TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @America_2100

Saved - July 7, 2025 at 6:11 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I watched MSNBC's election night coverage, and it didn't go well for them. I also tuned into the Never Trumper stream, so you're welcome! As a new account, I'm committed to promoting the MAGA agenda over the next four years with a simple philosophy: America first, America forever. I plan to share untold stories, like the influx of Haitian immigrants in Charleroi, Pennsylvania, which the media overlooks. If you want to support this mission, follow me at @America_2100.

@America_2100 - America 2100

We watched MSNBC's election night coverage so you don't have to. Spoiler: It didn't go well for them. https://t.co/Gy6HfB9XLw

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speakers discuss election night, noting no surprises as key states like Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan are too close to call early on. The Harris campaign aimed to drive up numbers to counteract rural votes for Trump. Some felt Harris ran a flawless campaign, while Trump had a "trashy week." Completed rural counties showed Trump's vote share increased relative to 2020. Public polling indicated a close race. The crowd at the Harris event was described as "nauseously optimistic," focusing on the "blue wall" in the Midwest. Later, NBC News called North Carolina and Georgia for Trump. Trump also gained in key counties. Eventually, NBC News projected Trump won Pennsylvania, presenting an "insurmountable future" for Harris. A short statement from Cedric Richmond, the Harris campaign co-chair, stated they would continue to fight to ensure every vote is counted. The mood at the Harris event grew somber, with attendees being told to go home and wait until tomorrow.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: All the anticipation, all the excitement, all the anxiety, all the doom scrolling, all the manic refreshing of polling averages, it has all been leading to this hour. And we know you have every choice in the world for where to spend tonight, so we're really grateful that you're spending it with us. We hope you'll be with us through the duration. Speaker 1: Hey. How's everybody doing? First time voting? Yes. How are you feeling? Good. Are you guys doing okay too? Speaker 2: Yes. We're doing great. Kama La la la. Speaker 3: Wait a ask Speaker 1: who you're gonna vote for, but I didn't need to. Speaker 2: Cabalala la because my shatter. Speaker 1: First time voting, as you know, this is where the, Harris campaign wants to drive up the numbers to sort of counteract that tea in the middle of Pennsylvania, to, counteract the rural votes that, the Trump campaign is expected to get. Speaker 4: And so what you've seen in the last couple of weeks, if this is an audition for managing a complex organization like The United States, Kamala Harris has passed the audition flawlessly. This has been, in many ways, a perfect campaign. And what the campaign is talking about now is the granular get out, the vote effort that you just don't see on the other side. On the other side, you're seeing Charlie Kirk going on ex Twitter this morning and begging people to vote. Speaker 5: The last week has been a very good close for Kamala Harris, not a good close for Donald Trump. He hasn't been able to fill the rallies. He's adult. He has racist comedians opening. Whatever. It's been a trashy week for Donald Trump. It's been a very strong week for Kamala Harris. Speaker 6: ASU, the campus that we're on right now, ASU students have the population is about 74,000. So a lot of people voting here when it comes to a lot of the young women that we've been talking to. Reproductive rights is huge. It's a big, big driver. It's a lot of the conversation that we're hearing. Speaker 7: We've got about 10 now completed of those rural heavily Trump counties. We're talking about places where he's gonna get seventy, seventy five, 80% of the vote. In all 10 that have now been completed, Trump's vote share relative to 2020 has gone up. Speaker 8: I'm just gonna give a couple of, like, everybody take a breath, warnings here. We don't know what's gonna happen in Georgia. It's like a baby blue state, I'm gonna say, and that it has not been blue for a long time. It is a hard state for the Harris team. Speaker 3: One of the things that was so striking about the public polling and the public data going into this election was that the public polling said, this is the closest race that we've ever had. Yeah. Basically. I mean, that was the consensus view. Tie. And there was a real question about, well, maybe the public polling's wrong, and maybe it's gonna miss a few points in one direction or another. We don't know at this point. It's very early in the evening. But I would say at 08:50, like, it's a very, very close race. Speaker 0: Yeah. I'd say that if you are just joining us right this second at 08:52 zero six, I had to summarize what's going on, no surprises. Yeah. Right. Pretty much that's what's happened thus far. Georgia, it's too close to call. In Pennsylvania, it's too close to call. In Wisconsin, it's too close to call. In Michigan, sing it with me now. It's too close to call. Speaker 9: Let's be blunt. I think when you watch what Donald Trump did in 2020, what Democrats were fantasizing about was a landslide victory. And so some of what was wanted and desired was a sweep that really wasn't on the table. We live in an evenly divided country, and it creates anxiety, but it also requires patience. Speaker 4: It is fairly shocking, and I don't think it's something that should make us super proud. You just think about just the last two weeks and the things that that Donald Trump has said. If all of that gets you half of the votes Speaker 5: 48, 49%. Speaker 4: What does it tell you? I mean, we need to really take a step back and think about what does that say about us. Speaker 9: I mean, blue all maybe there was always gonna be a blue all night. Some of the fantasies, right, of a landslide victory that would erase any doubt, that would eradicate, you know, the the the threat. I think it's going to be a late night. The polls have accurately captured this dead heat. Speaker 0: Ari, since you were last with us, I've got nothing to report. Well, Speaker 10: the crowd here is still large, is still loud, but a little bit more subdued. And the word that I keep hearing is the idea that people here are nauseously optimistic. Not just cautiously optimistic, but nauseously optimistic. The real focus now is on that blue wall in the Midwest. They knew that this was gonna be a long night and that it was gonna be a real nail biter, and it appears that that is exactly what we're looking at right now. Speaker 0: We've been saying for weeks, says O'Malley Dillon, quote, that this race might not be called tonight. Those of you who are around in 2020 know this well. What we do know is this race is not going to come into focus until the early morning hours. Part of Speaker 8: the objective of this email is to say to the people on the team, hang in there, guys. Like, it's not over. We're still getting votes in. We still need to keep talking to people. Keep people in lines. Tell your grandma it's gonna be okay. Speaker 0: We now have an NBC News call in the first one, Joy. North Carolina, call for Donald Trump. Speaker 4: Yep. And, so it was, Speaker 7: you know? We now have all the voting in Luzerne County. Donald Trump is gonna win this by a little bit more than 21 points. Four years ago, it was 14. We also saw him make those gains in Lackawanna County right next door earlier tonight. Democrats wanted more Trump more of a Trump drop off here. They don't get it in Lebanon County tonight. In 2020, Joe Biden won here by essentially 27 points. Sits at about 24 and a half. In Chester County, more significant drop off for Harris from Biden. Next door in Montgomery County, Harris is now running a point behind where Joe Biden finished in this county. Biden won this by a four and a half points in 2020. Trump has now taken the lead in Bucks County. Speaker 0: NBC News now projects that in the battleground state of Georgia in the presidential race, Donald Trump has prevailed. The Republican Party will control the United States Senate. This is live from Howard University in Washington DC. Speaker 11: We still have votes to count. We still have states that have not been called yet. We will continue overnight to fight to make sure that every vote is counted. Thank you all. Speaker 0: A short and to the point statement from Cedric Richmond, the Harris campaign co chair. You now see them turn as one to start Speaker 10: to leave the grounds. The evening was getting increasingly somber as people realized what this map is looking like. They turned off the TV set and just piped up the music because the room was starting to get increasingly somber. Speaker 0: You know, we always knew it was gonna be down to the blue wall, and the blue wall is still uncalled at this point. But it sounds like the Harris campaign is is sort of keeping things tight in terms of whether or not they're gonna string people along into thinking this is gonna happen. Speaker 8: What they went to that venue tonight hoping to see and witness was a historic election of Kamala Harris to the presidency Yeah. Was the end of the Trump era as they knew it. And so we don't know the outcome yet, but that is not what they are receiving, and they are being told to go home and wait till tomorrow. I I I that is that just I Speaker 4: And nothing that was true yesterday about how flawlessly this campaign was run is not true now. I mean, this really was an historic flawlessly run campaign. She had Queen Latifah never endorses anyone. She came out Speaker 7: and endorsed. You know, I mean, Speaker 4: you she had every prominent celebrity voice. She had the Swifties. She had the Beehive. Like, you could not have run a Speaker 5: better campaign. In Western Europe and in The UK and in The Middle East, people are waking up Speaker 6: to this. Speaker 3: Oh, and they are. Speaker 5: I've gotten people from Western Europe who are extraordinarily alarmed and terrified. May I reiterate, Speaker 0: there are two of the seven swing states that have been called by NBC News right now, which is Georgia and North Carolina. None none of the other five states have been have been called at this point. You can see this is the battleground states, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, the so called Blue Wall. None of those states called by NBC News. In the swing state of Pennsylvania, NBC News now projects that that presidential contest has been won by Donald Trump. It presents an insurmountable future here for for Kamala Harris and for the Democratic ticket. Let's watch as Trump takes the stage in Palm Beach, Florida. Speaker 12: We overcame obstacles that nobody thought possible, and it is now clear that we've achieved the most incredible political thing. Look what happened. Is this crazy? Speaker 3: Boy, it's gonna be a Speaker 1: real tough speech for her.

