US US Politics General 2 - Discussion of President Trump and other politicians

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Should be a wild four years.

Helpful links for those who need them:

Current members of the House of Representatives
https://www.house.gov/representatives

Current members of the Senate
https://www.senate.gov/senators/

Current members of the US Supreme Court
https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx

Members of the Trump Administration
https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/
 
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OBBB has been successfully gutted
Only a complete fucking retard like you could celebrate universal healthcare for illegals while US taxpayers go without.

This is exactly what I thought would happen.
‘Thought’ doesn’t mean jack shit, point us to where you stated it would, beforehand.
Unproven retrospective claims of prescience are worthless.
 
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In Jewish Billionaire Pritzker news...

JB Pritzker: From political neophyte to 43rd governor of Illinois — and potential US presidential candidate
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Dan Petrella
2025-06-27 10:00:56GMT
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Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker is joined by first lady MK Pritzker during a rally to kick off his reelection campaign for a third term as governor at the Grand Crossing Park Fieldhouse in Chicago on June 26, 2025. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker this week set out to make history, launching his bid to become the first Illinois governor since the 1980s to be elected to more than two terms in office.

A win next year also would make Pritzker, 60, the first Democrat ever in Illinois to win three terms. Republican James R. Thompson was Illinois’ longest-serving governor, winning election four times straight and holding the office from 1977 to 1991.

A century earlier, when the Grand Old Party was a new force in politics, Republican Richard Oglesby won three nonconsecutive elections, in 1864, ’72 and ’84, although he resigned 10 days after being sworn in for his second term to join the U.S. Senate. Two other Republicans, Dwight Green in 1948 and William Stratton in 1960, made unsuccessful third-term attempts, losing to Democrats Adlai Stevenson II and Otto Kerner, respectively.

Pritzker is not expected to have significant competition for the Democratic primary in March and it remains to be seen whether any high-profile Republicans will mount a campaign to challenge him in November 2026. He’s also publicly flirted with the idea of running for president in 2028.

So as Pritzker embarks on another campaign, here’s a look back at how the Hyatt Hotels heir went from political neophyte to 43rd governor of Illinois and potential Democratic presidential contender.

Fortune and tragedy​

Pritzker’s story begins when his great-grandfather Nicholas J. Pritzker came to Chicago from Kyiv in 1881 to escape the anti-Jewish Russian pogroms in present-day Ukraine.

Nicholas Pritzker eventually founded a law firm, but the family’s business empire got going in the next generation, when one of Nicholas’ sons and JB’s grandfather, A.N. Pritzker, and great-uncle began investing in real estate and other ventures. The family is best known for Hyatt, but other high-profile investments have included Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ticketmaster and credit bureau TransUnion.

Today, the extended Pritzker clan is the sixth-richest family in America, with an estimated fortune of $41.6 billion, according to Forbes. (JB’s share is estimated at $3.7 billion.)

Born into affluence in California in 1965, Jay Robert Pritzker — named after his two uncles and called JB for short — didn’t have an idyllic childhood. Both of his parents died before he turned 18.

His father, Donald, died of a heart attack in 1972 at age 39, and his mother, Sue, struggled with alcoholism. She died a decade later, almost to the day, when she leaped out of a tow truck that was pulling her car, and she was run over.

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A.N. Pritzker, Gov. JB Pritzker's late grandfather, circa 1985. (Chicago Tribune archive photo)

Despite her struggles, Sue Pritzker’s philanthropy and involvement in the Democratic Party inspired JB’s interest in politics and activism, particularly in the area of reproductive rights.

Political ambitions​

While he was only first elected to public office in 2018, Pritzker has long nursed political ambitions.

After graduating from Duke University in the 1980s, he worked on Capitol Hill as an aide to Democratic U.S. Sens. Terry Sanford of North Carolina and Alan Dixon of Illinois.

