Are you better off today, than you were 4 years ago when Trump was POTUS?

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
Don’t be too hard on migrants, most farm and food workers are migrants, most without documentation. I like to eat.
Yeah.. it's kinda sad that we don't have solid citizens that are willing to work for a living. As I have said before, they are the hardest working people I've ever seen. I just would like to to see it done in a legal process, and not try to break down the doors to get in here without being vetted, tested for disease, or given financial assistance. If that were the case, I'd slip across the boarder and cross back again myself...... joking of course.
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
During this Admin, we have had 6-7 ( can't remember ) Federal Rate hikes to "cool" the economy.
11 times in 2022-2023. Can't complain about interest rates hikes and complain about high inflation, can't have it both ways.


But... I digress. It's too late. Millions have come across, and unnoticed. And not just Mexicans. In a nutshell, the diluted rate has become so saturated that the Elite have control now. The American Dream is dead. They will soon have control over your everyday life, your finances, your assets, your worthless money, your location, likes, dislikes, buying habits, and we will all be cogs in the the Machine to make them richer. Soon, you will own nothing. They will. AI is just one of thier tools to make you influential, profitable, worthless, and eventually, disposable.
Made you a new better fitting hat:
newhat.jpg

Also provides full immunity against space lasers.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
@cannabineer and @hanimmal.. While Im on a roll here. I respect both of you for you contributions to this sector, but I do have a question that I would like to ask.
I dig you too, you mostly come off as a real person and not just trolling me. Of course its toss in my 2 cents if you want man, anytime. Thanks for asking


During this Admin, we have had 6-7 ( can't remember ) Federal Rate hikes to "cool" the economy.
Screen Shot 2024-03-25 at 8.34.55 AM.png

Sounds about right.

Now.. If memory serves me well, American spending is good for the economy. Why would they raise rates to a level that makes buying a used car out of reach for a lot of people?... or Mortgages for home buyers?.. How does that help the economy?
Mainly to cool the inflationary pressures from all the money that was dumped into the economy, they were trying to also increase the unemployment rate, (like they did in the 80's to kill inflation under Reagan, but luckily the pinpointed spending towards the lower income people kept enough stimulus in their pockets to stop the bleeding them dry (not losing houses, spending in local economies kept stable so businesses stayed open and city/localities were not bankrupted).

Some inflation is good, a lot of the 'hawks' like Powell want inflation to be around 2%, other economists think 3%-ish is pretty good spot for it to be since it stimulates investment, but once it gets too high it is a pretty big pain in the ass.

Mortgages (new ones) take a hit by having to pay more. On the flip side though the older mortgages actually come out far better because they are paying back their loans with 'cheaper' money if the rates are fixed, variable ones (like were popular in the '08 crisis) get boned though. So like everything it is a lot of variables but most homeowners/capital owners with debt will come out far better with a little higher inflation.

]I understand we need a balance in that. You can't have the Federal Reserve at near zero, but why the flux?... even back in the 70's they had Mortgage rates (although much cheaper homes) in the 13-18% range on short term loans. But now, we see around 7-8% rates for new Home Buyers,
Screen Shot 2024-03-25 at 8.49.12 AM.png
I actually think that the Fed wants rates to be around where they are at now if you look at the period in the 90s, and where they were trying to get them prior to the market crash when Bush and the Republicans let the credit companies fleece their borrowers, they were starting to rise back in 2016 (when Trump was pissing and moaning, but of course dropped during the recession (to stimulate demand for borrowers). They like to have some 'wiggle' room with rates to help stimulate/slow the economy with small adjustments based on what is happening in the economy, and having rates at zero takes away one of the biggest tools that we have to keep our economy stable.

What I think is interesting is when you look at the rate drops, it is normally during a recession. This last one though was so severe of a drop in 2020 and because rates were kept near zero for so long there was not that while it shows up as a sliver of a time frame, the only reason the recession doesn't show as far longer is that the drop was so sudden and so severe, and so much money was dumped into the system (through things like not paying rent/mortgages/school loans) that there was a hard floor to it, if the drop would have been slower easily all 2020 would have been one giant recession.

and about the same for Used Car buyers.. which compared to prices, you can buy New at Incentivized rates and get a New one for about the same payment.
So I think the way to think about this, I consider the supply chain jobs/part suppliers/advertising jobs/designers/etc that go into producing a new car. A used car is great for the salesman/dealership owner/financiers (im guessing more so than a new car) and that is about it usually (from my experience with buying used cars, the warranties make new worth it).


So what would be the motive to try and slow down consumer spending? ... simply because they can't afford it?
The Fed really doesn't look at it on a micro level to think of it as people not being able to afford it, but they were/are trying to slow consumer spending. More I'm pretty sure it is about helping investors by getting more return on their investments. That way they put more money into longer term savings (higher yields), which reduces the amount of cash that is in the system. Less cash means less pressure on prices because there is less demand for stuff.



