Yeah, I'm in the burbs in Chicago that I grew up in. Got older and decided to get a house and raise my kids here. It's important to fight for their communities because at the end of the day, the local politicians in a lot of cases aren't looking out for the town's best interests.The funny thing about life is how your views change.
I would be 100% against Dave before i had kids and owned property. Its different now. Like my area is "affluent" and mostly black. My community is always fighting against zoning for liquor stores, check cashing places, Family Dollars, hookah bars, affordable housing and cheap apartments.
Young Keond would be for all those things, but as i get older, i realize they wouldn't even think of putting those things in the white side of my county. Its like they want to dump all of that shyt over by us to help ghettoize my area because they see the demographics and figure we dont care.
Affordable housing is code word for Section 8 and everything that they bring. All coli bullshyt aside, nobody wants to have a expensive house next to no apartments in metro atlanta. Im just speaking facts, taking the emotion out of it.
People have to take pride in their neighborhoods and if you not rocking with a proposal or the direction that any legislation is throwing out there, you gotta organize and act. Hop on Nextdoor and you'll see people speaking up about their community's issues all the time. As you get older, you pay attention to this shyt a hell of a lot more.

they about to bring welfare whites in, fukk that shyt I'd pull my business too


