthony Furey: We Must Act Now to Stop the Decline of Our Cities

During my recent run to become mayor of Toronto, one line I heard from a lot of people was that they were considering moving out of town if Olivia Chow won the election. The challenges on our streets have become so dire on a number of fronts—crime, affordability, gridlock—that an exodus from the cities is becoming more likely.

We’ll see how many people make good on their threat following Chow’s victory. These sorts of sentiments have become common, such as how American progressive celebrities pledged to move to Canada if Donald Trump won the presidency.

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