My family came to California during the Great Depression, from Denver, Colorado. My Great Grandfather was chief of police of Denver, Colorado, for a time, and then when he came to California he went to work as a bartender in Los Angeles, where he spent the rest of his life. Some of my family members picked fruit in the fields, etc. My Great Grandmother eventually divorced my Great Grandfather, and she opened her own restaurant in San Bernardino. And my Grandmother went to work at the original McDonald's in San Bernardino. They were survivors. Of note, my family was in the same homeless camp that was in "The Grapes of Wrath" when they first came to California, and Roy Rogers was in the same camp when he came to California from Ohio.
My Grandmother was a hard worker, and she taught me a lot.
And yes, Bambu, for the 60,000 homeless people living on the streets of Los Angeles it is horrible. They cannot help themselves, they need help. You cannot pull yourself up by the boot straps if you do not have any boots. They are living horrible lives. I support basic housing, food, and healthcare, for all Americans. We need to get the homeless people into housing.
On the issue of Kentucky, they will rise. And education is one of the key factors, and job training, etc. Kentucky is a good state and it would make a good home for the refugees from Ukraine, I recommend Kentucky, and Nevada.
Salute,
Tony V.