By John Wayne on Tuesday, 23 July 2024
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

The Endgame of Open Borders Immigration, By Chris Knight (Florida)

While the issues of crime in New York may not seem all that relevant to Australians, and I understand, since I once thought that New York people just walked over gunshot victims. But it is just like covering the European scene where people in other jurisdictions can learn what is in store for them.

Thus, rather than increasing cultural diversity and joy, the illegal migrants whom Biden encouraged to invade his country have made pests of themselves, generally. Not all, but enough to be a social problem. In Europe the police and authorities worked on strategies to let immigrants know that raping girls was not part of the culture: https://nypost.com/2021/02/13/when-europe-ignored-sex-crimes-of-immigrants-all-women-suffered/; https://rmx.news/trending/young-arab-men-have-a-very-short-fuse-family-of-german-police-officer-stabbed-to-death-by-afghan-islamist-speaks-out-for-the-first-time/.

As covered in a story extracted below, New York faces an epidemic of illegals shoplifting, so much so that some shop owners are set to go out of business. Along with the crimes such as murders, it is one more strike against the ideology of supposed cultural enrichment of migration. Worse of all, much like the grooming child rapes in the UK, which the police turned a blind eye to because of fears of being called "racists" for arresting the pedophile rapists: https://literaryreview.co.uk/gone-girls, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7901731/Police-chief-admitted-force-ignored-sex-abuse-grooming-gangs-30-years.html, the police just let it happen. Of course, Whites protesting outside of abortion clinics, are fair game.

https://nypost.com/2024/07/21/us-news/nyc-store-owner-fears-business-wont-survive-rampant-shoplifting-that-has-occurred-since-start-of-migrant-crisis/

"The owner of a Queens store located within 13 blocks of 17 migrant shelters says his business "won't survive" the rampant shoplifting it has had to endure since their arrival.

Chris Sciacco, the owner of Kaiya's Pallets at 36-37 31st St. in Long Island City, told The Post his store is targeted as many as six times a week by migrant thieves.

"It's not fair that these people can come into my store and steal willy-nilly and nothing gets done about it," said Sciacco.

His variety store is a one-stop shop for food, clothing, electronics and staples such as diapers at wholesale prices — and that could be the reason it's targeted more often than other retail stores in the nabe. It's now bleeding at least $3,000 a month, Sciacco said.

"It's affecting the business and affecting our overhead," he said, adding, "I don't know if we can continue to survive at this rate."

And if it continues, Sciacco said: "I am going to cancel my lease. I am barely getting by. I don't see how I can continue at this rate."

The 4,500-square-foot store opened in 2021 and in its first year in business, they only saw three thefts – two of which appeared to be homeless people who stole a candy bar or two, Sciacco said.

But since the shelters opened in the past two years, it's been practically every day – and "small stuff and large stuff" is regularly taken, said Sciacco, who pointed to a trio of examples in just the past two weeks.

In the hours following the Gatorade theft, "I called [the NYPD] 6 times, waited over 8 hours and not one cop showed up to help me," Sciacco claimed.

"I also tried to flag down over 30 cop cars on the street and not one stopped to help me or even see what was wrong," he seethed.

And Sciacco said he's called the NYPD at least a dozen times over the past year when he's spotted a thief in his store – but claimed none have shown up to investigate, nor have officers followed up on any of the three theft reports he's filed with the 114th Precinct.

When he said he reported the most recent theft in-person at the precinct, an officer allegedly told Sciacco, "'Well, you should hire security.'

"So I explained to [the cop], I'm a one-man band trying to make it in this expensive city – I'm not a corporation that can afford to spend money on those types of hires or I will go out of business," he said.

The thieves have also forced Sciacco to change how he does business.

For example, "We had to start putting the underwear loose over here," he said, and motioned to a bin full of men's boxers, which Sciacco started selling individually for $1 instead of in bulk because it was getting stolen at least once a month.

"The only way to combat the theft and the loss of the whole thing, is by putting [it] loose and keeping it in eyeshot, hoping people won't steal one [pair] of underwear for $1," he explained.

With no end to the rampant theft in sight, Sciacco recently started a "Wall of Shame" where he posts photos of thieves and notes what they stole.

"It just goes to show that, frankly, people don't care anymore," said store manager Bobby Valiente, who showed The Post the baseball bat he is now keeping behind the cash register just in case — but, luckily, has never had to use.

As of Friday, there were a dozen perpetrators featured on the public-facing wall.

The NYPD did not return a request for comment."

Of course they will not.

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