Please look up the Rotorua case in New Zealand. The hotels there were forced to home the homeless during lockdowns. Now they are facing a crisis of meth-addicts wrecking the premises and arseholes ram raiding their small businesses.
If they can impose such onerous regulations on privately held property, then California has just gone full, all-out totalitarian. I've been advising some California acquaintances of mine to get the hell out of that state, but they don't seem to see the problem that I see from east Tennessee. They are like happy little frogs in a saucepan, and the temperature goes up a degree or so every few days, so they're comfy in their miserable lives.
Look at present day, in many of the cities in South Texas. If you stay at a hotel, you have NO IDEA if the ones who stayed in that room the night before were illegal immigrants housed by DHS in that hotel room.
You have no idea how many people staying in the nearby rooms are illegal immigrants. What sort of diseases do they have? What filthy conditions were they living in for the past month... before they occupied the room next door? Which public transportation (bus) was filled with illegal immigrants to get them to the hotel?
It's sickening. The response from normal people is HELL NO. I wouldn't take a bus these days for any reason. I refuse to stay in a hotel in any of those areas, regardless of the reason. I'll sleep in my own car first. At least I know who's been in it and where it's been. I feel the same about any airplane flights from border cities, where those planes have been used by our lovely government to transport thousands of illegal immigrants. No thanks. I'll walk first.
If L.A. wants to kill the entire hotel and restaurant industry, then that's their option. I can tell you from first hand experience though, most people will simply opt out.
Will the last American out of LA please bring the flag and turn off the lights.
It'll drive away the paying guests and then they'll close.
Seems like they want to rid themselves of the hotel industry, a fine way to encourage an exodus of more business owners.
Wait until they extend it to AirBnB.
It will be tried with homeowners eventually
Please look up the Rotorua case in New Zealand. The hotels there were forced to home the homeless during lockdowns. Now they are facing a crisis of meth-addicts wrecking the premises and arseholes ram raiding their small businesses.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/rotorua-daily-post/news/rotorua-homeless-crisis-council-hits-four-canoes-on-fenton-st-with-dangerous-building-notice/6SBSQNYWD2XUIJONIO3WLH7OJU/
https://www.rnz.co.nz/programmes/the-detail/story/2018846515/rotorua-s-emergency-housing-problem
https://www.neighbourly.co.nz/public/auckland/new-lynn/message/63703111
If they can impose such onerous regulations on privately held property, then California has just gone full, all-out totalitarian. I've been advising some California acquaintances of mine to get the hell out of that state, but they don't seem to see the problem that I see from east Tennessee. They are like happy little frogs in a saucepan, and the temperature goes up a degree or so every few days, so they're comfy in their miserable lives.
God bless you...
Why wait until 2024 to see what happens?
Look at present day, in many of the cities in South Texas. If you stay at a hotel, you have NO IDEA if the ones who stayed in that room the night before were illegal immigrants housed by DHS in that hotel room.
You have no idea how many people staying in the nearby rooms are illegal immigrants. What sort of diseases do they have? What filthy conditions were they living in for the past month... before they occupied the room next door? Which public transportation (bus) was filled with illegal immigrants to get them to the hotel?
It's sickening. The response from normal people is HELL NO. I wouldn't take a bus these days for any reason. I refuse to stay in a hotel in any of those areas, regardless of the reason. I'll sleep in my own car first. At least I know who's been in it and where it's been. I feel the same about any airplane flights from border cities, where those planes have been used by our lovely government to transport thousands of illegal immigrants. No thanks. I'll walk first.
If L.A. wants to kill the entire hotel and restaurant industry, then that's their option. I can tell you from first hand experience though, most people will simply opt out.
It’d be faster to just outlaw Hotels. Since the objective seems to be force them to close in a roundabout way.