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An Airbnb host was offered $10,000 a month by a county and state to house illegal aliens in a rental property. The host is considering the offer, as the property normally rents for $1800-$2500 long-term or makes $5000-$6000 a month on Airbnb. The host questions where the money is coming from and why it's not being used to house citizens. They are curious if other areas are doing this and if it's an investment opportunity. The host replied that they would do it if paid $240,000 for two years upfront, and the county/state is considering it. The host states that even if the house burned down, they would make the value of the house back.

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The state spends $64 per person per day on 3 meals. Some shelters lack cooking facilities, so the state pays Spinelli Ravioli $10 million for 6 months to provide food.

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We received a letter from the Home Office with an offer we initially thought was a joke. The amount of money was considerable, about double our usual good year, for full occupancy on a rolling contract for a year. They wanted to house illegal migrants in our hotel, Camelot Castle. However, accepting would have meant laying off most of our staff, a devastating blow to the village where we are a major employer. The plan was to house around 300 people, and we were unsure if they would be allowed to freely roam the village. We were concerned, as other hotels in Newquay have experienced serious problems housing migrants. Our guests spend significant money in the village, supporting the local economy, which would be destroyed. Beyond the economic impact, we also worried about the cultural degradation this would bring.

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As a Royal Hotel administrator, I oversaw nearly 5,000 migrants. The hotel provided everything from medical care to cribs, with numerous babies born weekly. However, the situation deteriorated rapidly. Alcohol abuse, underage drinking, sexual activity, and even guns became commonplace in this family hotel. I witnessed a drunk ten-year-old with two other intoxicated children whose parents had left them. Security guards frequently dealt with weapons and threats. Staff faced assaults and threats, needing escorts to their vehicles. Shoplifting escalated into physical altercations. My five years at the hotel have been the worst of my career, and the city’s handling of the migrant situation is alarming and unsustainable.

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A city built over a hundred tiny homes, each fitting a bed and a bit more, to house homeless people. However, drug dealers then stormed the area, leading to open-air drug dealing, increased crime, robberies, looting, and homeless camps. The tiny homes are allegedly not helping and are hurting the neighborhood. The owners of these tiny homes are charging $150 a night. The city pays this amount to a corporation for each homeless person to live there. Drug dealing is allegedly being done from the tiny homes. Nonprofits operating the tiny homes are paid by the city for everything they do and are making a lot of money.

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Politicians are not equipped to solve problems, as evidenced by the alleged disappearance of $24 billion earmarked for homeless aid in California. The homelessness issue was created by politicians and environmentalists who resisted growth, leading to insufficient housing and increased living costs. Wages have not kept pace with rising rents, resulting in economic homelessness. The speaker asserts that doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results is insanity, which is what is happening now. The city and state are unable to manage the situation. As an example, the speaker cited homeless veterans camping outside the Veterans Administration in Westwood. The speaker donated money to build small houses for them, demonstrating that solutions are possible with the will to act. They built homes for 25 people within two months, proving that progress is achievable.

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The US government is using BlackRock to house illegal immigrants in New York, paying homeowners $125 per migrant per day. With BlackRock owning many properties, they could potentially house multiple migrants, earning significant monthly income. This arrangement benefits both BlackRock and the migrants, with the government guaranteeing the payments. The influx of migrants into New York is incentivized by these programs, creating a profitable situation for BlackRock until the census.

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According to a new report by the US House Committee on Homeland Security majority, the annual cost for housing and caring for asylum seekers is estimated to be $451 billion. This includes expenses for both their accommodation and general welfare.

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The US government is using BlackRock to house illegal immigrants in New York, paying homeowners $125 per migrant per day. With BlackRock owning many properties, they stand to profit significantly. Incentives in New York make it attractive for migrants to go there. This arrangement is likely to continue until the census.