Returning to the Chicago area to attend law school at Northwestern University in the early 1990s, he formed Democratic Leadership for the 21st Century. The group sought to bring more young voices into the party and helped spur the careers of several prominent Illinois officials and Democratic operatives, including Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, an Oak Park Democrat.

In 1998, Pritzker made his first run for public office, finishing in a disappointing third place in a Democratic primary to replace 24-term U.S. Rep. Sidney Yates. The winner was Jan Schakowsky. She went on to win the general election and has held the seat since, although Schakowsky recently announced she isn’t running for another term.

“Could I live a happy life without ever running for public office again?” Pritzker said in a Tribune profile after losing the race. “I suppose that I can imagine not running, but I feel I have something important that I can do. And my skin is far thicker now.”

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Candidates in the 9th Congressional District JB Pritzker, from left, state Sen. Howard Carroll and state Rep. Jan Schakowsky wait for their cue to step onto a stage at the beginning of a debate on Jan. 25, 1998, at the Ezra Habonim Synagogue in Skokie. (John Lee/Chicago Tribune)

It would be two decades before he’d put his name on the ballot again. But ambitions lingered.

In a 2008 phone call secretly recorded by federal investigators, Pritzker spoke with then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich, whose campaigns he’d contributed to, as the Chicago Democratic governor schemed over who to appoint to the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by then-President-elect Barack Obama. On the call, first revealed by the Tribune during the 2018 governor’s race, Pritzker expressed disinterest in the Senate appointment but suggested Blagojevich might make him state treasurer if the position became vacant. Blagojevich and Pritzker also were recorded discussing various Black officials who were potential Senate appointees in language that caused a stir during the 2018 campaign.

Aside from his own aspirations, Pritzker was a major backer of Hillary Clinton in both her presidential bids, even as his older sister Penny served as finance chair for Illinois’ favorite son, Obama, in 2008. Ahead of the 2016 election, JB Pritzker and his wife, MK, gave $15.6 million to pro-Clinton political action committee Priorities USA Action.

Outside politics​

Out of the political spotlight, Pritzker built up his resume as an investor and philanthropist.

While his name and fortune are closely associated with Hyatt, Pritzker only worked for the family hotel business as a teenager.

He made his mark in the business realm through New World Ventures, a tech-focused investment fund founded with his older brother, Anthony, and later renamed Pritzker Group Venture Capital. The brothers also started Pritzker Group, which, in addition to the venture fund, includes private equity and asset management components.

In 2012, Pritzker founded the nonprofit tech incubator 1871 to help spur Chicago’s tech sector, later collaborating closely with then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel. In a 2014 profile highlighting the project, Chicago magazine dubbed Pritzker “The Other Mayor of Chicago.”

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JB Pritzker, then Chicago Next co-chair speaks while Mayor Rahm Emanuel listens as they visited the offices of Sprout Social on Oct. 17, 2012. (Nancy Stone/Chicago Tribune)

In the philanthropic world, Pritzker helped found and fund the Illinois Holocaust Museum in Skokie, and he, along with MK, launched the Pritzker Family Foundation in 2001, which funds initiatives in early childhood education and other areas.

Repudiating Rauner and beating Bailey​

Spurred by Clinton’s loss to Republican Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election and the bruising budget battles in Springfield between then-Gov. and GOP multimillionaire Bruce Rauner and the Democratic-controlled legislature, Pritzker entered the 2018 campaign for Illinois governor.

Defeating political scion Chris Kennedy and then-state Sen. Daniel Biss of Evanston in the Democratic primary, Pritzker ultimately poured more than $170 million of his own money into the campaign. Combined with $79 million for Rauner, including $50 million from the incumbent himself and $22.5 million from billionaire Citadel CEO Ken Griffin, it resulted in what’s believed to be the most expensive governor’s race in U.S. history, which Pritzker won by nearly 16 points.

