SCOOP: the Seattle government is deliberating concealing home many homeless have migrated into the region.
Through a public records request—and threat of a lawsuit—I've obtained the bombshell statistic that shows 23% of King County's homeless migrated from out of state.

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After I filed my records request, the county deliberately stonewalled, delayed, and flat-out denied that the data existed. So I raised the stakes and threatened to sue the King Government and the public records officer for "obstructing a legal records request."pic.twitter.com/hmTnP9XkKb
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Finally, they relented and released the bombshell statistic: at least 23% of King County's homeless migrated to the region after becoming homeless *in another state.* The magnet effect is real, profound, and devastating to the premises of progressive policies.pic.twitter.com/WfbLUgY79s
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Here's the shocking part: Seattle's political class deliberately hid this statistics from the public because it violates its preferred political narrative. Seattle's policies have drawn more than 2,700 homeless from out of state—and they buried the truth.
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Why? Because it's big money for the homeless-industrial complex. Remember: the Seattle region spends $1 billion a year on homelessness. So that's $216 million per year to support out-of-state homeless migrants. All to line the pockets of the activist class.
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Enough is enough. It's time to expose the activist class that exploits the most vulnerable and weaponizes "compassion" against taxpaying citizens. I'm going to keep fighting for the truth—I hope you'll join me.
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The Seattle Times most recently reported that only 5% of the homeless are out-of-state migrants: the newspaper, parroting the activist rhetoric, is dead wrong. The activist class knows the truth, but they control the machine that can conceal it. TIME FOR SOME SUNLIGHT!
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End of conversation
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All of the above.
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Early 1990's I hired men to work from the Seattle millionaires club you may be familiar with. I always talked with them about their families and where they were from. 95% of them were from out of state and came to Seattle because of free benefits handed out.
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