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William Lajanes reports from Los Angeles on hospice fraud, describing it as costing taxpayers 200 million dollars a year, with the worst activity seen in LA. He cites ghost patients, sham companies, corrupt doctors, and hospitals billing for care never provided, including owners stealing Medicare numbers from seniors who don’t know they’re on hospice until they need real care and then can’t receive it because the hospice owns their Medicare number. He and others call it human trafficking of beneficiaries. A source labels hospice fraud in LA as “crazy,” noting hospice care has grown sevenfold in the last five years. They estimate about 3.5 billion dollars of fraud in LA County alone. They describe LA as ground zero for scammers. Sheila Clark states hundreds of LA hospices falsely bill the government for unnecessary care, often cycling patients from one provider to another. Another participant describes a “non ending benefit,” with patients allegedly receiving four thousand dollars a month indefinitely. Patients are said to be bought and sold like trading cards, and recruiters told to post at busy shopping centers or senior living addresses to knock on doors, offering walkers, wheelchairs, and promising recruiters earn 300 dollars for any senior aged 62 they sign up, sick or not. That patient data and Medicare numbers are then sold to providers. A speaker emphasizes that a Medicare MIB number is highly lucrative. When asked how much federal taxpayers are losing, the response is “Millions, billions.” The report asserts that Russian Armenian gangs and the mafia are leading many of these efforts, allegedly able to corrupt and work with doctors willing to lie. A doctor is cited who billed the government 120,000,000 dollars in a single year, claiming to oversee 1,900 patients. With almost 2,000 hospice agencies, LA County has more than 36 states combined, and 30 times more than Florida or New York. It is stated that 18 percent of the entire country’s home health care billing comes from Los Angeles County. A map shows a cluster of 287 hospice providers in a two-mile radius, including locations in strip malls, unmarked buildings, a wrecking yard, and a vacant lot. The problem is described as once a beneficiary’s number is assigned to a hospice, that patient cannot get care elsewhere, including in a hospital. There is a call to listen to people who say they’ve been scammed. Context is provided that Governor Newsom filed a civil rights complaint against Doctor Oz for unfairly targeting the Armenian community; auditors and prosecutors say Armenian organized crime is involved with Medicare fraud. California auditors four years ago warned that lax state controls created the mess, prompting a moratorium on new hospices and the revocation of about 280 licenses since then. Ayesha?

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The Roosevelt Hotel is still operating despite Mayor Adams' June closure announcement. The hotel, owned by Pakistani and International Air, closed in 2020 but was leased by New York City during the migrant crisis for $575,000 a night, or $200 per room. With 1,025 rooms, the hotel housed over 3,000 migrants, costing New York City taxpayers $4,000,000 a week, or $16,000,000 a month for three and a half years. The speaker claims New York City has spent billions on this crisis and attributes it to open border policies. They state Obama deported over 3,200,000 people, while Donald Trump deported around 175,000. The speaker concludes the crisis is due to open borders and housing migrants in hotels at taxpayer expense.

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There are many units at Gas Works, fully furnished with beds, furniture, and washing machines. The speaker questions why similar estates can't be built to help the homeless and those on housing lists. The builders are unhappy about the situation, as the site continues to expand.

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A serial squatter in Washington state has avoided eviction three times with taxpayer money from a nonprofit. The squatter owes almost $90,000 in unpaid rent and the homeowner has spent $30,000 in legal fees trying to remove him. The nonprofit receives $4.6 million annually from the state to support its staff. The homeowner is frustrated as he is losing money on the property despite the rental income.

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Migrants in Brunswick, Maine, are housed in furnished apartments with utilities paid for up to two years. These units, originally intended for Maine residents, are free for migrants while a one-bedroom apartment for residents costs around $1800 and a two-bedroom costs approximately $2300. The average house price in Brunswick is $480,000. This situation has caused outrage given the ongoing housing crisis for American citizens. Brunswick is in the same county that received nearly $1 billion in FEMA funding for sheltering illegal immigrants in 2023-2024, funds now reportedly depleted. We've also spoken with those in Bangor and Lewiston, and Catholic Charities expects to house up to 150 more refugees by September 30th. This highlights the impact of the open border crisis, extending even to unexpected areas of the U.S.

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The Roosevelt Hotel, owned by Pakistani and International Air, is still operating despite Mayor Adams' reported intention to close it in June. The hotel closed in 2020, but New York City leased it from the Pakistani company at $575,000 a night, or $200 per room, due to the migrant crisis. At its peak, the hotel housed over 3,000 migrants, costing $4,000,000 a week, or $16,000,000 a month. New York City taxpayers have been paying this amount for the past three and a half years to house undocumented immigrants. The speaker claims New York City has spent billions of dollars funding this crisis and suggests the open border policy is the cause. They state Obama deported over 3,200,000 people, while Donald Trump deported around 175,000. The speaker concludes that the crisis and the housing of migrants in hotels at taxpayer expense would not be happening without open borders.

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A migrant family of four in New York receives significant benefits, including over $20 a month in freebies, $500 a night for hotel stays, $130 a day for food, and just $5 a month for their two kids in public school. This doesn’t include additional perks like $1,000 cash gift cards from Mayor Adams, free healthcare, free phones, free legal assistance, and $400,000 in college tuition for dreamers. In contrast, working taxpayers in New York struggle to afford housing, paying around $1,000 for small living spaces. The speaker highlights their own 80 square foot apartment, which costs $1,754.

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A man who has worked with the homeless for 25 years claims there are no homeless Haitians in his town because they all got vouchers. He says the homeless in the community are not who people think they are, and squatting isn't the issue. He states many are veterans and invites people to contact him to see the situation firsthand. He says the homeless don't want toothpaste and peanut butter sandwiches; they want solutions to their displacement. He claims to personally know someone who lost their house after 7 years because the landlord asked them to move out temporarily for remodeling, then tripled the rent upon their return. He attributes this to money.