Four years later, Pritzker spent another $167 million to beat back a challenge from conservative southern Illinois state Sen. Darren Bailey, who got backing from billionaire ultraconservative Richard Uihlein, founder of the Uline packaging supplies firm.

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Democratic candidates for Illinois governor, J.B. Pritzker, from left, Chris Kennedy and Daniel Biss take their positions before the first televised 2018 Illinois Democratic gubernatorial forum at WMAQ-Ch. 5 studios on Jan. 23, 2018. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

Pritzker’s 2022 spending total included $27 million he gave to the Democratic Governors Association, which aired ads during the GOP primary labeling Bailey as too conservative. The move was a thinly veiled attempt to set up what Pritzker’s team saw as an easier general election matchup, boosting Bailey among Republican primary voters over then-Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin, backed by $50 million from Pritzker nemesis Griffin.

Pritzker beat Bailey by 13 points that fall.

Through the end of 2022, Pritzker spent nearly $350 million on the two campaigns. Over the past two years, he’s deposited another $25 million in his campaign account and had $3.4 million remaining at the end of April, state records show.

Fiscal focus​

A hallmark of Pritzker’s two terms in office has been his handling of the state’s chronically shaky finances.

While he failed to convince voters in 2020 to amend the state constitution to create a graduated-rate income tax, an effort into which he sunk $58 million, Pritzker has received high marks from ratings agencies and other observers for his handling of the budget. After years of downgrades, the state has seen its credit rating raised by all the major agencies, though it still ranks near the bottom compared to the other 49 states.

Spending has increased by nearly a third during his time in office, without adjusting for inflation. But the state largely has avoided using gimmicks to balance the budget on Pritzker’s watch and received its first credit upgrades in decades.

Tighter financial times have returned, however, with the state budget that takes effect July 1 cutting funding for health insurance for noncitizen immigrants younger than 65 and pausing Pritzker’s proposed expansion of state-funded preschool programs, among other trims.

Rather than trying again to fix a state tax system he once described as “unfair” and “inadequate,” Pritzker has instead blamed Trump and his economic policies for the state’s latest budget woes.

Progressive bona fides​

Aided by overwhelming Democratic majorities in the state legislature, which he helped secure through his political largesse, Pritzker has built a resume almost any governor in the party would be happy to claim.

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Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs legislation to ban military style firearms on Jan. 10, 2023, in Springfield. Gun control advocate Delphine Cherry, second from right, who lost two of her children, Tyesa and Tyler, to gun violence becomes emotional during the signing. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

His accomplishments in the legislature include raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour, enshrining abortion rights in state law, legalizing recreational marijuana while expunging prior convictions, and enacting a $45 billion infrastructure program, the largest in state history.

And that was just his first year.

He has also enacted an ambitious energy policy that aims to make Illinois’ energy generation carbon-free by 2050, as well as an overhaul of the criminal justice system that has eliminated cash bail.

In one of the first acts of his second term, Pritzker in early 2023 signed a sweeping gun ban that prohibits the sale or possession of a long list of high-powered semiautomatic firearms and high-capacity ammunition magazines, a response to the mass shooting at Highland Park’s Fourth of July parade months earlier. While facing ongoing legal challenges, the law has remained in force.

More recently, he’s taken on what he describes as the predatory practices of health insurance companies and pharmacy benefit managers.

He’s also made moves, with mixed results, to position Illinois as a leader in emerging industries such as electric vehicles and quantum technology.

Crises and controversies​

The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 tested Pritzker’s leadership and, in some ways, ended a brief honeymoon period he had with some members of the legislature’s Republican minority. Decisions to shut schools and issue a stay-at-home order brought the state government into people’s lives in unprecedented ways.

Aside from conservative criticism over Pritzker’s use of executive power, the pandemic exposed problems at state agencies under his control, including an outbreak at a state-run veterans home in LaSalle that led to 36 deaths and an overwhelmed unemployment system that elicited some bipartisan criticism.

