I say this today that I-300 "the right to survive" was shot down at just over 81% against. I though all the liberals wanted to take care of the homeless. Apparently they don't want them to be able to camp on Denver owned areas.
I say this today that I-300 "the right to survive" was shot down at just over 81% against. I though all the liberals wanted to take care of the homeless. Apparently they don't want them to be able to camp on Denver owned areas.
But, when you need your next bag of shrooms, you can just head into town.
Who cares. Just because the people don?t want it doesn?t mean they won?t just implement it anyways.
Stupid peasants. If they aren?t smart enough to make the right decision then the king will do it for them.
I'm sure any disenfranchised campers in Denver can make their way to Boulder. Boulder has a camping ban yet under every bridge along Boulder Creek is a defacto homeless camp, complete with tents and chairs for them to lounge in. The homeless have trashed what could be a really attractive trout-filled creek running through town - trash everywhere, needles, empty food cans, discarded clothes from raided Goodwill bins, etc. Boulder simply will not enforce the ban.
They want to help them, they just don?t want them in their backyard.
Just like they want electric cars, but they don?t want to build power plants anywhere near where they live.
I would love to see a survey of what percentage of those "experiencing homelessness" (I fucking hate that expression) in the Front Range area were actually living in Colorado previously as honest citizens and fell on hard times- lost job, injured, medical expenses, lost home due landlord selling property, etc.
I am all for helping those people, but I feel that number would be very low, perhaps even single digits, and would be completely overwhelmed by the number of transients who came here for "legal weed" and the vagrant lifestyle facilitated by guilt-ridden, self-loathing liberals (like here in Boulder).
But, but,.... according to the Boulder County Commissioners, they passed a resolution:
As a community, Boulder County “explicitly welcomes all residents regardless of their age, race, ethnicity, country of origin, sexual preference of gender identity, ability, religion, income, political persuasion, or cultural practices,”