@America_2100 - America 2100

...and we watched the Never Trumper election night stream too. (You're welcome!) https://t.co/41OoTnZxL3

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speakers on the livestream express disappointment as election results come in. Initial hopes for a decisive victory are dashed as the race appears close. While some remain cautiously optimistic, others express concern, comparing the situation to 2016. North Carolina and Georgia are not in the cards for Kamala Harris. There is a sense that trends are unfavorable, but some advocate waiting for results from key states. The possibility of a narrow margin in a few states raises anxieties. One speaker laments the potential return of Donald Trump and another says they are prepared to harbor undocumented people. The overall mood is grim, with one speaker calling it a potentially horrific event in American history. Another acknowledges the possibility of one of the greatest comebacks in American political history.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Hey, guys. Welcome to the Bullwarks two thousand twenty four election night livestream. I am Tim Miller. I'm here with Bill Crystal. I I go back to what everything I'm saying right now really is in line with what Speaker 1: I expected from tonight. Speaker 0: I I was hopeful that we're gonna see a big Ann Seltzer wave, a secret wave, a huge rush, and every we're gonna out the polls are gonna be outdone, and I I we're a polarized country. And what we're seeing right now is some changes on the margins for 2020 that we're trying to trying to analyze. I don't we don't have bad news yet, guys. That's for people getting nervous. It's it's right now, it's it's we're looking at a close race like we expected. We're we're gonna bring in JV on Sarah's. But before that, do you have any any words of wisdom for everybody? There's some nerves in the comments. Any deep thoughts before we give you a break? Yeah. Speaker 2: No. Keep calm and carry on, and, let's see what happens here. And I I remain I remain on the mildly bullish side. Speaker 1: I would say that the the big takeaways right now are that the Harris blowout scenario is probably off the table. Speaker 3: I have never thought she was gonna win North Carolina or Georgia or Arizona. Speaker 0: My final prediction on the podcast today was two seventy six, two sixty two in favor of the vice president. But Georgia looks close. North Carolina looks close to me. Neither of them were on the map that I had for Kamala Harris if we're winning. So I I wish we're already popping champagne, and the country would have rejected this piece of shit who attempted a coup. It's not happening, so far. Speaker 1: But if we are talking about coming down to a five digit margin Mhmm. In three states I know. I mean, I'm sorry, but that is panic time. Things are about to go dark, I think. Speaker 4: Is Would Speaker 3: you just stop? Speaker 1: This is what 2016 felt like. The trends don't look too great. In fact, they look bad, but we still have three states that we just don't have great data on. Because we always talk about how voters are too stupid to even, like, exist in the world because they're just morons who can't understand anything. Speaker 3: I always thought this was gonna be tight. I think we gotta wait until these blue wall states are counted. That's where it's gonna be decided. Speaker 1: That that again is voters are too stupid to understand how anything works. Speaker 4: Pretty grim evening, all told. There's no way to, sugarcoat it. It's a bad day for democracy. It's a bad day for The United States. Speaker 0: Gosh. Do you really want are we are we ready to start doing this? Speaker 4: No. I don't think Speaker 5: I don't Speaker 4: think No. Speaker 0: No. Having a yeah. You don't wanna throw Speaker 4: in the towel. Speaker 0: Yeah. No. You don't wanna throw in the towel. Speaker 4: I don't want people to I don't want people to mistake this Throwing in the towel. Okay? Speaker 1: So I'm glad the rest of everybody has caught up where I was at 08:00. I mean, I I I think the election's over. Speaker 3: You know, I'm still waiting to see how this is going, but I will say, I do think it is trending badly. It is not trending in a positive direction. I do think that it is possible that she could still eke this out. Speaker 5: We don't wanna be too funereal. And by the way, I really feel a little sick at the idea of having to having to have Donald Trump in our faces for another four years, it's it's almost more than I can stand. Speaker 1: Sarah, come on. This is where you really rally us with something helpful. Speaker 3: Yeah. I mean, look. I'm just I think we're, like, a little bit ahead of ourselves, and I think I think we're gonna have to wait and see what happens here. Speaker 4: Just a horrific event in American history. And and I'm prepared to to put undocumented people in my attic. I I you know? Speaker 2: Momentum Trump will have. One of the greatest comebacks in American political history.

@America_2100 - America 2100

We’re a new account on here. But we’ll be using this platform to fight for the MAGA agenda over the next four years. Our philosophy is simple: America first. America forever. 🇺🇸 If you want to support our work, give us a follow: @America_2100

@America_2100 - America 2100

Charleroi is a small town in Pennsylvania. In two years, it’s been flooded by thousands of Haitian immigrants. We went there to find out why. The media won’t tell this story—so we will. https://t.co/tJlrglF22R