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The Choate Mental Health and Developmental Center seen on Aug. 26, 2022, in Anna, Illinois. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

His administration also has come under fire for continued problems at the beleaguered Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the handling of resident mistreatment at homes for the developmentally disabled. And a state inspector general has found rampant fraud among state employees who abused the federal government’s Paycheck Protection Program, a pandemic-era lifeline for businesses.

Pritzker’s administration also was forced to respond when Republican Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas in 2022 began sending busloads of migrants from the southern border to Chicago, creating a crisis for the city and state and inflaming tensions with Mayors Lori Lightfoot and Brandon Johnson.

The governor has also faced criticism for working with legislative Democrats to exclude Republicans from the process of allocating funds for local infrastructure projects and for not taking significant enough steps to strengthen government ethics laws, despite a sprawling federal corruption probe involving state lawmakers and local officials and a series of high-profile convictions during his tenure.

Higher ambitions​

A vociferous Trump critic, Pritzker has long been believed to harbor presidential ambitions, speculation he’s done little to quell even as he has professed his dedication to Illinois.

The governor lobbied hard to bring last year’s Democratic National Convention to Chicago, serving as de facto host for an event widely seen as a success, at least until Trump emerged victorious in November.

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Gov. JB Pritzker speaks on Aug. 20, 2024, during the Democratic National Convention at the United Center. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
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Gov. JB Pritzker greets people after announcing his candidacy for a third term on June 26, 2025, at the Grand Crossing Park Field House in Chicago. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

Pritzker, at least publicly, stood behind President Joe Biden until he dropped out, declining to mount a primary challenge to a sitting president or to enter the fray when Vice President Kamala Harris became the consensus pick of party leaders. He was vetted to join Harris on the ticket but was passed over in favor of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

In 2023, he launched Think Big America, a dark money group that has backed abortion rights ballot measures and pro-abortion rights candidates across the country. He’s also poured money into two recent Wisconsin Supreme Court races, backing candidates that reclaimed and then maintained a liberal majority in the pivotal swing state.

In addition to running his campaign for reelection next year, Pritzker is putting his force behind Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, his two-time running mate, in her Democratic primary bid for U.S. Senate.

Heading into 2026, a big question is whether and how quickly Pritzker will pivot to a 2028 presidential bid if he wins a third term as governor.
 
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https://x.com/GunOwners/status/1938460098856169927 (archive.ph)

Meet the Senate parliamentarian, the official tying Republicans in knots over their tax bill
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Kevin Freking
2025-06-26 23:58:41GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — A few Republicans reacted with indignation Thursday after the Senate parliamentarian advised that some of the measures in their tax and immigration bill could not be included in the legislation.

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., tweeted on X that Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough should be fired, “ASAP.” Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., intimated that she was partisan, asking why an “unelected swamp bureaucrat, who was appointed by Harry Reid over a decade ago” gets to decide what’s in the bill?”

It’s hardly the first time the parliamentarian’s normally low-key and lawyerly role has drawn a blast of public criticism.

MacDonough also dashed Democratic plans over the years, advising in 2021 that they couldn’t include a minimum wage increase in their COVID-19 relief bill. Later that same year, she advised that Democrats needed to drop an effort to let millions of immigrants remain temporarily in the U.S. as part of their big climate bill.

But the attention falling on MacDonough’s rulings in recent years also reflects a broader change in Congress, with lawmakers increasingly trying to wedge their top policy priorities into bills that can’t be filibustered in the Senate. The process comes with special rules designed to deter provisions unrelated to spending or taxes — and that’s where the parliamentarian comes in, offering analysis of what does and doesn’t qualify.

Her latest round of decisions Thursday was a blow to the GOP’s efforts to wring hundreds of billions of dollars from Medicaid over the next decade. Senate Republicans could opt to try to override her recommendations, but they are unlikely to do so.

Here’s a closer look at what the Senate parliamentarian does and why lawmakers are so focused on her recommendations right now.