I can't figure out this part of rate hikes if the economy was doing well with consumer spending. Is it the fact the that like in the 80's, consumer spending was in a feeding frenzy, and extended credit got out of control and resulted in unpaid debt?, and now (like then) they are trying to recoup the losses by slowing down spending, but at the same time raising rates to make up for the loss as well??
You nailed it, that is pretty much exactly what they did, with the exception that the rates are just to get more money into longer term savings which tends to be a wash investment wise (just far safer because you don't have the gamble of investment yield changes).


But... I digress. It's too late. Millions have come across, and unnoticed. And not just Mexicans. In a nutshell, the diluted rate has become so saturated that the Elite have control now. The American Dream is dead. They will soon have control over your everyday life, your finances, your assets, your worthless money, your location, likes, dislikes, buying habits, and we will all be cogs in the the Machine to make them richer. Soon, you will own nothing. They will. AI is just one of thier tools to make you influential, profitable, worthless, and eventually, disposable.


Are you talking about the white people that came here and murdered everyone and then destroyed the land?

Or just in the post Vietnam era when every white man was not given free land and homes?

BTW.... I just got censored... I have a missing post after #214.... which is a new #215.... Come on Admins.... you're starting to look like the NWO.
Screen Shot 2024-03-25 at 9.39.33 AM.png


Is it their fabulous hair?
 
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CCGNZ

Well-Known Member
Like I prev. stated,I'm better off just due to the fact an adult occupies the Oval,not a man/child who needs a pacifier and rattle and needs his psyche soothed on a daily basis and I can actually ,you know SLEEP. The sight off his orange mop in proximity to the officer carrying the doomsday football is surreal in itself.Never has there been a Pres. whose self interest "trumps" the 350 million+ citizens they sworn to protect under the Cons.,his complete absence of humility in his quest for self preservation "trumps" the interests of the nation. ATTENTION Maganites does it register as a come to Jesus moment that virtually NONE of his former cabinet members who have intimate knowledge of this "man" ENDORSE him for another term,that is a stunning indictment to his credibility,get your heads out of the hole and wake up,you're being USED as a means to a end.Under this wannabe despot who has a hard on for the power/control of today's nastiest autocrats a lock step MAGA supporter is tomorrows persecuted w/one wayward drift from the "company line", prosecute today,persecuted tomorrow,WAKE UP, history has been there done that w/these cult of personality posers.
 

CCGNZ

Well-Known Member
11 times in 2022-2023. Can't complain about interest rates hikes and complain about high inflation, can't have it both ways.



Made you a new better fitting hat:
View attachment 5380758

Also provides full immunity against space lasers.
Don't like ridiculous int. rates,don't like zero rates either, 2 yrs ago when saving's accts. paid 4-5$ a month on 40 k somethings fk'd,saving used to be considered a virtue to be rewarded w/out using Stock Market or a online acct at a bank I never heard of or can't go to a physical location if there's a prob.,IDK maybe I'm old fashioned.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Yeah.. it's kinda sad that we don't have solid citizens that are willing to work for a living. As I have said before, they are the hardest working people I've ever seen. I just would like to to see it done in a legal process, and not try to break down the doors to get in here without being vetted, tested for disease, or given financial assistance. If that were the case, I'd slip across the boarder and cross back again myself...... joking of course.
For the legal process to be credible, we have to undo the “defund-DC” “policies” of the right — and generate the tax revenue to operate a restored customs&immigration service.

Also, boarders are houseguests as distinct from borders.
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
Thanks for the input.
I dig you too, you mostly come off as a real person and not just trolling me. Of course its toss in my 2 cents if you want man, anytime. Thanks for asking



View attachment 5380748

Sounds about right.

Mainly to cool the inflationary pressures from all the money that was dumped into the economy, they were trying to also increase the unemployment rate, (like they did in the 80's to kill inflation under Reagan, but luckily the pinpointed spending towards the lower income people kept enough stimulus in their pockets to stop the bleeding them dry (not losing houses, spending in local economies kept stable so businesses stayed open and city/localities were not bankrupted).

Some inflation is good, a lot of the 'hawks' like Powell want inflation to be around 2%, other economists think 3%-ish is pretty good spot for it to be since it stimulates investment, but once it gets too high it is a pretty big pain in the ass.

Mortgages (new ones) take a hit by having to pay more. On the flip side though the older mortgages actually come out far better because they are paying back their loans with 'cheaper' money if the rates are fixed, variable ones (like were popular in the '08 crisis) get boned though. So like everything it is a lot of variables but most homeowners/capital owners with debt will come out far better with a little higher inflation.

