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Topic

Democrats ( Biden ) Four Years in Power ?

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#1
  • アメリカの進路?
  • mail
  • 2025/01/21 11:04

California and New York in particular are in terminal condition ?
Inflation, public safety, and homelessness are eye-watering,
and now we see what a political anomaly they have become.

Now, what course will they take ?
L.A. wildfire problems, now that Gov. ? ? ? ?

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#18
  • もっともだ
  • 2025/01/27 (Mon) 08:01
  • Report

I don't feel sorry for the Mexicans.
They get past the soldiers, their children are US citizens,
they can't make ends meet to raise their children, so they get welfare.

Once they get over the fence, the US government manages to provide for the rest of their lives.

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#19
  • 昭和のおとっつぁん
  • 2025/01/27 (Mon) 09:19
  • Report

The tariffs were dropped because they agreed to accept Colombian illegal immigrants without restrictions.

Japan also has to accept Japanese illegal aliens staying in the U.S. or tariffs will be waiting for them.

Japan's allies will be tested by whether they prefer to be tariffed or accept Japanese illegals into Japan.

The US will show no mercy even to its allies.

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#20
  • 取り締まり
  • 2025/01/27 (Mon) 10:36
  • Report

Maybe it's because ICE enforcement has tightened up in many places, but there seem to be fewer Latino types here than usual
The 405FWY, which is jammed on Mondays, is not as congested and there are fewer cars ?.

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#21
  • 取り締まり
  • 2025/01/27 (Mon) 10:58
  • Report

I saw on the news that the DEA and ICE have started a joint crackdown on illegal immigrants in LA
Maybe we'll lose the street taco shops.

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#22

I don't know why you don't feel sorry for Mexicans or why you assume that people who post here are Mexicans.
The one caught in LA today was a Venezuelan gang member. Chicago and other places seemed to have a lot of Colombians. I guess when people here get bad news about Asians, the first thing they assume is that they are Chinese.

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#24
  • 昭和のおとっつぁん
  • 2025/01/27 (Mon) 17:24
  • Report

20

January 27 in the U.S. is the International Day of Remembrance for the Victims of the Holocaust,
a holiday in about half the states, depending on the state.
California also observes it as a national holiday, with banks, libraries, etc.

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#25
  • 見栄晴
  • 2025/01/28 (Tue) 02:12
  • Report

> #24 Showa Ototto
> January 27 in the US is ・ ・ ・. The state of California also observes it as a national holiday, and banks, libraries, etc. 

I was able to get assistance from an employee at the counter of U S Bank on January 27, though.

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#28
  • ボケた高齢者
  • 2025/01/28 (Tue) 09:01
  • Report

Living in a city that has nothing to do with the Holocaust will not be affected.

We will do events to commemorate Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

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#29
  • LA fire 2025
  • 2025/01/28 (Tue) 16:05
  • Report


In the name of politics, from the top of the power purchase to the end of the state under the Democratic administration,
the result of the mad rush to make money was the damage to the entire US from New York in the east to Hawaii in the west,
and the pandemic was the worst example of this.
No politician has said anything responsible or regretted it, and there is no doubt that the U.S. is in a terminal state
. 。。。。。

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#30
  • 昭和のおとっつぁん
  • 2025/01/28 (Tue) 16:31
  • Report

American cities that accepted Jews after the end of World War II made it a national holiday.

In Los Angeles, Boyle Heights has accepted Jews
and a section of the cemetery is dedicated to them.

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#32
  • もっともだ
  • 2025/01/28 (Tue) 17:18
  • Report

>It depends on the state, but about half of the states make it a national holiday.

> If you live in a city that has nothing to do with the Holocaust, it won't affect you.

That's not the whole state.

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#34
  • LA fire 2025
  • 2025/01/28 (Tue) 18:08
  • Report

To #30
I had strong memories of the Fellowship House where the Boyle Heights cemetery was located.
First arrived from Japan and was surprised to find the YMCA in Hollywood a gay hangout, then
there was a boarding house after the church and various Japanese.
In the evening, Mexican women would show up, and a raucous evening party would begin.
It is a bitter memory. I paid a two-week depot there, but left the next day to escape.
I guess it's like the setting of Strawberry Fields: 。。。。 I guess not many people know those days anymore 、、、、、 ?