The crucial role of the parliamentarian
Both the House and Senate have a parliamentarian to provide assistance on that chamber’s rules and precedents. They are often seen advising whoever is presiding over the chamber on the proper procedures to be followed and the appropriate responses to a parliamentary inquiry.

They are also charged with providing information to lawmakers and their respective staff on a strictly nonpartisan and confidential basis.

The parliamentarians and their staff only offer advice. Their recommendations are not binding. In the case of the massive tax and spending bill now before both chambers, the parliamentarian plays a critical role in advising whether the reconciliation bill’s provisions remain focused on fiscal issues.

How MacDonough became the first woman in the job
MacDonough, an English literature major, is the Senate’s first woman to be parliamentarian and just the sixth person to hold the position since its creation in 1935.

She began her Senate career in its library before leaving to get a law degree at Vermont Law School. She worked briefly as a Justice Department trial attorney before returning to the Senate in 1999, this time as an assistant in the parliamentarian’s office. She was initially appointed parliamentarian in 2012 by Democrat Harry Reid of Nevada, Senate majority leader at the time. She was retained by Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., when he became majority leader in 2015.

She helped Chief Justice John Roberts preside over Trump’s 2020 Senate impeachment trial and was beside then-Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., for Trump’s second trial the following year. Trump was acquitted both times.

When Trump supporters fought past police and into the Capitol in hopes of disrupting Congress’ certification of Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory, MacDonough and other staffers rescued those ballots and hustled mahogany boxes containing them to safety. MacDonough’s office, on the Capitol’s first floor, was ransacked and declared a crime scene.

Can the Senate ignore the parliamentarian’s advice?
Yes. The parliamentarian makes the recommendation, but it’s the presiding officer overseeing Senate proceedings who rules on provisions in the bill. If there is a dispute, it would be put to a vote.

Michael Thorning, director of structural democracy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank, said he doubts Republicans will want to go that route. And indeed, some Republican senators said as much Thursday.

“It’s the institutional integrity, even if I’m convinced 100% she’s wrong,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D.

Thorning said lawmakers from both parties view MacDonough as “very much an honest broker.”

“And the Senate relies on her,” Thorning said. “Sometimes, those decisions cut your way, and sometimes, they don’t. I also think members recognize that once you start treating the parliamentarian’s advice as just something that could be easily dismissed, then the rules start to matter less.”

Have parliamentarians been fired?
Majority leaders from both parties have replaced the parliamentarian. For more than three decades, the position alternated between Robert Dove and Alan Frumin depending upon which party was in the majority.

Thorning said the two parliamentarians weren’t far apart though, in how they interpreted the Senate’s rules and precedents.

MacDonough succeeded Frumin as parliamentarian. He said the small number of calls Thursday for her dismissal “tells you all people need to know about the current parliamentarian.”

“Senators know this isn’t somebody playing politics,” Thorning said.
 
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Majority leaders from both parties have replaced the parliamentarian. For more than three decades, the position alternated between Robert Dove and Alan Frumin depending upon which party was in the majority.
Most important line in that article.

For some reason, no one had any problem putting a loyalist in that position for decades, but now we must keep Harry Reid's pick in because of "institutional integrity".

Hopefully Trump or Vance tells Thune to pass the BBB as written and to stop with the games.
 
I don't like his odds considering that NYC uses ranked choice voting but this is the most divided Democrats have been in the city for a while. Sliwa seems to be in a dark horse candidate position currently.

EDIT: The NYC general mayoral ballot doesn't use ranked-choice. Good luck to Sliwa.
wait, so is it better if there is ranked choice for silwa or no?
 
JB Pritzker: From political neophyte to 43rd governor of Illinois — and potential US presidential candidate
Illinois is one of the most corrupt states in the Union, possibly even worse than California. Whereas CA is openly retarded and hostile to its constituents Illinois is a lot more subtle with just how awful it is to live there, even if you don't live directly around the Chicongo area. I remember 20ish years ago when the governor got arrested for corruption charges, but ironically it's only gotten worse since. Any politician coming from there is almost certainly worse than Blagojevich.