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According to a report by the US House Committee on Homeland Security Majority, the annual cost for housing and caring for asylum seekers is $451 billion. This includes both their accommodation and general welfare.

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Graham King, known as the king of Britain's migrant hotels, has seen his profits skyrocket to over £60 million this year. He made £25 million in 2021 alone, thanks to a home office contract to house asylum seekers in Southern England and Wales. However, the increasing number of cross channel arrivals has more than doubled his profits, with his firm being paid a staggering £1.3 billion in 12 months. Clear Springs Ready Homes Limited, another company in the same business, made £500 million in 2021 and expects continued success despite government promises to tackle small boat arrivals. They are even looking to expand into non-hotel accommodation sites like army camps.

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A local government is offering $15,000 to house non-citizens in my Airbnb, potentially on a monthly basis. While $15,000 is a significant amount, I have concerns about the arrangement, such as the number of people involved and the risk of property damage. I've received previous offers ranging from $10,000 to $12,000, and the prospect of earning $180,000 in a year is tempting. However, I've never received such offers for helping veterans or the homeless. Although it's challenging to turn down this money, I’m hesitant to proceed given the circumstances. My mortgage is only $1,400, which adds to my dilemma.

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New York City is launching ACES Place, which is described as the first city-funded homeless shelter dedicated to transgender and gender non-conforming individuals. This follows previous expenditures, including millions for safe injection sites, $700,000 for vending machines containing needles and condoms, and $220 million paid to the Pakistani government to house illegal aliens at the Roosevelt Hotel. The annual cost to taxpayers for ACES Place is reportedly $63 million.

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I'm in the Bronx, where 2,200 migrant men will soon be housed in this building. Bronx residents are angry because they weren't consulted. This highlights how sanctuary cities, despite the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration, continue spending millions on migrant housing. For example, a women- and minority-owned business received a $340,000 contract, and Garner Environmental Services got a $450 million contract to manage shelters citywide. Residents are protesting the lack of input on this relocation to this building, which was originally marketed as luxury housing with a rooftop terrace. This is just temporary housing; permanent housing will likely follow, a pattern seen in other sanctuary cities and states. I'm here to bring attention to the Bronx residents' concerns about this situation.

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I own a small bed and breakfast/hotel near London and Bristol. The government asked me to house refugee families, but they only sent men between 19 and 30 years old. I currently have 150 immigrants staying at my place. The government paid me a large sum of money and told me to fire my staff. They also provided their own staff and security guards. Recently, I received a call about a large parcel arriving at 2:13 in the morning. I met army personnel who asked me to show them a secure room in my place. They unloaded about 60 items there.

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A migrant family of four in New York could receive over $20,000 a month in free benefits. This includes $500 a night at a hotel, $130 a day for food, and $5 a month for two children in public school. This calculation excludes Mayor Adams' $1,000 cash gift cards, free healthcare at the ER, free phones, free lawyers, and $400,000 in free college tuition per dreamer. Meanwhile, taxpayers with jobs in New York pay $1,000 to live in a closet, such as an 80-square-foot apartment costing $1,754 per month. The apartment is described as being five steps long.

The Koerner Office

Exactly How to Start This Genius AI Business
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The episode centers on spotting scalable ideas in the aging population, pegged as the ‘Silver Tsunami,’ and then pivots to a concrete business concept: capturing and preserving family stories for future generations. The hosts discuss the enormous demographic shift—the over-65 crowd doubling by 2050, rising dementia and Alzheimer's cases, and the growing need for genealogical services that organize and digitize personal histories. They propose two main avenues: digital video storytelling and AI-assisted digitization of handwritten journals and records, creating end products like family chatbots, episodic video storytelling, and publishable books. The conversation is practical, emphasizing accessibility, cost, and distribution, not just novelty. They brainstorm a range of product ideas and distribution strategies. They imagine a family chatbot that embodies grandparents, preserving advice and memories, and they explore converting long interviews into podcasts with high production value. They emphasize tools like OCR for handwriting, cloud transcription services, and LLMs to power personalized, knowledge-based chat experiences. The discussion also covers a near-term testing plan: partner with assisted living facilities to film weekly storytelling sessions, digitize records, and package results for families or as standalone offerings. They propose a freemium or data-driven approach to prove value before charging, and they consider leveraging existing platforms to keep costs low while validating demand. The host and guest then diverge into execution details and monetization, weighing a space where a facility could be paid to host or where families would pay directly. They debate a “buy-in” model versus a revenue-share, the potential for a low-friction in-facility pod solution, and the benefit of making data collection painless for residents and staff. Throughout, the emphasis stays on meaningful impact—giving people a way to preserve legacies, while building a scalable business anchored to aging, memory, and storytelling—rather than chasing hype alone.
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