this was the prompt in entirely:
>build a clone of the arcade game foodfight re: https://t.co/0Hc4xbXHB0. the only change should the use of the ijkl wasd keyboard controls, wasd
movement and ijkl constant firing of food. ask me no questions, just build the exe
WHY THE HELL AM I PAYING TAXES TO A FEDERAL GOVERNMENT THAT:
>CANNOT DEFUND THE TALBAN
>CANNOT SECURE OUR ELECTIONS
>CANNOT BALANCE A BUDGET
>CANNOT READ THE BILLS THEY VOTE ON
>CANNOT PASS TERM LIMITS
>CANNOT PASS DOGE CUTS
WHY ARE WE PAYING TAXES?!!!!!!
One Policy That Screwed American Workers
B-1 Visa Abuse for Engineering Work
The B-1 business visitor visa was designed for short-term meetings and business travel. Instead companies turned it into a loophole to bring in foreign engineers and IT staff for months of actual productive work without H-1B caps or proper labor market testing.
This allowed outsourcing firms to place workers on client sites at lower effective cost while bypassing wage and displacement protections. American engineers were often told to train their B-1 replacements.
The policy meant to facilitate legitimate business became another channel for replacing domestic technical talent.
Bookmark if you see the pattern. Quote or repost your observation. Comment below if you have seen this in your town or industry.
**H-1B Housing Access and the Coming Texas Reveal**
For over a year I have been saying the surge in home buying by temporary workers from some of the poorest regions did not add up on salary alone.
High-end subdivisions in north Dallas suburbs like Frisco, Prosper, and Celina saw massive demand from Indian H-1B holders. They powered a building boom with homes featuring puja rooms and spice kitchens. Now the picture is shifting fast.
The key was not just the visa. It was access to easy government-backed financing and cooperative banking channels manned by their fellow countrymen that treated temporary visa holders like permanent residents for mortgage purposes. FHA loans and similar programs were a major pipeline. Recent policy changes under the current administration have shut much of that down for non-permanent residents. FHA eligibility for H-1B and similar visas has been cut off. Combined with higher H-1B fees and tighter rules, the easy money spigot is closing.
I also predicted this.
We are about to see what happens when that artificial demand dries up. Properties bought at the peak with stretched financing will face pressure. Some businesses tied to this community may struggle as well. This is basic supply, demand, and incentive mechanics catching up.
People want to blame H-1B policy alone. The deeper issue was the banking and loan access that amplified it. When you import large numbers of temporary workers and give them leverage most Americans cannot get, you create distortions. Low-trust cultural patterns around finance, family lending circles, and risk-taking become visible when the supports are pulled.
This could be one of the clearest real-world demonstrations of cultural trust differences playing out in American real estate. High-trust societies build systems that assume compliance and skin in the game. When those assumptions meet different norms at scale, the cracks show. We are not treated the same, Americans were subordinate, lower caste.
The data from north Texas is already moving. Prices in some of those suburbs dropped sharply as Indian buyer participation fell. Watch the foreclosure and distress numbers over the next 12-18 months. The reveal is coming.
This is exactly the kind of distortion and corruption we track on Saturdays. Temporary policy advantages created a bubble. Reality is reasserting itself.
They will somehow blame everyone and have already started except those responsible.
We could jump into a wide discussion about nepotistic loan practices and fraudulent applications.
Here's a better tactic.
Just ask.
Why were they giving home loans to foreigners here with a 3 yr visa?
That's it. Let them answer that.
They can either admit these people are here permanently to take our jobs and replace us.
Or
They can explain a process most don't know and would never vote for.
There's a delivery driver who comes to our building every morning.
Probably mid-30s.
He brings dog treats for a dog that died two years ago.
I know because I was the one who told him the dog died.
It was a small golden retriever named Momo.
She belonged to the old man on the second floor.
Every morning the driver would stop, kneel down at the lobby door, and hand Momo a treat through the gap before the old man even signed for the package.
It was their whole routine.
Then one winter, Momo got sick.
She passed in early March.
The next Monday, the driver showed up with his usual handful of treats.
I was getting the mail.