Video Transcript AI Summary
Charle Roy, Pennsylvania, a struggling former steel town, is facing a new crisis due to a large influx of Haitian migrants, increasing the foreign-born population by 1500% since 2020. Residents claim that this has strained the town's resources and altered its culture. Locals suspect that the migrants are being brought in for cheap labor by Fourth Street Foods, a food packaging plant, and staffing agencies. These agencies allegedly pay immigrants less than the average wage, while the owner of Fourth Street Foods buys up properties to house them. Residents feel that jobs are being taken from Americans and wages are being driven down. The closure of the town's glass plant, a major employer for 132 years, has further devastated the economy. Residents express frustration that their concerns are not being heard and fear that Charle Roy is being transformed into a "workers' barracks" without their consent, potentially erasing its history and way of life.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I I was just always focused on my little town of Sholowar. It's just a pattern that gets repeated. I just I I would like to find out what's really going on. Speaker 1: You know, there are so many questions that have been unanswered by, you know, anybody. Speaker 0: There's been immigrants coming in, you know, slowly over the past twenty twenty years or so. It has never been an issue. Speaker 2: Yeah. Speaker 0: It's it's never been an issue at all. And now now it really has become one. Speaker 1: The excuse for bringing them in here was is what we can't get anybody to do these jobs, which I was was suspicious of. I always suspected somebody wanted some cheap labor. Speaker 3: It's all coordinated. No way around it not being coordinated at this point. Speaker 1: If I'm in Haiti and I live there and somebody spreads out a map of The United States Of America in front of me, the odds of me landing on Charlevoix, Pennsylvania is zero. Speaker 0: I never realized that there was a bigger picture that tied into other places around the country, to the national immigration policy. It really all does tie together. Speaker 1: So whoever is responsible for putting them here, that is an act of negligence, and they don't know that because, again, nobody cares about showing the Pennsylvania. Speaker 2: Charle Roy is a small town of just over 4,000 people situated in the Mon Valley region of Southwestern Pennsylvania, about 30 miles from Pittsburgh. It's a poor, primarily white working class community. Less than 18% of the borough has a bachelor's degree, and the median household makes less than $45,000 a year. The town was once a vibrant, flourishing area. Nicknamed the Magic City, its economy was fed by the region's booming steel industry, as well as a major glass making plant based in Charle Roy itself. But as the steel industry withered in the nineteen eighties, Charle Roy entered into a steep decline. Decline. Speaker 1: In the early eighties, the steel industry started to collapse. You know? The place became less useful for people. The population left in droves, and what was left behind, you know, hung on as best they could. You know, it went from a manufacturing economy to a service economy. Yeah. So no, America doesn't need this place, doesn't care about this place. You know, It's just a a it's a place that time forgot. My standard joke about this place is that if the world ended tomorrow, get ten more years because we're roughly that far behind the curve here in terms of everything. Speaker 2: Charle Roy was already a symbol of the forgotten America, one of many little places that had been left for dead by the people in power. But over the past few years, Charle Roy has become a symbol of something even bigger and darker, a microcosm of a new crisis that threatens to transform America forever. Speaker 4: We're back now with a Speaker 3: record number of migrants crossing into The US, pushing resources to the limit. Speaker 5: The number of migrants arriving at the southern border is unprecedented. Speaker 6: There are alarming images from the Texas border tonight. A group of migrants storming a barbed wire fence in Texas. Speaker 0: Get on. Get the gun. Speaker 5: Southern border officials have cleared the massive migrant encampment beneath a bridge in Del Rio, Texas. At one point, nearly 15,000 migrants, many of them Haitian, were living at the encampment. Speaker 7: Right now, there's about between 50,000 and a 100,000 people just from Haiti alone reportedly making their way up to The US Mexico border. Speaker 8: How did it happen that so many people got injected into a population and a society that wasn't ready for it in Ohio? Speaker 4: And Springfield was this beautiful town, and now they're going through hell. Speaker 9: You know that the sheer number of migrants dumped into Springfield, Ohio has caused chaos there. And now another target, take Charle Roy, Pennsylvania. It's nestled in the far Southwestern part of the state. That's a town of only about 4,200 or so residents. Now its budget is buckling though under the weight of a huge number of Haitian migrants. Speaker 4: Where are the other people that started screaming about Charlotte Roy? Where are they? Okay. Has your has your beautiful town changed? Yes. Speaker 2: Hey, man. Great to meet you. Speaker 0: Yeah. My name is Andy. Speaker 2: Hey. I'm Nate. That's Brett. Speaker 10: Nice to meet Speaker 0: you, man. Yeah. You guys. I mean Speaker 2: What do you make overall