@McDonalds whoever developed the labor planning schedule should be slapped. West Central Florida cleaning of bathrooms at peak breakfast rush. These bathrooms are still being “cleaned” now since 7:00am.
@RapidResponse47 I always thought that credit card rates should be tied to the amount of interest banks are giving on money deposite. Two or three times the basic savings account interest should be a fair business mark up.
@donwinslow Agreed, I don’t believe she intended to hit the officer. If only we lived a clairvoyant life in slow motion with multiple angles to avoid danger. The best we can do is to not engage in dangerous activities. Like, blocking Law Enforcement Officers during a operation.
🚨 This is real. And it’s happening right now.
New York just passed the so-called “COPA Act” — a law that would force homeowners to offer their property to the government or NGOs before they can sell it freely.
And one city councilwoman blew the whistle.
Councilwoman Vickie Paladino didn’t mince words. She flat-out warned this is theft by policy.
She called it “ridiculous and shameful” — and she’s right.
Her message was crystal clear:
If you own a home — whether it’s a two-family, three-family, or four-family — it’s YOUR property.
You earned it. You own it.
You should be able to sell it to whoever you choose.
Instead, this law forces homeowners to:
• Go through city bureaucrats
• Wait six months
• Give nonprofits first dibs
• And ask permission to sell what they already own
That’s not regulation.
That’s government overreach on steroids.
Paladino called it exactly what it is:
👉 “Maniacal.”
She said no homeowner who worked their entire life to buy property should be told they must offer it to a nonprofit first — while their neighbor across the street could’ve bought it outright.
Her closing line hit hard:
Everyone supporting this should be embarrassed.
This isn’t housing policy.
This is the government inserting itself between you and your property.
If they can do it in New York…
They can try it anywhere.
What do you think — protection or outright theft? 👀