Bidengeddon: Dank Brandon Rises

Discussion in 'The Mainboard' started by GoodForAnother, Nov 6, 2020.

  1. IV

    IV Freedom is the right of all sentient beings
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    I didn’t have anyone come to my house cause of COVID
     
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  2. MORBO!

    MORBO! Hello, Tiny Man. I WILL DESTROY YOU!!!!
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    I mean mine was 2013 so we were good there haha
     
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  3. IV

    IV Freedom is the right of all sentient beings
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  4. afb

    afb Spoiler Alert: Pawnee, IN may not be on a map.
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  5. IV

    IV Freedom is the right of all sentient beings
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    I mean, I’m sure this is good, but there are so many battles more important to fight so that we can take care of these people later
     
  6. CaneKnight

    CaneKnight FSU Private Board's Fav Poster
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    https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2021/07/30/evictions-moratorium-expire-rental-assistance/

    Well this isn't good

    Evictions are about to restart as tenants wait on billions in unspent rental aid
    As courts prepare to allow evictions again, only 12 percent of $25 billion approved in December has reached people in need
    Listen to article
    10 min

    By
    Jonathan O'Connell
    ,
    Anu Narayanswamy
    ,
    Rachel Siegel
    and
    Alyssa Fowers

    Today at 9:00 a.m. EDT


    Housing activists protest in New York last fall. A federal ban on evicting tenants who have lost income because of the pandemic will expire Saturday, but rental aid remains unavailable in many communities. (Paul Frangipane/Bloomberg News)
    When the pandemic hit, Angela Bears was afraid that she would bring the virus home to her 3-year-old son, who was in treatment for kidney cancer.


    She fell behind on rent for her Kansas City, Mo., home when she decided it was safer to stop going to her warehouse job. Bears said she applied for rental assistance multiple times this spring but never heard back.

    Without any government aid, she is now $5,000 behind on her rent and fearing eviction. She is asking for donations online to stay in her home.

    “I’ve got boxes. I’ve started packing,” Bears said. “The only thing at this point that matters to me is that my son doesn’t get sick.”

    Bears is one of thousands of Americans who have been shortchanged by a yawning disconnect between two well-meaning policies lawmakers passed in response to the pandemic.

    Are you a renter or landlord impacted by federal or local eviction moratoriums? Share your story with The Washington Post.

    One, a federal ban on some evictions, is set to expire Saturday. Another, a $46.5 billion emergency fund aimed at getting rent to tenants at risk of eviction, has been painfully slow to get off the ground, with some states and counties unable to spend even a dollar of the money they were provided months earlier.



    The expiration of the federal moratorium, following a last-ditch effort by congressional Democrats to revive it that is expected to fail, will leave renters with few pandemic-era protections as courts begin processing steep backlogs of eviction cases. Only nine states and D.C. have some kind of emergency protections for tenants that will last into August, according to an analysis by The Washington Post.

    That has magnified criticism of the sluggish Emergency Rental Assistance Program, which some advocates say was flawed from the get-go because it relies on state and local governments across the country to create and administer their own programs. While some states quickly set up programs, others struggled to locate people in need or else received so many applications that the onslaught overwhelmed staff and software systems, causing months-long delays.

    Six months after the aid program was approved by President Donald Trump in December, just 12 percent of the first $25 billion in funds had reached people in need due to loss of income from the pandemic, according to the Treasury Department. More than three months after President Biden signed a March relief package with another $21.5 billion for the program, even less of that has been spent.



    [​IMG]
    Just 12 percent of emergency rental assistance

    distributed after six months

    Funds

    spent

    $3B

    spent

    Funds

    available

    $25B

    allocated

    $22B

    unspent

    Jan. 1

    April 30

    March 31

    May 31

    June 30

    Note: excludes second round of funding allocated in March

    Source: Treasury Department

    THE WASHINGTON POST

    Unlike other coronavirus aid programs such as stimulus checks or child tax credits, Congress designed the program as a partnership between the federal government, where the money begins, and states and localities, which have leeway to distribute the funds largely as they see fit.

    As problems arose, some states and cities stopped accepting applications to make fixes. But the trade-offs are steep: The longer it takes programs to come back online, the longer vulnerable households wait for help.