of the whole situation? Like, it's pretty drastic change over the last couple of years. Speaker 0: It's it's it's major growing pains because, you know, people are seeing such a divide between what the people the Americans are benefits they get here and the benefits that these that these immigrants are getting because all these programs are in place for them. Yeah. There's there's been immigrants coming in, you know, slowly over the past twenty or twenty years or so. It has never been an issue. Speaker 2: Yeah. Speaker 0: It's it's it's never been an issue at all. Right. And now now it really has become one. Speaker 1: They don't have anything in common with our culture. Culture when people say the culture, a lot of times they say it, they don't know what it means. What culture means is the way we do things around here worldwide. That's what culture is. Culture means this is how we do things around here for better or worse. You know? And what I've seen in the last five years since the influx has started is they have no interest in our culture, this culture. They've brought their culture here. If you go look at the main drag of town here, you'll see. You know? I mean, they've had their groceries, you know, and they have their storefronts, and, you know, the message is fairly clear, that is this is for us. Okay. Message received. People understand. Speaker 2: So tell us about the situation with your seventh grade son. When did you pull him out of Speaker 1: school? Okay. So the the first the first of the of the Haitian immigrants that showed up in his classroom was in fourth grade. Speaker 2: So three years ago. Speaker 1: So three years ago. You know, the the first start showed up in his classrooms. And then it just snow balled. You know? It got continuously you know, the the the the numbers grew exponentially until, you know, you finally look around, and now we have an immigrant population in his school where English is a second language, they're not prepared to deal with that, is now penalizing not only the immigrant students, but the students were who were here. So I'm looking around me and saying, okay. Wait a minute. I'm college educated. I have enormous amounts of time on my hands where I can be there overseeing my son's education. What's this family next to me doing where mom and dad are both working full time, some of them working two jobs full time? They don't have the option of pulling their kid out of school and putting them in a freaking cyber school like I do because I'm around. I can watch and see what's going on. You know, this isn't a place where, you know, after COVID, everybody here ended up staying and working from home. Mhmm. You know? You don't get to make glass sitting in your in your living room or in your in your den in your house in front of your laptop. That's not how this place works. The way this place works is you get in the morning, you put your clothes on, and you freaking go to work. Speaker 0: I'm pretty sure that was Ernie's car there, and he's the one who had on Meadow Avenue, he has an upside down flag, distressed flag Speaker 2: Oh, really? Speaker 0: Flying because he has a bunch of immigrants packed into the houses all around him, Speaker 3: like Really? Speaker 0: Jam packed. Speaker 2: Well, yeah. We'd love talk to him if you'd willing to talk. Speaker 0: He's not Speaker 2: on Even if he's got ten minutes Speaker 0: because he's a truck driver, Speaker 3: so Okay. Speaker 0: He he works from five till whenever. Speaker 2: Even if he's got ten minutes. Yeah. Speaker 0: Show him your show him really the people. Oh, we got Speaker 2: Oh, nice. Speaker 0: Got that We got that one. Speaker 2: Actually, show the camera since we're filming. That's awesome. Oh, yeah, man. There you go. Speaker 3: They bought all these properties. Okay. You might be able to buy a house cheap, but what kind of people are you gonna get in? Speaker 2: Yeah. What kind of neighbors you have? Speaker 3: Well, that's it. Yeah. And right now, I'm surrounded by the immigrants. Mhmm. Never used to be that way. They don't care about their property. They don't they'll destroy it. They'll run through, steal your stuff, break your stuff. There's no pride anymore. Nobody cares about anything. Yeah. It's just use it, abuse it, throw it out, go on to the next. Mhmm. And unfortunately, think Shaw is always on that list. Mhmm. Yeah. This used to be just a nice blue collar middle of nowhere nowhere town. You know, it was affordable to live in, wasn't a terrible neighborhood. You can raise your family here and live your life, and everybody just pretty much leave you alone. But I I don't know if it's gonna come back from this. I don't know if we're gonna come back from this. Speaker 2: Charle Roy's problems didn't start with the immigrants. The town has been sliding downhill for decades, but now its economy is teetering on the brink of destruction. Earlier this year, the glass plant that was the backbone of Charle Roy for a hundred and thirty two years was acquired by a private equity firm. In September, the firm announced that it was shutting down the plant and moving it out of Charle Roy. Speaker 11: The CEO of Anchor Hawking told workers plant is closing at the end of the year. Borough Councilman Larry Solaski says just last Friday, 100 jobs were eliminated at Quality Pasta. He says now with this plant closing that has given people jobs for generations, the area will suffer. Speaker 12: My grandfather worked here for fifty years, blowing glass, and