View attachment 5380750
I actually think that the Fed wants rates to be around where they are at now if you look at the period in the 90s, and where they were trying to get them prior to the market crash when Bush and the Republicans let the credit companies fleece their borrowers, they were starting to rise back in 2016 (when Trump was pissing and moaning, but of course dropped during the recession (to stimulate demand for borrowers). They like to have some 'wiggle' room with rates to help stimulate/slow the economy with small adjustments based on what is happening in the economy, and having rates at zero takes away one of the biggest tools that we have to keep our economy stable.

What I think is interesting is when you look at the rate drops, it is normally during a recession. This last one though was so severe of a drop in 2020 and because rates were kept near zero for so long there was not that while it shows up as a sliver of a time frame, the only reason the recession doesn't show as far longer is that the drop was so sudden and so severe, and so much money was dumped into the system (through things like not paying rent/mortgages/school loans) that there was a hard floor to it, if the drop would have been slower easily all 2020 would have been one giant recession.


So I think the way to think about this, I consider the supply chain jobs/part suppliers/advertising jobs/designers/etc that go into producing a new car. A used car is great for the salesman/dealership owner/financiers (im guessing more so than a new car) and that is about it usually (from my experience with buying used cars, the warranties make new worth it).



The Fed really doesn't look at it on a micro level to think of it as people not being able to afford it, but they were/are trying to slow consumer spending. More I'm pretty sure it is about helping investors by getting more return on their investments. That way they put more money into longer term savings (higher yields), which reduces the amount of cash that is in the system. Less cash means less pressure on prices because there is less demand for stuff.



You nailed it, that is pretty much exactly what they did, with the exception that the rates are just to get more money into longer term savings which tends to be a wash investment wise (just far safer because you don't have the gamble of investment yield changes).





Are you talking about the white people that came here and murdered everyone and then destroyed the land?

Or just in the post Vietnam era when every white man was not given free land and homes?

View attachment 5380779


Is it their fabulous hair?
Thanks for the input. Being in the Car Biz as a finance manager for 32 years, I've seen it go up and down. I got to witness the over lending to the sub prime market in the late 2000's to the <600 credit scores on cars, homes, etc. It really set the market up for a crash/housing bubble pop, increased foreclosures, repo's, voluntary surrenders, etc. On my end at that time (2010 or so) The lending institutions really tightened up after learning that lesson. Funny story, right before all that, I had a Credit Union that if you had a TransUnion score of 740+, there was NO LTV on a car. So, we had people coming in, financing thier car/truck at 100%, and then adding on $50,000 in Credit Card debt to the loan. ..... that lasted about 28 days before they pulled the plug on that deal. So, most of that era was the Federal Lending's fault for doing what they did. It was a disaster in the making for not adhering to common sense guidelines. I understand what they were trying to do, but... they just over did it.
In today's case, You're right. After 911, people kinda froze up, and were not spending anything. After all, were just saw a collapse of the market (and 4 buildings), so people were just afraid to take on debt. Enter the 0% financing for 60 or 72 months from FMCC, GMAC (at the time), and Chrysler Financial. This long stretch of the idea that money was free (which it was) took a long time to adjust a customers thinking because it was just the norm for a long time. ... and in that long time, these institutions would still loan out to <600 score customers. The process started all over again, but this time, they were losing money for years. You can't loan out money for nothing and get your chicks for free for long. So,.... here we are. Good thing for me I don't have any debt, and can't complain about the 4.5% return I get every month on a savings account, but it sure has put a lot of people in a pinch these days.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Thanks for the input.

Thanks for the input. Being in the Car Biz as a finance manager for 32 years, I've seen it go up and down. I got to witness the over lending to the sub prime market in the late 2000's to the <600 credit scores on cars, homes, etc. It really set the market up for a crash/housing bubble pop, increased foreclosures, repo's, voluntary surrenders, etc. On my end at that time (2010 or so) The lending institutions really tightened up after learning that lesson. Funny story, right before all that, I had a Credit Union that if you had a TransUnion score of 740+, there was NO LTV on a car. So, we had people coming in, financing thier car/truck at 100%, and then adding on $50,000 in Credit Card debt to the loan. ..... that lasted about 28 days before they pulled the plug on that deal. So, most of that era was the Federal Lending's fault for doing what they did. It was a disaster in the making for not adhering to common sense guidelines. I understand what they were trying to do, but... they just over did it.
In today's case, You're right. After 911, people kinda froze up, and were not spending anything. After all, were just saw a collapse of the market (and 4 buildings), so people were just afraid to take on debt. Enter the 0% financing for 60 or 72 months from FMCC, GMAC (at the time), and Chrysler Financial. This long stretch of the idea that money was free (which it was) took a long time to adjust a customers thinking because it was just the norm for a long time. ... and in that long time, these institutions would still loan out to <600 score customers. The process started all over again, but this time, they were losing money for years. You can't loan out money for nothing and get your chicks for free for long. So,.... here we are. Good thing for me I don't have any debt, and can't complain about the 4.5% return I get every month on a savings account, but it sure has put a lot of people in a pinch these days.
What is really bothering me is that while I have no issue with foreign investment, there is becoming very apperant that there is a fine line between it being a economic boon (I think of all those car dealerships I saw in East Lansing that were selling really really nice cars to all the Chinese students that had parents wealthy enough to pay for their entire Undergrad/Masters education with cash paying the highest out of state rates making the townies mint) and a dangerous vulnerability when it is weaponized like buying up all the housing stock and holding it so that they create a housing 'bubble' which leads to inflated rents.