    The city of Los Angeles stopped taking applications after seven weeks because of “unprecedented demand that far exceeded the program funding,” according to a spokeswoman. North Carolina officials had to hire an outside vendor to quickly issue checks to thousands of recipients. The city of Phoenix was overwhelmed by the number of documents it needed to verify and stopped taking applications online, routing people instead to a hotline.



    In other places, confusion reigned: Fulton County, Ga., which includes part of Atlanta, received thousands of applications from people who needed to apply to the city of Atlanta for aid. The city of Houston and surrounding Harris County in Texas, merged their programs to eliminate confusion, a move that ultimately made the program one of the nation’s exemplars.

    Overall just 36 out of more than 400 states, counties and cities reporting data to the Treasury Department were able to spend half of the money allotted them by the end of June. Another 49 hadn’t spent any funds at all. That included New York state — recipient of $801 million in first-round funds — plus huge metropolitan governments, according to an analysis of Treasury data by The Post.

    Advocates and legal aid groups say the program has failed tenants who reasonably expected aid to arrive in time.



    “What I am seeing now is an anxiety that I haven’t seen in 20 years of practice, and it continues to grow and compound,” said Jack Newton, director of public services at the nonprofit Bronx Legal Services, in New York City. “The unknowingness about what is going to happen — it really has people frightened, losing sleep, calling our hotline for updates.”

    White House and Treasury officials say they are continuing to press states and localities to improve their programs, while giving them the flexibility to design them as they choose. The pace of spending has increased dramatically, with $1.5 billion going to households in the month of June, more than all previous months combined.

    Rental relief programs ramped up in June, but fears mount that momentum may be coming too late

    “When the Administration arrived, we knew that this would be an enormous challenge and that the systems were not in place at the state and local level to deliver assistance at this unprecedented scale,” said Treasury spokeswoman Elizabeth Bourgeois, in a statement.



    Once the ban ends, housing experts say areas of the country with hot housing markets and in-demand apartments may be most likely to see a surge in evictions starting in August.

    “I am sure there will be a significant pickup of evictions because the number of people who are behind is about double what you would see in a normal economy,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics.

    The good news, Zandi said, is that the estimated amount of unpaid rent in America had fallen from $44.1 billion in December to $27.5 billion in June.

    But he attributed much of the progress to one-time stimulus programs such as the cash payments that helped people pay rent. Moody’s data shows there are still well over 6 million renters behind and massive disparities between the need of renters and the aid they’ve received.



    Experts say they expect to see pockets of America where a lack of funding and expiring renter protections lead to a surge in evictions.

    “I’m anticipating that there will be mass confusion about who can be evicted, how they can be evicted, for what reasons and when,” said Anne Kat Alexander of Princeton University’s Eviction Lab. “There’s already a lot of confusion out there about exactly who is covered by the CDC moratorium and what the CDC moratorium protects from happening to you.”

    Residents of the Bronx and other New York communities have had particular trouble getting aid, as the state did not make any payments to renters until July. (Seth Wenig/AP)
    Moratorium under assault
    Timothy Johnson, a 59-year-old with a chronic hip problem and two young daughters, says his landlord is waiting on $11,000 in unpaid rent for his rent-controlled Bronx apartment. He receives disability payments, and his wife had a job as a department store clerk, but he said it has not been enough to cover the rent.



    He said he avoids thinking about what would happen if New York state can’t ultimately provide him and his wife with funds to make up their thousands of dollars in unpaid rent.

    “If that happens I’m going to trust in God, because he’s going to make a way,” he said. “He’s always made a way. That’s when your faith kicks in.”

    New York has been one of the slowest states to start its aid program. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D) said Tuesday that the state finally began making payments in July and that the state would relax documentation requirements, streamline the application process and convene staffers from other state agencies to process applications.

    The New York State Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance issued a statement from spokesman Anthony Farmer saying the program “has already received more than 100,000 applications and upwards of 7,000 calls a day are being handled with virtually no wait time.”



    For now, New York state residents can take solace in the fact that a state ban on evictions remains in effect until the end of August. In addition to New York, California, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oregon and Washington have some level of protections beyond July.