this hits home. Speaker 10: We know a lot of people that work here. His grandpa worked there. My great uncle worked there. I know a lot of people still work here, and I and I don't wanna see this plant leak. I wanna I wanna save it. Speaker 2: You know, people would argue some people argue the reason you bring in a bunch of people to a town is it revitalizes the town. Right? You got more consumers, more people buying stuff, more people opening businesses, etcetera. Does the Haitian immigration thing help the job issue at all? Speaker 12: Not to any magnitude where it's gonna change the face of the community. You know, again, we've got a small budget of $3,000,000. The school districts, you know, their budget has been has been affected. Speaker 10: I'll pick the schools really been hit hard. Speaker 12: So you took our population from 4,124, and then if we're looking at safe to say 2,500, even up to 3,000 immigrants, okay, That's cause for guess what? We've got to make sure the safety aspect is out there and that we then need more police. And, how are we supposed to do that if we're losing tax revenue of two of the largest employers, the the first and probably the third and fourth largest employer in the town? How how are we supposed to do that? Speaker 2: The mayor estimates that Charle Roy has seen a 1500% increase in its foreign born population since 2020, going from a couple 100 immigrants to a few thousand. In a town of just over 4,000 native residents, the effects have been palpable. But what's most striking about the crisis is that nobody seemed to know how the immigrants were getting there. We tried to ask them ourselves, but none of them were interested in talking to us. Speaker 6: Would you would you like to do Speaker 2: an interview with us? Speaker 6: Like, speak Speaker 0: to us? Speaker 13: No. No. No interview? No. Speaker 0: I don't. Speaker 2: You don't? Okay. Alright. Thank you. Do you wanna talk to us in an interview? No. No? Do you wanna talk to us? No? No. Thank you? Alright. Talk. Speaker 1: I bid you. Speaker 2: Okay. Alright. You see? Speaker 13: She don't Speaker 2: want an interview? Speaker 0: I don't want to talk to you. Sorry. Speaker 13: Would you wanna talk Speaker 11: to us? What? I don't Speaker 13: speak English. Speaker 2: You guys wanna talk to us for an interview? No. Speaker 3: No? Alright. There's only so much investigating we can do as citizens. There's only so many meetings we can go to and only so Speaker 0: many phone calls we can make. Speaker 3: Yeah. And now that it's getting some attention, I'm crossing my fingers that at least we can get some action taken to try to clean this Speaker 0: people's schools, their kids, their houses, their homes, their property, their their their, you know, their hometown. Yeah. So it's it's a lot of frustration that's going on. I just I I would like to find out what's really going on because I never realized that it was a bigger picture that tied into other places around the country to the national immigration policy. It really all does tie together. Speaker 14: In that three years, we've seen a population increase, probably 40% patient coming in and just going in and out of different houses and having vans pick them up to go to wherever they are going to, you know, and then returning them at all hours of the night. Speaker 2: Tell me about the vans because this is something that comes up again and again. It seems like the vans play pivotal role in that saga. Do you have any idea where they're coming from? Speaker 14: No. No. They're parked on the street all the time. Now there's black vans, there's red vans, there's white vans, there's all different types now. When we lived here before, it was just white vans. Now it's all different types. Speaker 2: So there's been a sharp increase in the Americans Speaker 14: Yes. It's like having a bus stop. Yeah. You know, they drive down, stop, pick up people, go to the next block, stop, pick up people. You can drive down McKean Avenue, Fallofield Avenue, and you can see who's waiting for them to be picked up. Mhmm. Because they just stand on the street waiting in groups. Speaker 6: The agencies, they just keep they keep bringing these people in, bringing people in, bringing people in. But you know, we'll go in, we do monthly inspections, and I do, like I feel so bad for these people. And there has been times where I personally have spent three days just scrubbing the kitchen just so that I can paint it. People can argue all they want that they're revitalizing the economy, but they're not. Speaker 1: The excuse for bringing them in here was is, well, we can't get anybody to do these jobs, which I was was suspicious of. I always suspected it was way more Somebody wanted some cheap labor more than you can't get anybody to do the work. Speaker 14: And right now, Andy talks with the businessman who brought most of them to town and says they're working jobs that Americans don't want. Speaker 13: It's a twenty four hour round the clock operation, packaging tens of thousands of prepared food items for major retailers. Speaker 4: This is a day shift in one of our ballrooms. We operate 26 production lines for sandwiches, dinner, and breakfast bowls. Speaker 13: David Barb of Fourth Street Foods has a thousand employees. The 700 or so who work the assembly line, almost all are immigrants. Here legally, unprotected status from troubled countries like Haiti, Liberia, and Nepal. The hours are long and monotonous, and Barb says he gets