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McLean Hospital is who released this lunatic playing Grand Theft Auto on Memorial Drive in Cambridge. But here's what nobody else is talking about. This isn't the first time McLean Hospital has released a patient who went on to cause a tragedy. Back in 2008, McLean discharged Marcelle Thibault six days after diagnosing her with bipolar disorder. Four months later, she killed her two young niece and nephew on I-495. The parents sued and it's been radio silence ever since.
Mike Urban32,191 views • 23 days ago

The Ayanna Presley paradox is wild. "Cancel rent" was her slogan during COVID. Meanwhile, her household cashed $50-100k from a Mattapan rental alone with multiple Boston properties bringing in steady cash flow. Let's also not forget about the condo flips in Florida. For those of you that might have forgotten, her husband Conan Harris just landed a partnership stake in a 400+ unit development deal in Roxbury, on public land. In her OWN district. Now to be fair, it technically a competitive bid. But does that matter? Not really and here's why. This woman has spent years ripping into "institutional investors" and "corporate landlords" for using leverage, buying with minimal down payments, and driving up housing costs. I pulled the mortgage records. Guess what her household used? The same tricks she condemns. 5% down FHA loans. Refinancing vacation homes to extract equity while playing the same exact game she condemns in speeches. Their Martha's Vineyard property alone is over $1M as a vacation home/Airbnb situation. She's literally playing monopoly with house money while calling landlords parasites. And look, everyone should have an opportunity to be a capitalize on investments, but condemning people doing the same thing on the front-end and doing the SAME thing on the back end looks evil. Then there's the COVID rent cancellation bill. Here's what she never mentioned: landlords would've still gotten paid through federal relief funds, including her. So she wanted to cancel rent for America but cash rent at home. That's the actual story. Look, buying rental properties isn't illegal. Using leverage isn't illegal. But when your brand is "working class warrior" and your balance sheet tells a completely different story? That's textbook hypocrisy, and furthermore, it poisons the well for actual tenant advocacy. How do you get up and preach about housing justice when you're extracting equity from multiple properties, flipping condos, and your spouse is partnered in a public land deal? Answer: you can't. At least not credibly. The bottom line is, I don't care if you're progressive or conservative. If you preach fairness, why don't these people practice it at home? especially when it costs you money. Otherwise you're just handing ammunition to everyone who opposes you. And that trust evaporates. There is a common thread between all the "squad members" and it will eventually come out of the wash.
Mike Urban67,190 views • 4 months ago

Massachusetts politicians love talking about helping poor people. Meanwhile, a 150-square-foot store was stealing $500,000/month in food stamps right under their noses. A restaurant used 115 fake identities to eliminate its entire food cost. Families are getting their EBT cards drained to zero overnight. - The fix exists. They won't do it. - This isn't incompetence anymore. - This is what happens when nobody's watching and nobody's accountable. And you're paying for all of it.
Mike Urban30,773 views • 3 months ago

I just signed an Executive Order to bring enough 'energy' into Massachusetts to power 2 million homes, and by 'power,' I mean we’re going to charge you for it whether the wind is blowing or not! So how does our 'all-of-the-above' energy strategy actually lower your bills? Well, it doesn't. But it makes for a great TikTok! Let’s break down the Big Dig 2.0 in terms everyone understands: munchkins.
Mike Urban14,467 views • 2 months ago

Boston City Hall COVER UP Exposed HUGE Credit to Mass Daily News for breaking this story. .
Mike Urban34,136 views • 11 months ago

Maura Healey wants to build 222,000 homes in 10 years, but right now we’re only building around 11,000 per year — all while simultaneously making it less cost-effective due to 'green initiatives' that will inherently increase the cost of every single home built in the state. How can we fix a housing crisis while we're digging the hole even deeper for developers?
Mike Urban13,660 views • 1 year ago
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