    Some counties and cities have protections, and the Federal Housing Finance Agency also announced Wednesday that properties backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac will give tenants at least 30 days before requiring them to vacate their units. Biden on Thursday also asked the Departments of Housing and Urban Development, Agriculture and Veterans Affairs to extend their moratoriums through the end of September.

    “The places that I think we will be impacted the most will be where they enforced the moratorium well but didn’t get rental assistance out quickly,” said Daryl Fairweather, the chief economist of Redfin, the housing company. “It seems like all the money is out there and exists but the issue is getting it to people who are at risk.”

    The $50 billion race to save America’s renters from eviction

    Some advocates and elected Democrats, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, called for the Biden administration to extend the federal moratorium.

    But the ban, put in place nearly 11 months ago by the Centers for Disease Control to prevent evictions from contributing to coronavirus infections, has come under withering assault from landlords and federal judges.

    The Supreme Court in June allowed the moratorium to stay in place for another month. But Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh wrote at the time that any further extensions would require “clear and specific congressional authorization” through new legislation.

    White House press secretary Jen Psaki issued a statement Thursday saying that the administration would support an extension of the moratorium but that “the Supreme Court has made clear that this option is no longer available,” and that the White House was calling on Congress to pass a new ban for it to hold up in court. Congressional Democrats launched a last-minute effort to extend the ban Thursday, but Hill aides said they don’t expect it to succeed.

    Secretary Janet L. Yellen's Treasury Department has overseen efforts to encourage state and local governments to set up their programs and get aid to those in need. (Patrick Semansky/AP)
    Raising awareness
    The ban’s expiration has put the spotlight on government efforts to get aid programs up and running.

    Treasury officials say the first $25 billion in funds was provided to grantees in February, but unlike federally administered pandemic responses, such as the Paycheck Protection Program, Congress designed the Emergency Rental Assistance program to allow governors, state legislatures, mayors and county councils to create and administer their own programs.

    That has turned out to be a daunting and confusing task. Some states and counties opened application portals only to see them overwhelmed. Technical glitches dogged other systems.

    Under Gov. Greg Abbott (R), Texas has found success, having put $610 million in the hands of renters — more than half of its first round of funding — by Thursday. But that came after its program stumbled out of the gate, requiring the state Department of Housing and Community Affairs to switch software systems and hire additional contractors to right the ship.

    Bobby Wilkinson, the agency’s executive director, said his team found success by encouraging landlords to participate in the program. About 85 percent of funds have gone directly to landlords.

    “I just want landlords to participate from the get-go. My message has been, ‘Talk to your tenants. Tenants, talk to your landlords. The way to make yourself whole is to participate in our program,'" Wilkinson said.

    The Biden White House and Secretary Janet L. Yellen’s Treasury Department have been trying to raise awareness about funds. Guidance from February and May was widely praised by housing advocates for helping streamline application processes.

    The administration also announced other initiatives in June and convened two eviction-prevention meetings, urging an all-hands-on-deck effort since the problem could not be solved by the federal government alone. On Wednesday, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau launched an online tool to further help renters and landlords find assistance.

    “We have been listening and responding in real time — and will continue to closely examine any doable suggestions for new policy or guidance,” said Gene Sperling, who is overseeing White House stimulus efforts. “With some states and localities showing they can get significant funds out efficiently and effectively, those who are not ramping up their programs faster in light of the end of the eviction moratorium have no excuse nor any place to hide.”

     
  7. Daniel Ocean

    Daniel Ocean I only lied about being a thief
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    great article and he expressed my love of thanksgiving perfectly.
     
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  8. Daniel Ocean

    Daniel Ocean I only lied about being a thief
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    Los Angeles also just passed an ordinance restricting where the homeless can set up encampments. The issue is about to get a lot worse.
     
  9. CaneKnight

    CaneKnight FSU Private Board's Fav Poster
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    You know the important things, it's hilarious people think that California is some kind of leftist paradise
     
  10. BudKilmer

    BudKilmer Well-Known Member
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    This country will be on fire soon

     
  11. Henry Blake

    Henry Blake No Springsteen is leaving this house!
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    Cinnamon has to get to her wine retreat in Vail
     
  12. CaneKnight

    CaneKnight FSU Private Board's Fav Poster
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    I'm never going to be able to afford a house something has to be done
     
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  13. afb

    afb Spoiler Alert: Pawnee, IN may not be on a map.
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    Florida State SeminolesBig Ten Conference

  14. GoS

    GoS I heart shitty FB teams my life is forfeit
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    I like this post. It fucks hard
     
  15. steamengine

    steamengine I don’t want to press one for English!
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    Sarcasm?
     
