Sunday, October 05, 2025

Press Lies vs. Truth About Chicago ICE Raid

A report from CWB via Second City Cop tells us that what the "Highly-Trained Professional Reporters" tell you ain't............nearly............true.

 Chicago news outlets have published and aired seemingly endless images and videos from inside the South Shore apartment building raided by federal immigration agents this week. You’ve undoubtedly seen them: doors hanging open, apartments torn apart, and hallways left in disarray after the feds left.

What the outlets haven’t shared is what the building looked like before the raid. That’s why we’re here....

 ...CWBChicago obtained several videos recorded inside the building at 7500 South South Shore Drive that were posted to TikTok in September, about three weeks before the federal raid. The “before” footage is in some ways more shocking than the “after,” showing living conditions that appear unfit for rats, let alone humans....

Much, much, more at the link.  The maintenance man for the building shot lots of videos and explained how and why the Venezuelans ripped the place to shreds long before ICE arrived.

Second City Cop has further comments:

...Libtards, media-types and democrats (but we repeat ourselves) are always surprised when subsidized or free government housing (in which the occupants have zero investment in maintaining) turns out to be leaky, moldy, roach-infested shitholes in poor repair.

What we saw in nearly thirty years would turn the stomachs of normal people. We learned not to touch or lean on walls pretty quickly, and not to go digging too deeply through a lot of closets or furniture unless we were really sure of what we were looking for....and wearing disposable gloves at the very least. Many was the night we'd change clothes in the garage so as not to bring home unwanted guests. We stopped telling those types of stories to non-police friends pretty quickly, too, because they wouldn't believe that human beings would voluntarily live like that. ...

Recently, the City of Brookfield approved of its first low-income housing project.  Let's hope they don't find out the hard way that those projects are dicey, at best.  

No comments: