Prepare to see an influx of women

I see this happening on oh2. I believe the policies In place now Will push women to the hobby. Hispanic women. Because they are afraid and want to be invisible. I know several business owners who are saying their employees are not showing up to work out of fear. Guys get ready for the plethora of women. Good times for those with money
Busty's Avatar
  • Busty
  • 01-31-2025, 06:35 PM
Are you talking about the immigration stuff?
Selena Gomez was crying about it
Great topic tho.
Thanks Busty but no thanks. This post honestly was meant for the guys, or giving them a heads up that alot of ladies are looking at this industry now in a different light. I can tell by the welcome wagon on oh2. Women are saying let me go underground. I honestly don't want any interaction with you though. Your energy doesn't vibe with me. I honestly just want you to leave me alone as I will you. Thanks in advance
DEAR_JOHN's Avatar
Thanks Busty but no thanks. This post honestly was meant for the guys, or giving them a heads up that alot of ladies are looking at this industry now in a different light. I can tell by the welcome wagon on oh2. Women are saying let me go underground. I honestly don't want any interaction with you though. Your energy doesn't vibe with me. I honestly just want you to leave me alone as I will you. Thanks in advance Originally Posted by HakunaMatata

  • pxmcc
  • 02-01-2025, 05:40 PM
Busty i thought your comments were on point. there is no need to be adversarial. let's all play nice.

i feel bad for the hard working immigrants without papers who Trump is targeting. he's going to create a huge hole for Medicare, Social Security, and Treasury's balance sheet, plus the human cost cannot be quantified. i favor a path to citizenship for otherwise law-abiding, taxpaying undocumented immigrants who just want a shot at the American dream.

when Trump is done, who is going to pick your strawberries and shingle your roof in the middle of August? U.S. citizens? just naw..
Busty's Avatar
  • Busty
  • 02-01-2025, 09:14 PM
Thank you John & PXM.
We can have civil discussions even if we disagree & have different opinions.

PXM has a good point, if it's done correctly. Actual born Americans have to do things a certain way and the same stipulations should apply to immigrants.
Unless they come here to evade a serious crime that happened in their country.
DoubleEagle's Avatar
Thanks Busty but no thanks. This post honestly was meant for the guys, or giving them a heads up that alot of ladies are looking at this industry now in a different light. I can tell by the welcome wagon on oh2. Women are saying let me go underground. I honestly don't want any interaction with you though. Your energy doesn't vibe with me. I honestly just want you to leave me alone as I will you. Thanks in advance Originally Posted by HakunaMatata
If you wanted it to be for men only then I think you should have put it in men’s lounge. That’s how it works. Things are still the same from all you other personas. This is CO-ED means for men AND women. Maybe you should check out of your own thread.
Unique_Carpenter's Avatar
The oracle desires an all encompassing audience, again.
Busty's Avatar
  • Busty
  • 02-04-2025, 06:21 PM
^2 excellent comments
Smart men make me excited
  • pxmcc
  • 02-04-2025, 06:47 PM
here is a good summary of the real backstory, just from a single state (FL).

https://www.tallahassee.com/story/op...n/78095188007/
Michael8219's Avatar
News flash: there will not be 12 to 20 million undocumented folks deported.

My hope is that all those that are criminal are deported. “As of July 2024, there were 425,431 non-citizens with criminal convictions on ICE's "non-detained docket" - a database of people facing deportation proceedings but who are not held in ICE custody. Of these: 13,099 were convicted of homicide. 15,811 were convicted of sexual assault.”

I would consider it a win if these 425k were deported in the next 3 months. Step up enforcement at all the borders (in progress). Build more wall. Then look at a long consensus process to guest worker program, permanent residency, and in some cases citizenship.

I’m sure there are studies that support continuation of some remaining undocumented. To be realistic there will always be at least 25 to 35% undocumented unless you further infringe upon US citizens’ rights which is happening regardless- cameras everywhere cell phones cashless society et al.

I will return in a consultation role to the federal government to thoroughly vet all 18 to 49 year old single women.

Time to head for the hills…
Busty's Avatar
  • Busty
  • 02-04-2025, 07:17 PM
modern day slavery
https://archives.fbi.gov/archives/ne...florida_030904

The Case of the Florida Fruit-Pickers Slave Ring
Labor Boss Gets 15 Years for Heinous Crimes

03/09/04

flmap030804.jpgDrive south from Orlando for about 100 miles along Rt. 27 and you'll come to the city of Lake Placid, positioned squarely between Sarasota on the Gulf of Mexico and Port Saint Lucie on the Atlantic. The steady Florida sunshine and the gentle breezes flowing from its 27 freshwater lakes makes Lake Placid ideal for growing citrus. Indeed, the region supplies much of the nation's crop of oranges and grapefruits.

To pick all this fruit every season, it takes a lot of hands. The Ramos Brothers—Ramiro and Juan—were among those who helped furnish a stream of workers to local fruit growers. In the process, they made millions. The Ramos family owned three fruit harvesting businesses, a grocery, two clothing stores, and over 30 pieces of real estate.

One problem, though, and the reason for this story: their workers weren't workers in the traditional sense. They were more like slaves. And the Ramos brothers employed as many as 700 of them. They forced these individuals to pick fruit for ten hours a day, six days a week, with no time off. They threatened them at gunpoint, promising torture and death if they tried to escape. And they made them live in filthy, substandard, and overcrowded apartments.

How did they recruit these workers? From across the border. In this case, Mexican workers slipped into Arizona illegally with the help of a smuggler or "coyote." The Ramos brothers would ask the coyote to ship them illegal aliens. When the workers arrived, the brothers would charge them $1,000 for their transportation to Florida. Each week, the Ramoses would take most of the workers' meager paychecks to "repay" the debt and to cover the cost of food and rent. In reality, though, no one was ever set free.

How was the ring broken? The Ramos brothers got caught attacking (and knocking unconscious) the owner of a van service that transported migrant workers out of the area. Then, in April 2001, four Ramos workers escaped with the help of the Coalition for Immokalee Workers. In 2002, the Ramos brothers were tried and convicted. Earlier this month, Ramiro Ramos was re-sentenced to 15 years in prison. His brother Juan, originally sentenced to 12 years, will be re-sentenced in May. Both were also ordered to forfeit $3 million earned from their crimes.

Cooperation Makes the Case: Once again, partnerships were key. Special thanks to the U.S. Border Patrol and the Highland County Sheriff's Office. And thanks to all those who offered assistance to the victims, including the Mexican Consulate in Miami and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
  • pxmcc
  • 02-04-2025, 08:02 PM
^^good story Busty. and this is just the tip of the iceberg. no one has a clue what really goes on.
Claims "the real backstory" and posts the Tally Democrat, which amounts to CNN in print
  • pxmcc
  • 02-05-2025, 04:13 AM
Claims "the real backstory" and posts the Tally Democrat, which amounts to CNN in print Originally Posted by TotalPlayboy
are you able to point out a single inaccuracy in the article, or are you just saying that if it skews left, then it must be false?

illegals form the base of our economy, whether you or I like it or not. these folks would be analogous to the helots of ancient Sparta or the slaves of Rome, essential but totally under-appreciated and un-rewarded.