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The Water Cooler
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Tulsa leaders look to Denver for ideas on how to end homelessness
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<blockquote data-quote="NationalMatch" data-source="post: 3876770" data-attributes="member: 48586"><p>Denver was ground zero for the "Colorado Project." Some billionaire Californians knew they could destroy Colorado the same way they destroyed California, viz. by seizing control of the major metropolitan areas. And, they did. Colorado's governor is from Kalifornia.</p><p></p><p>California is majority conservative, but the metro areas of LA, San Fran and Sac control the elections. </p><p></p><p>Ditto Colorado. </p><p></p><p>Which is why I'm watching, with interest, our metro areas (Tulsa and OKC) getting increasingly more liberal. And with liberalism always, ALWAYS, comes the inevitable social catastrophes. Such as, addicts in the streets living in boxes.</p><p></p><p>Is Oklahoma sure this is the direction we want to go?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NationalMatch, post: 3876770, member: 48586"] Denver was ground zero for the "Colorado Project." Some billionaire Californians knew they could destroy Colorado the same way they destroyed California, viz. by seizing control of the major metropolitan areas. And, they did. Colorado's governor is from Kalifornia. California is majority conservative, but the metro areas of LA, San Fran and Sac control the elections. Ditto Colorado. Which is why I'm watching, with interest, our metro areas (Tulsa and OKC) getting increasingly more liberal. And with liberalism always, ALWAYS, comes the inevitable social catastrophes. Such as, addicts in the streets living in boxes. Is Oklahoma sure this is the direction we want to go? [/QUOTE]
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Tulsa leaders look to Denver for ideas on how to end homelessness
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