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#37
  • 見栄晴
  • 2025/02/02 (Sun) 13:13
  • Report

Jews settled in Boyle Heights. The Japanese came in after that.
So the Japanese American Retirement Home was also originally Jewish.
Little Tokyo near Boyle Heights also prospered.
Japanese who were engaged in agriculture also enjoyed eating and shopping in Little Tokyo on Sundays. There was also a movie theater. This was before Ototsan came to LA.

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#41
  • ボケた高齢者
  • 2025/02/03 (Mon) 15:53
  • Report



Many people no longer know what happened back then.

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#43
  • 0ではないと❓
  • 2025/02/04 (Tue) 05:34
  • Report

What is Boyle Heights ?
Boyle Heights is a so-called "East LA" area about 10 minutes east of downtown Los Angeles. Today, it is an area where you can enjoy an exotic atmosphere, where Spanish is spoken so often that you might wonder if you are in Mexico ?.
A Very Deep LA Experience ! "Ofu-san" in Boyle Heights, the Heartland of Japanese Americans
Boyle Heights used to be a Nikkei Town !
Boyle Heights used to be a Nikkei Town where Japanese people who worked in Little Tokyo lived several decades ago. And with the support of that Japanese community, "Otomi-san" opened in 1956. Even today, the neighborhood is home to facilities such as Konkokyo and Rissho Kosei-kai. Surprising "Former Japanese Town"
Similarly, the Crenshaw area was once a Nikkei town due to the segregation of Nikkei in the area ( Nowadays, the area around Crenshaw x Exposition to Slawson is a predominantly black area, but the situation has changed completely ). . Also, Huntington Beach in Orange County had a Japanese neighborhood in the 19th century, and even Palos Verdes, now known as an upscale residential area, used to be a large Japanese American plantation. However, they were put into concentration camps during World War II. Now, their names remain only in the names of places and restaurants as a commemoration of their history. Of course, many Japanese still live here in the South Bay, but the atmosphere is completely different between those who settled here after it became an upscale residential area and the Japanese who had been farming here before the war. I wonder what Palos Verdes was like in the past ? Looking at maps and photos in old documents, my imagination is filled with ideas. I feel encouraged when I think of the community of "immigrants with Japanese names" who settled here long ago and survived
What will happen now ? Nikkei Town now
What is known as Nikkei Town now is Sawtelle, I think the current Nikkei Towns are Sawtelle, Little Tokyo, Torrance, Irvine, and Costa Mesa, but this will probably change as time goes by. Sawtelle and Little Tokyo are already undergoing gentrification and are being transformed into hip places, and are gradually becoming less and less of a "Nikkei town. In Little Tokyo, there used to be some interesting restaurants with a retro atmosphere similar to that of Otomi-san, but they have closed one after another in recent years. Fountain Valley and Gardena are already becoming "Nikkei Towns with a retro atmosphere from a long time ago", although they still have some Nikkei town atmosphere. Torrance, once called the "48th largest prefecture" by LA Weekly because of its large Japanese population, will have to change with the completion of Toyota's relocation. 20 years from now, it may be an area where people say, "Oh, there were Japanese people living here ?.

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#44
  • 昭和のおとっつぁん
  • 2025/02/04 (Tue) 15:38
  • Report



Broadway in downtown Los Angeles has somehow become a Mexican neighborhood.

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#45
  • 0ではないと❓
  • 2025/02/04 (Tue) 17:37
  • Report

The area around Broadway, which once had the appearance of a fashionable, upscale neighborhood, is now filthy, and all that actually stands side by side are cheap Mexican stores. There is no sign of the once prosperous city, but I knew that Los Angeles means "angels" in Spanish ?. Santa Monica, etc. All the place names with San (Santa ⌘)}, Los, and Las are of Spanish origin. You should at least try to use your brain for a while,
old man !.

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#47
  • 昭和のおとっつぁん
  • 2025/02/05 (Wed) 08:21
  • Report

If California is a former Mexican territory, it is not surprising that many of the place names are Spanish.

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#52
  • TRUMP2025
  • 2025/02/05 (Wed) 21:13
  • Report

Trump's Executive Order Banning Transgender Women from Participating in Athletics, Demanding IOC Change
Back to the norm.

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#55
  • 紅夜叉
  • 2025/02/06 (Thu) 08:41
  • Report

The Treaty of Guadalupe ・ Hidalgo, signed in February 1848, ended the Mexican-American War.
In this treaty, the United States agreed to pay Mexico $18.25 million,
Mexico formally ceded California to the United States, and
the border between the United States and Mexico was drawn for the first time.

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