"He's not coming down."
"Why not."
"Momo passed."
He went still.
"When."
"Last week."
He looked down at the treats in his hand.
"How is he."
"Not great."
He nodded slowly.
"Tell him I'm sorry."
"I will."
He left the treats on the lobby table and walked out.
The next morning, he came back with more treats.
He put them on the same table.
I thought maybe he forgot.
The morning after, he did it again.
And again.
For two years, every weekday morning, he has placed a small handful of dog treats on the lobby table before he leaves.
He never says a word about it.
One day I finally asked him.
"Why do you still bring them."
He paused with his hand on the door.
"For who."
"For Momo."
He looked at me.
"They're not for Momo."
"Then who."
"For him."
"The old man."
"The old man."
I didn't follow.
"He doesn't even take them."
"I know."
"Then why."
He thought for a moment.
"My dad lost my mom seven years ago."
I waited.
"The first year, everyone called. Everyone visited. Everyone brought food."
"And then."
"And then they stopped."
"How long did it take."
"About a year."
"And your dad."
"My dad stopped eating."
I went quiet.
"He told me later that the worst part wasn't her dying."
"What was."
"It was the day people stopped saying her name."
I looked at the treats on the table.
"So the treats."
"They're me saying her name."
"Momo's name."
"Momo's name."
I stood there for a long time after he left.
I went up to the second floor that afternoon.
I knocked on the old man's door.
He answered slowly.
"Can I show you something."
"What."
I brought him down to the lobby.
I showed him the table.
I told him everything.
He didn't speak for a long time.
He picked up one of the treats.
He held it in his hand like it was something fragile.
"He's been doing this."
"Every morning."
"For two years."
"For two years."
The old man started crying in the lobby.
Not the broken kind of crying. The other kind.
The kind where someone reminds you that the thing you lost was real.
The next morning, I came down early.
The old man was already in the lobby.
When the driver walked in with the treats, the old man was standing there waiting.
The driver stopped.
They looked at each other.
The old man held out his hand.
The driver placed the treats in it.
Neither of them said anything.
The old man went back upstairs.
The driver kept his route.
But every morning after that, the old man came down to collect them himself.
The delivery driver who brought treats for a dog that died wasn't keeping the dog alive.
He was keeping a name alive.
And he taught me that grief doesn't end when people stop showing up.
It ends when someone refuses to.
This is how Democrats stay in power in California
US Attorney Bill Essayli was kicked off the Elections Committee by Democrats for fighting for Voter ID
🚨 He exposed how the State’s website allows ANYONE to receive mail in ballots without a drivers license or social security. You simply check the box, ‘I don’t have one’ and are sent a ballot
“The Democrats in our legislature in Sacramento kicked me off my elections committee for fighting for you, the voters, and speaking up on voter id”
“I'm on the website for the State of California to register to vote on the section where you put in your driver's license, your last four of your social, there's a box underneath each one. It says, I don't have one. I don't have one. And then you're allowed to proceed to go to vote. What is the agenda here? Why do we let people register to vote and we don't verify their immigration status? We need to instill confidence in our elections”
Here’s how Democrats rig elections with those mail in ballots
California moved aggressively toward universal mail-in ballots. Key steps included:
- 2016-2018: Laws like the Voter’s Choice Act expanded vote-by-mail options.
- 2020+ Permanent universal mail-in ballots, every registered voter gets a ballot mailed automatically
Ballot harvesting third parties collecting and delivering ballots was also legalized and expanded
The finishing blow: In 2024 SB 1174 was signed. It locked in the statewide no-ID standard
And that right there is how you permanently rig elections forever
No one can ever beat this voter fraud
We need a federal audit of California elections
The punishment for election fraud should be equivalent to the punishment for treason, because that’s exactly what it is
🚨BOMBSHELL DISCLOSURE: The Trump administration has revealed that, as a national security measure, it has canceled the visas of a staggering 80,000 people from other countries since January. This includes around 16,000 for drunk driving, 12,000 for assaults, and 8,000 for theft.
FOLLOW ME, THE NEXT DROP WILL BE SHOCKING