Show me you’re out of reach without telling me you’re out of reach.  ,
I took a moment to read a piece in the New York Times, which made me wonder if I had unintentionally found a sarcasm site like the Babylon Bee, despite not writing anything now because I’m knee-deep in a home cleaning task. It was about how the rich people who live in the Hamptons may be impacted negatively by deporting improper immigrants. You know, the real sufferers in all of this.  ,
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The content is entitled” They Support Create the Hamptons the Hamptons, and Now They’re Living in Fear”. Some of America’s most opulent beach houses are the subject of the title. Their disappearance may affect the rich, to”. But wait, it gets better. The post begins:  ,
The celebration dresses had been double-pressed, the bushes shaved into strong rectangles. Along bath sinks, beautiful lines must be formed between the hand lotion and lotion dispensers. The clams and cocktail servers must be hidden as soon as they can.
Rich residents of the Hamptons need perfection. Today, many of the people who make it so — Latino immigrants, some of them illegal — are panicking about President Trump’s imprisonment purchases.
It continues with some inspiring quotes, such as this:” Some of the rich are slowly beginning to make calculations about what it may suggest if their undocumented workers were deported. Who had mowed the garden”?
( Note: their , undocumented workers )
Or this one from Hamptons Community Outreach’s chairman, Marit Molan:” All relies on maids and carpenters and trees cutters and lawn cutters.” Who will look after the homes of the people who come to the Hamptons to love them?
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Who had mowed the garden? Or replace the side soap dispensers or cut the hedges into strong rectangles? You kidding me, aren’t you? I don’t think what I was reading. The New York Times is concerned about how snobbish Hamptons people will look after their plantations qualities because we’re talking about people. Speaking of the Babylon Bee, it did a tale this way a few weeks ago: Â
Beyond essentially making a case for present slavery, the article also mentions that even some legitimate refugees are “living in fear” of being deported.  , Jerry Larsen, president of the Village of East Hampton, blames “misinformation”. But here’s the point: The popular advertising, including the NYT, is mainly responsible for this “misinformation”.
Associated:  , Disturbing Connections: Dems on Slavery and Dems on Illegal Alien Labor
In this article only, the creators are a little foggy with their language. They use the term “immigrants”,” Latinos”, and “undocumented staff” about colloquially to explain the same group of people — a common exercise among the liberal media in recent years. I’m not certain if the remaining is terrible and unaware that there are many Latino citizens in the United States illegally, or if they simply like to combine all the words in an article as some sort of dog whistle, but it’s extremely irresponsible.  ,
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However, if you only observe certain demographic groups like those who water the lawns and complete the hand lotion dispensers, you might not care if your monitoring depicts them as “living in fear.”
I was telling a friend the other day that it can be tiresome to sort through the day’s articles since January 20. It’s like a switch flipped that day and immediately, whatever is terrible. When I see a headline about imprisonment with images of depressed Latino children and parents crying as opposed to the aggressive offenders and gang members we’re really deporting, one thing more bothers me than anyone.  ,
Most if not all of them are not from the previous month, I’m quite sure. I’m aware that democrats and the mainstream media are teaching me about empathy too much. They don’t worry about Latinos. They are unconcerned with the legal refugees who attempted to immigrate to the United States. They are uninterested in the illegal immigrants who do not commit violent crimes and who are truly seeking refuge or making a contribution to our society.  ,
They simply consider them to be potential voters for the Democratic Party, images to deceive others into doing so, and/or cheap labor to avoid having to mow their personal lawns or replace their own hands soap dispensers. And it’s totally ugly.  ,
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Then, if you’ll pardon me, I have to get back to cleaning my own house, which I do all by myself. I’ll get back on Monday.  ,