You know the kicking out of folks from Gaza and rebuilding it and then not allowing the ones kicked out back in….whereas America is the occupiers? I know where these folks can go until they can relocate. I am sure there are other billionaire mansion occupiers who owe taxes that can be occupied as well.
Maralago…...Just kick out the residents of now and take residence there. I think the swap would be nice. Of course if that is too big of a task, maybe we could take over Maralago and place Homeless veterans there until they obtain housing.
Wonder how the orange man would feel if Canada or Mexico wanted his home. Some might like to swim in that pool and lay around the ocean beach and get away from that cold or a change of climate. Just wondering mind you. We don’t know how they feel about his wanting to land grab them.
On the veteran issues…
I found this question answered.
As veterans adjust to life as civilians, they deserve a safe place to stay. Economic uncertainties combined with a lack of reasonable housing options make it a struggle for veterans to receive the security and support they need.
Between 1776 and the present, the United States seized some 1.5 billion acres from North America’s native peoples, an area 25 times the size of the United Kingdom. Many Americans are only vaguely familiar with the story of how this happened. They perhaps recognise Wounded Knee and the Trail of Tears, but few can recall the details and even fewer think that those events are central to US history.
Their tenuous grasp of the subject is regrettable if unsurprising, given that the conquest of the continent is both essential to understanding the rise of the US and deplorable. Acre by acre, the dispossession of native peoples made the US a transcontinental power. To visualise this story, I created ‘The Invasion of America’, an interactive time-lapse map of the nearly 500 cessions that the US carved out of native lands on its westward march to the shores of the Pacific.