Feds Pull Kids From Woke Westchester Shelter After Uh... 'Complaints'
Turns out 'sanctuary city' vibes don't automatically stop bad stuff from happening, who knew?
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, N.Y. – So, the Feds had to yeet a bunch of migrant kids outta some shelter in Westchester County. Why? Oh, just a few unspecified 'complaints' about how the kiddies were being treated. Insert surprised Pikachu face here. Shocking, I know. You'd think in a place practically vibrating with 'no human is illegal' bumper stickers, everything would be rainbows and unicorns. But nah.
Remember all the virtue signaling about how we must open our arms and our wallets to these kids? Turns out, virtue signaling doesn't automatically equal competence. Or basic human decency, apparently. Who'd have thunk?
Look, nobody's saying all these places are bad, okay? But let's not pretend that throwing money at the problem and hoping for the best is a viable strategy. Especially when that money is coming straight outta our pockets. Remember when they were all like “it’s a humanitarian crisis”? Now it’s a humanitarian scandal.
We’re constantly told to trust the experts, trust the system, trust the narrative. But the narrative is always curated to make them look good, not to reflect reality. Reality is messy. Reality is complicated. Reality involves…gasp…actually holding people accountable for their actions.
Instead, we get vague pronouncements and promises to do better. Better how? Better by whose standards? And who's gonna pay for it? (Spoiler: it's you.)
This is just another reminder that good intentions don't pave the road to utopia. Sometimes, they pave the road to…well, let’s just say less-than-ideal situations. Like kids being pulled from shelters because someone wasn't doing their job. Or maybe everyone wasn't doing their job. Whatever. Details, details.
So, what's the solution? More money? More virtue signaling? More hand-wringing? Nah. The solution is to demand accountability. The solution is to stop blindly trusting the people in charge. The solution is to ask uncomfortable questions and refuse to accept vague answers.
And maybe, just maybe, the solution is to actually secure the border so fewer kids end up in these situations in the first place. Just spitballin' here.
But hey, at least the woke folks in Westchester can pat themselves on the back for being so tolerant and inclusive. Even if it didn't actually help the kids. Priorities, am I right?
Meanwhile, the investigation continues. And we'll probably forget about it in a week, because there's always some new outrage to get worked up about. Such is life in the outrage industrial complex. Just keep the faith. (Or don't. Whatever.)
