FaustusC

FaustusC t1_jdit93t wrote

24 weeks termination up to fucking 6 months in, end of the second trimester?

A Baby born early at 24 weeks has a 60-70% chance of survival. How does this not sicken people? At that point it's indisputably a baby. I'm all for exceptions for assisting when the baby is terminal or won't be able to survive, but fucks sake. Allowing an otherwise healthy baby to be terminated at 6 months in is just horrifying.

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FaustusC t1_jaehb7t wrote

I mean. I don't disagree he's a piece of shit because mag dumping someone is stupid, but I'm also not believing everything the media has released until the evidence is released at trial.

All I know is: I saw the video. Party A was standing there. Party B approaches. Party B appeared to say something. Party B nails Party A in the side of the head. Party A draws and Party B becomes fertilizer.

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FaustusC t1_jaar6p7 wrote

Why?

Well, for starters let's do some Math. See here NH's official statistics on housing by type.

EDIT i fixed my math because I included manufactured homes which are traditionally single family. If we remove all single family (not the most accurate because there IS rental single family but this is the closest option I have access to) and simply factor in multi unit dwellings, we're left with (by unit count), for the entire state, 198,471 Apartments at any given time.

Now, per this source, At any time We have 0.5% of our apartments available as rentals. Which, means, assuming or original State sponsored figure is accurate or, yah know, close enough, at any given time here we have 992 apartments to rent in a state of 1,100,000 people. Nice.

And if we further explore this, New Hampshire maintains consistent population growth through internal and external migrations. Basically, more people move here than leave here. To the tune of 6,000+ a year.

And finally. Assachusetts ranked (shockingly) was rated as the 7th most fled from State in the union. They lost 57,000 bodies alone between 2021 and 2022. One of their data sources is a moving compamy that helpfully sources What percentage of moves were incoming and outgoing. They also offer income data, which is neat if you're interested.

And finally, according to NHPR there was just about 4,700 homeless individuals and families in the granite state. Which means if just 1/3rd are actively seeking housing at any given time, that 1600 people within the state need immediate shelter and are actively competing for the 1,168 units that are potentially available for the year.

So why do I assume these would be taken over by transplants? It's simple math. If 1600 NH people and 6,000 new bodies applied, just by odds alone, those places are almost 5x as likely to be occupied by someone from out of state. That's not factoring in Anecdotal experience of living on the seacoast and looking for a new rental recently. Does that answer your question?

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FaustusC t1_jaam9ir wrote

New Hampshire has a 0.5% vacancy rate at any given time. We were one of the most affordable states to live in. Rents have increased by 32% on average in the state.

If the people here can't afford to stay here, they don't even really have anywhere left to go now.

Downvote all you want. Those are facts.

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FaustusC t1_jaaevdd wrote

If they build 44 and immediately 44 people move here to work for them from Other states, they've added exactly 0 options to the local housing market. Hell, if even two thirds are taken up by transplants, all we've done is ensured that the fight will be even harder when these people decide to size up and find out everything below $2,000 is basically unobtainable unless you're literally the perfect candidate.

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