  16. IV

    IV Freedom is the right of all sentient beings
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    it’s going to be much harder to take care of these people with a fascist government in place, but I guess we aren’t going to go after trump for literal treason so
     
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  17. steamengine

    steamengine I don’t want to press one for English!
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    Our government is compartmentalized enough (although having a guy in charge recently who thought he and his large sons and weird lawyers could run it top down put that into question) that we can support vulnerable populations while doing policy.

    Sinema appears to be an impediment to this way of doing things though. It’s all the filibuster.
     
  18. IV

    IV Freedom is the right of all sentient beings
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    I mean, I feel like I’m right here, and I feel like even those that are worried have no idea how precarious our situation is
     
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  19. Daniel Ocean

    Daniel Ocean I only lied about being a thief
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    yeah but, that said I’d rather live here than just about any other place in the US
     
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  20. CaneKnight

    CaneKnight FSU Private Board's Fav Poster
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    That's fair, Florida is hell. Orlando being very progressive is all that protects me
     
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  21. —

    Well-Known Member
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    #vacationinfadedmattepurple
     
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  22. Doc Louis

    Doc Louis Well-Known Member
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    Nonsense there's plenty of outdated first time buyer programs that no one qualifies for because housing prices outpaced income requirements so people can meet only some, if any, of the requirements. You've just gotta bootstrap and whatnot and win a scratcher or two.
     
  23. Doc Louis

    Doc Louis Well-Known Member
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    I dunno, I think you'd like Alabama
     
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  24. IV

    IV Freedom is the right of all sentient beings
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    Cities are cities, rural is rural


    Seems to have been basically true for all my domestic travels
     
  25. afb

    afb Spoiler Alert: Pawnee, IN may not be on a map.
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    Florida State SeminolesBig Ten Conference

    the coalition that got 55 votes together, still isnt ready



     
  26. CaneKnight

    CaneKnight FSU Private Board's Fav Poster
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    They’re fucking running the clock. Hence that piece of shit Enema’s bullshit about not sticking around because of her vacation
     
  27. The Banks

    The Banks TMB's Alaskan
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    Climate is climate.
     
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  28. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
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  29. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
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  30. Henry Blake

    Henry Blake No Springsteen is leaving this house!
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    "I mentioned it during most of my weekly press conferences. I really care!"
     
  31. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
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    guys guys guys

    she just found out yesterday about this thing that everyone has known about for months

     
  32. The Banks

    The Banks TMB's Alaskan
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    Fuck you, Nancy. America would be better off with you dead (or out of Congress, which ever happens first).
     
  33. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
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    she's obviously not quite as evil as donnie but she is at least in the same ballpark
     
  34. *DIESEL*

    *DIESEL* Half man, half amazing
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  35. Henry Blake

    Henry Blake No Springsteen is leaving this house!
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    SCOTUS ruled on 6/29. I think that meant that Congress would have to extend it after 7/31. Biden said he would not extend it. I mean, didn't even pass a bill and send to the Senate. :facepalm:
    "The decision comes at a time when roughly 7 million American households say they are still behind on their rent. Many suffered job losses during the pandemic. And delays have stopped more than $46 billion in congressionally approved rental assistance from reaching many of those facing eviction who need it."

    https://www.npr.org/2021/06/29/1003...ves-the-cdcs-moratorium-on-evictions-in-place
     
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  36. Tobias

    Tobias dan “the man qb1” jones fan account
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    fuck joe biden for not extending it as well

    fdr 2.0 stuff there
     
  37. Henry Blake

    Henry Blake No Springsteen is leaving this house!
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    No one wants to stand for anything. More accurately probably, no one wants to go against ___ lobbying group that's been in their ear for the last 6 months about ___ issue.
     