Also
> Pritzker is a heeb
I've spent a lot of time around the Chicago suburbs and the worst ones - aside from the ones with high melanin and crime rates that put the Middle East to shame - are always the ones with menoras on every lawn. My relatives always used to blame it on the lawyers and doctors but never put two and two together.
 
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Tell that to the Zoomers and Alphas, who have turned on the left and are the most conservative generation in recorded history.
They're not really "conservative." A "conservative" is just someone who thinks the previous iteration of liberalism went far enough, and we need hit the brakes on the next one. A conservative is someone who thinks it would be great to replace Andrew Jackson on the $20 with Harriet Tubman, since "we'd be replacing a racist Democrat with a badass Republican woman with a gun." Conservatives think it's sad that modern libs have fallen so far from the noble vision of Dr King, and they want lots and lots of 3rd-world immigration, just so long as it's legal.
 
Lol if I have a choice, can I be the turbo racist?

Definitely not me tho - I was born in Queens. I'm out of there now so thankfully this Zohan bullshit isn't affecting me but it is scary in that NYCers always go hard left and I can see them fucking themselves over on purpose. It really is an idiotic city.

I would not be surprised if AnitaSarsleezian knew the turbo racist because the turbo racist is an actual performer who put out a good album.

I'd laugh my ass of if I played in his band. There's a good chance if he used a keyboard player.
 
Gee whizz, look at all that rape that's just an artificial construct. 18.9% increase from 2023 to 2024. I'm sure all those rape victims will be glad to know that their assault is the result of social constructs that rapists should get released early for. But hey, at least murder dropped 3.6%! Honk honk!

Rape actually is a social construct. Unlike violence, which obviously and clearly existed all the way back in the animal kingdom, rape's unpleasantness has spiked as we've developed other social constructs like "dignity," "freedom of choice," "romance," "love," and "consent." Before those constructs, it's just how the deed was done, sometimes it was more pleasant than others but it wasn't some great wrong if it was unpleasant, just an unfortunate fact of life.

Sure, drakes "rape" female ducks, but it's just violent copulation. There's no intent behind it. It's only rape once someone intends to do something in violation of the other person's desires.
 
Your amigdyla is acting up, don't let it turn you into a buck broken doomer. People have been saying this about every civilization since the dawn of time. Clown world is very real but if you spend your time on line your brain is being overexposed to it.

That said you might find this video interesting, he's a bit of a sperg himself but kind of touches on what you're talking about. I found it worth listening to.
You have to be a retard to actually watch any of this guys videos if you're over the age of 12; this guy just makes shit up and bullshits his way through his videos. He was the king of vibes based politics and historical analysis in the late 2010s his fucking Russia video from 2017 had no citations in it and consisted of bullshit infographics he made in excel.
He's weird. A decent amount of stuff, he is correct about, but he's a sperg and a lot of his videos are just shit out of his ass, the Incel revolution one is a good example

If you stay in the rich white areas that voted for the commie, the city looks fine. Most of the tourist spots are in those areas. Take one step outside of them (excluding Jewish and suburban areas) and the city looks third world. Unfortunately for the NYC Department of Tourism, one of the third-world locations is the transfer point between the bus from LaGuardia airport and the subway, so every tourist flying through there gets immediately exposed to the “real” city.
This is a good summary of the city. Outside of suburban areas like Eastern Queens, South Brooklyn, Nice parts of the Bronx and Staten Island. Not to mention Nice parts like Williamsburg or Astoria, the city looks like a third world country, and it's always funny watching "Influencers" try and romanticize them. A lot of these people just imported their backwards third world culture here, and if you criticize it, "NYC has always had immigrants!' or "you're racist"
 
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