I strongly recommend it -- this "idle permanent underclass" (very correct terminology) is not exclusively an American thing - you see white chavs in the UK who do the same.
But i'll ask you a question (and I don't have any answer to it myself) - if these shops aren't there, what do the people do to get food?
When I was a kid, “poor” wasn’t associated with shiftless and criminal negroes.
But the rats and rinos changed all that. At enormous expense for zero positive results.
FAD.
I haven’t read it, but will make an effort - thanks for sharing.
I understand it isn’t purely an American thing, but it can only exist in other Western socialist countries; if they didn’t starve to death in the rest of the world, they’d at least be a lot less comfortable (so they are motivated to do something about it).
Wawa isn’t a supermarket, so closing it isn’t creating a “food desert”; in fact, blacks point to these stores as EVIDENCE of the food deserts. I know firsthand where they shop when those stores aren’t there - they go to neighboring suburbs, and this is not the result (suburban cops tend to police more proactively, so the populations there don’t flee and expand the welfare reservation). My town is on a peninsula with Newark across a river on one side and Jersey City across a river on the other; Newark residents have always shopped at a supermarket on that side, and when a Wal-Mart opened people from both filled its aisles. Crime has come with them, but they don’t starve - and shoplifters are arrested rather than ignored.