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  38. chuckmasterflex

    chuckmasterflex Attack and dethrone God
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    Where is the bipartisan raise on the minimum wage that Joe Manchin decided?
     
  39. PeterGriffin

    PeterGriffin Iced and/or sweet tea is for dirty rednecks.
    Florida State SeminolesPhoenix SunsTottenham HotspurAvengersSan Diego PadresBorussia MönchengladbachFormula 1

    [​IMG]
     
  40. Daniel Ocean

    Daniel Ocean I only lied about being a thief
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    This isn’t exactly true and not this simple. For a white person the difference is minimal but for a poc it’s not also living in a more liberal area is different too. Look at Covid numbers. Look at education levels. Look at things like vaccination rates and the reaction to covid. So maybe the city vs rural area is true to a point on the whole living in Cali is no where the same as living in Alabama.
     
  41. Daniel Ocean

    Daniel Ocean I only lied about being a thief
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    I’ve been beating the fuck the democrats drum so much I forget it’s not my dick
     
  42. Blu Tang Clan

    Blu Tang Clan Sorry for partying
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    Pelosi is a Scottish noble from Braveheart.
     
  43. The Banks

    The Banks TMB's Alaskan
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    Would love a reality tv show of a dozen people from rural Alabama live in rural Alaska for one calendar year.

    We’d have a dozen fewer Trump voters.
     
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  44. Doc Louis

    Doc Louis Well-Known Member
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    Yeah I bet you would love a reality tv show. Alaska's already got a few reality shows, and the fine people of The Lizard State have been watching it all for the last few years.

    1. Deadliest catch
    2. Life below zero
    3. Life below zero: the next generation
    4. Alaska: the last frontier
    5. The last Alaskans
    6. Alaskan bush people
    7. Alaska off the grid
    8. Sarah Palin's Alaska
    9. Ice road truckers
    10. Railroad Alaska
    11. Ice airport Alaska
    12. Into Alaska
    13. Gold rush Alaska
    14. Gold rush: white water
    15. Gold rush: Parker's trail
    16. Bering sea gold
    17. Bering sea gold: under the ice
    18. Edge of Alaska
    19. Building Alaska
    20. Buying Alaska
    21. Guiding Alaska
    22. Living Alaska
    23. Escaping Alaska
    24. The Alaska triangle
    25. Alaska: battle of the bay
    26. Homestead rescue ( sure they lgo to other states, but they let you know where they're from. Repeatedly.)
    27. Grizzly man
    28. Yukon men
    29. Yukon river run
    30. River of no return
    31. Out of the wild
    32. Wild Alaska
    33. Wild west Alaska
    34. Flying wild Alaska
    35. Alaska state troopers
    36. Slednecks
    37. Alaska proof
    38. Alaskan women looking for love
    39. Looking for love: bachelorettes in Alaska
    40. Alaska gold diggers
    41. Win the wilderness
    42. Dr. Dee: Alaska vet
    43. Alaska mega machines
    44. Alaska monsters
    45. Extinct or alive: Jaws of Alaska
    46. Alaska haunting
    47. Aliens in Alaska
    48. Molly of Denali
    49. Northern exposure
    Not to mention any real estate buying, building, log cabin living, food eating, hotel managing, hunting, fishing, murdering, surviving, abandoned building exploring shows that have episodes set in Alaska.

    So nah, Alabamians might be better prepared than you think. And they know the best diners, drive-ins, and dives Alaska has to offer.
     
  45. The Banks

    The Banks TMB's Alaskan
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    Molly of Denali is a top tier show. Up there with Wishbone from my childhood.
     
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  46. IV

    IV Freedom is the right of all sentient beings
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    Sure my point was there are going to be plenty of people in Birmingham you can get along with just like LA

    And rural white people tend to be grass eating morons regardless of the state

    didn’t consider the different experience of POC in the cities for my extremely broad sweeping generalization but I think you see what I’m saying
     
  47. Pile Driving Miss Daisy

    Pile Driving Miss Daisy It angries up the blood
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    There are only a small handful of states where rural white people might be less hostile to non white people.
     
  48. ashy larry

    ashy larry from ashy to classy
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  49. ashy larry

    ashy larry from ashy to classy
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    we didn’t know
    Republicans blocked us

    CDC can do it