almost no local applicants. They're not taking jobs away from people in Charlotte. Speaker 4: If I had 300 Americans come in today and they wanted to work, we would make room for them. Speaker 2: Fourth Street Foods is a major food packaging plant with two locations in the area, one in Charle Roy and the other in its neighboring town of Spears. It employs about 1,000 workers. The vast majority are foreign born. We reached out to Fourth Street Foods to try to get them to speak with us. They never returned our calls. But when we started asking around about who was bringing immigrants to Charle Roy, their name kept coming up. What emerged from our interviews was a picture of a sophisticated operation run by Fourth Street Foods and the staffing agencies that own and operate the vans. The purpose of the operation is simple, access to cheap foreign labor. The average wage for an entry level food processing worker in the county is more than $16 an hour. The staffing agencies that are supplying Fourth Street with immigrant labor pay about 12. The owner of fourth Street, Dave Barb, has been buying up houses across Charle Roy at a rapid pace over the past few years. Those houses are then converted into rentals to house immigrant workers workers that are imported into the town by the staffing agencies. The agencies help settle the immigrants in Barb's housing complexes, and their vans act as a shuttle service, transporting them to and from Fourth Street to fill the plant's assembly line. It's a simple and effective system, and it's making a handful of people very rich. Yeah. We still can't figure out, like, why they came here. Charle Roy specifically. Right? Like, not even around it. Speaker 0: I'm almost certain that it's because of Fourth Street Foods Speaker 2: and Yeah. Speaker 0: Packing plants. Yeah. That's that's the only thing that makes any sense. That's where I saw them fifteen years ago starting the whole thing. Speaker 2: So is that happening here? Are there it's like jobs are being that would be going to Americans or going to to Haitians or other immigrants? Speaker 0: Well, yeah. Because that's what these staffing agencies are doing is there's they they said, we can't find people to work. Well, that's that's a half truth. There there's people that would work if you if you pay them, you know, pay them the the wage the going wage for the work. But they wanna pay less, and so they they ended up hiring these getting involved with these agencies that bring in these workers. Those jobs that they have, they used to be American jobs, but they they decided we don't wanna pay, you know, $5 more an hour. We'll pay $3 more an hour, and we'll we'll take that off the top, and we'll keep that. And we'll we'll bring in Haitians with the through this, you know, work program. And so it's it's a lot of jobs that have been lost. So they bring in poverty people from third world countries who will do that work for poverty wages. Speaker 2: Right. Right. Speaker 0: And they think it's a great deal. Speaker 2: Right. Speaker 0: And and probably is a good deal for them. Speaker 2: Yeah. But not for the natives. Yeah. Speaker 3: You're bringing in people from one of the poorest countries in the Western Hemisphere Speaker 2: Yep. Speaker 3: Paying them nothing because they don't know what a dollar is. And then you got this company who's paying for buying the houses, renting off of them. I mean, it it's full all around corruption, extortion. Somebody's lying in their pockets. Speaker 2: Big business, working in conjunction with the federal government, is effectively converting Charle Roy into a gigantic workers' barracks. A company town, but not for Americans. The people of Charle Roy are paying for this with their tax dollars. It's enabled by the houses they built, on the streets they paved, in the businesses they used to work in. This was their town. It was their home. At a certain point, there simply won't be a Charle Roy anymore. It might have the same name, but it will be a completely different place altogether. The town that began more than a century ago, its memories, its history, its way of life itself will just disappear. The people who live in Charle Roy didn't vote for this. Nobody ever even thought to ask them, but it's happening anyways in Charle Roy and in American towns just like it all across the country. Again, nobody cares. Speaker 1: If you weren't here, if this didn't happen in Ohio, nobody hears about this. This place could slide into that river over there, and the only people that would care would be the ones right in those houses over there. Nobody else would ever know what happened. Speaker 3: So nobody ever really got their voices heard on anything and then just piling more and more and more. And then whenever you see the natives from this area in particular Yeah. Going somewhere else, it's bad. Yeah. No. But we've always just fight, survive, make it happen. Yeah. Find a way to make it happen. There's there's a lot of fighting people around here, and it takes a lot for people to Speaker 0: quit. Yeah. Speaker 10: And it's happening. Speaker 0: I know a lot of people that are on fixed incomes here, and the inflation has destroyed them. Yeah. And this is just one more thing piled up on people's heads that they can't they can't deal with. They don't have any solution for. So I don't I don't blame them for coming here. Mhmm. I blame the people who did it. That's that's who really needs to be held accountable.
Saved - February 10, 2025 at 7:38 PM

@America_2100 - America 2100

Mark Krikorian has been one of the leading immigration restrictionists in America for decades. Listen to him explain how Trump has fundamentally transformed the GOP—and the country—on this issue. https://t.co/Ms04lYKqKt

Video Transcript AI Summary
The Republican Party's stance on immigration has become significantly more hawkish, impacting both legal and illegal immigration. This shift isn't entirely new, but Trump's presidency amplified pre-existing public concerns, manifesting in Republican leadership. Previously, a more lenient view existed, particularly among libertarians. However, issues like borders and sovereignty have gained prominence, pushing libertarians towards the left, despite their continued focus on low taxes. Even Republican voters now favor substantial reductions in legal immigration, with a significant portion desiring zero immigration. This change reflects a stronger, more unified opinion against increased immigration than in the past. Trump played a key role in this transformation, both as a cause and a consequence.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: For those of us who are Zoomers who came of political consciousness in the Trump era, there was always at least a faction of the GOP that was serious about immigration hawkishness. And for folks who have sort of been in this space for much longer and lived through the Bush amnesty, that's a much more radical kind of alteration of the political world. True. And I I was talking to some other folks who have been in the immigration space for a while, and they were saying, you know, seeing the RNC and a sea of signs that said mass deportations now was like an out of body experience for people who lived through the Bush era. How has the GOP's attitude about immigration changed? Speaker 1: The GOP has gotten a lot more hawkish on immigration. There's no question about it. And in both illegal and legal immigration. Now it's not like those, kind of high walls but open wide gates people have disappeared. It's still there, and, you know, you can't expect to there's no such thing as total political victory, but they're at the back of the bus now. Clearly, because because of Trump personally, but because of what Trump has done by connecting by essentially enabling the public concern among voters to actually be manifested in their Republican leadership. Yeah. And I say and and it's not just illegal immigration. That almost has become, at this point, litmus test. I mean, you really it's only a handful of Republicans, and they're not even really Republicans anymore Mhmm. Who take that kind of, lackadaisical view with regard to illegal immigration. I mean, it was especially libertarians. And, actually, the interesting thing is the immigration issue is, I think, one of the things that's reshuffling where the libertarians fit. Totally. Which in the country as a whole, it doesn't really mean mean anything. I mean, nobody Speaker 0: There are no actual libertarians. Speaker 1: Flyover country are just conservatives who don't go to church. Right. But in DC, it matters. The Cato Institute and what have you. And they were always or traditionally an eccentric part of the right. Mhmm. Because the issues that were salient were taxes and spending and size of government, and so they agreed with the right. So they were, again, eccentric because they were for abortion and prostitution and drugs and all that stuff. But those just weren't that important. It's taxing, spending, government spending was essential. And so they were an eccentric part of the right. Since the cold war, the what John O'Sullivan calls the national question, which is borders, immigration, sovereignty, that whole collection of issues where immigration is probably the one that's at the forefront that you have to deal with are now more salient. And they're they're on the left on that issue, basically. And so the immigration is actually turning libertarians into an eccentric part of the left coalition. They're still eccentric because they still want low taxes and all that. I mean, in other words but what's important to them is open borders, and so they're becoming part of the left. Anyway, to finish the thing about how Republicans have changed, Republican voters even are now much more likely to say they want reductions even in legal immigration. Rasmussen did a poll Yeah. That where they told people how many what's the level of they actually told people the level of legal legal immigration. They didn't say more or less because what does that mean? They told them, well, here's the number. What do you think it should be? And a majority of the the respondents, Republicans, wanted it to be cut by half or more. In fact, about about one out of five wanted it to be zero Mhmm. Which, you know, it's not zero. That's just their way of saying, I strong this is a strong opinion of mine. So that's that's different. Because before, there really was, even among regular voters, a kind of, I don't know, cognitive, imbalance where it's like, well, I don't like too much immigration either, but I love grandma from Minsk, and so I don't know what to say. And, you know, they've gotten over that. And I think Trump helped there, but Trump is also is is a cause, but is also an effect of that change.
Saved - September 18, 2024 at 9:21 PM

@America_2100 - America 2100

Charleroi, PA is a town of 4,000 people. 2,000 Haitian immigrants just arrived on their doorstep. And now, one of their last big employers is leaving. We sat down with the mayor and a city councilman. They say immigration isn't helping their economy—it's making things worse. https://t.co/6JfKIWbg42

Saved - September 7, 2024 at 5:33 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
The conversation discusses the role of left-wing nonprofits in the border crisis, particularly under the Biden administration. One participant highlights the connections between these groups and the White House, specifically mentioning HIAS and Alejandro Mayorkas. Another contributor argues that NGOs serve as a covert government extension and a tax avoidance strategy for the wealthy, leading to increased taxation for regular workers. A third participant notes that many U.S.-based refugee NGOs rely heavily on federal contracts for funding, with additional financial support funneled through the UN.

@America_2100 - America 2100

Left-wing nonprofits have played a central role in the border crisis. Under Biden, many of those groups have connections in White House. In this video, we're going to tell you the story of HIAS — a radical left-wing group with direct links to Alejandro Mayorkas. This is big.

@brockreiss - Voice of reason

@America_2100 The NGOs not only are a secret arm of the government but they are a tax dodge for the rich. The tax base is lowered and taxation increases, particularly for the W2 worker. We need tax reform that eliminates these corrupt non-profits.

@KimWexlerMAJD - Kim “filterless” Wexler MA JD

@brockreiss @America_2100 Most people would be surprised to learn that “refugee” NGOs based in the U.S. receive much of their funding not through charitable contributions but from federal contracts. The migration NGOs outside the U.S. also receive billions in federal funding, laundered through the UN. 🧵

@KimWexlerMAJD - Kim “filterless” Wexler MA JD

FOLLOW THE MONEY!! U.S. Treasury 💵 > State Dept. 💵 > United Nations 💵 > NGOs 💸

Saved - April 12, 2024 at 4:24 PM

@America_2100 - America 2100

Left-wing nonprofits have played a central role in the border crisis. Under Biden, many of those groups have connections in White House. In this video, we're going to tell you the story of HIAS — a radical left-wing group with direct links to Alejandro Mayorkas. This is big.

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