https://www.bostonfed.org/news-and-events/news/2023/11/china-massive-us-real-estate-investment-housing-shock-major-impacts-leslie-shen-boston-fed.aspx
Screen Shot 2024-03-25 at 11.04.07 AM.png
Starting in 2008, a significant but largely unnoticed trend took hold in the California real estate market – massive and increasing investment by Chinese buyers.

In the coming years, Chinese buyers were responsible for an ever-larger number of real estate transactions as the total transaction value and count of their housing purchases soared. By 2013, Chinese buyers accounted for 3.5% of total housing transaction value in California, a 30-fold increase from 2008.

The impact on the local economy was substantial. Employment and property values both went up, but lower-income residents were also displaced from their homes.

The causes and effects of this surge in Chinese housing purchases are documented in a paper co-authored by Federal Reserve Bank of Boston economist Leslie Shen called “Local Effects of Global Capital Flows: A China Shock in the U.S. Housing Market.”

The paper focuses on California, but Shen said its broad aim is to show that foreign investment in domestic housing markets has major impacts.

Shen noted foreign real estate investment is very tough to track, so it’s sometimes unnoticed or overlooked. She added this investment is often sparked by the domestic policies of foreign governments, not the natural ebb and flow of business cycles, and it has consequences that policymakers need to understand.

“The mechanism we document here shows that foreign real estate capital can really influence local employment and potentially affect welfare,” Shen said. “I think it's important to highlight this kind of under-documented, underappreciated component of international capital flows that can really have domestic impacts.”

Paper ties influx of Chinese investment to loosened “capital controls”
Shen is an economist in the Boston Fed’s Supervision, Regulation & Credit department. Calvin Zhang, another paper co-author, is an economist at the Philadelphia Fed. A third co-author, Zhimin Li, is an economist at Peking University.

Shen said while the paper focused on the housing shock in California, “this (phenomenon) is definitely not something that's restricted to one specific area.”

According to the paper, the sudden and large Chinese investment in California real estate in 2008 was tied to: a) the loosening of Chinese “capital controls” that restrict how much money citizens can move out of the country, and b) the introduction of a series of domestic housing purchase restrictions, which were aimed at taming housing price inflation.

These policies fueled “smurfing,” a popular technique for moving capital abroad for real estate-buying purposes. Smurfing occurs when a group of people (could be family, friends, or neighbors) lend their government-imposed foreign currency quotas to a single individual by wiring money to one overseas bank account. The accumulated funds increase the individual’s purchasing power and enable investment in foreign real estate. The Chinese government has tried to curb smurfing, but the loosening of capital controls aided the practice.

The subsequent investment in California real estate had a few distinct features, including:

  • Clear “home bias:” The California real estate purchases were concentrated in ZIP codes historically populated by ethnic Chinese.
  • Flat Chinese immigration. More Chinese homeowners in California didn’t lead to more Chinese immigrants. Studies and anecdotal evidence show that the Chinese often leave their houses abroad vacant – in some cases, they just use the address to obtain the “green cards” that give their children U.S. residency.
According to the paper, the increase in local housing demand due to the surge of Chinese investment raised local housing values. The homeowners’ greater wealth gave them more buying power, and they bought more local goods and services. That created and sustained more local jobs, Shen said. The researchers calculated, for instance, that a 1% increase in the number of housing transactions by foreign Chinese increased local employment by 0.247%.

The flip side: More locals priced out of neighborhoods
But the paper documents a flip side: The higher housing prices forced out lower-income residents. As property values increase in a neighborhood, so does the cost to live there, so some can no longer afford it.

The researchers found a 1% increase in the number of housing transactions by foreign Chinese also decreases the low-income household count in an area by 0.112%

That displacement makes the topic of foreign investment in local housing markets contentious, not just in the U.S., but abroad, Shen said. It also makes it essential to better understand it, she said.

“We need to see the full picture, all the effects and consequences,” Shen said. “It’s the only way to construct good policy that really addresses this issue.”

Read the paper.
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
What is really bothering me is that while I have no issue with foreign investment, there is becoming very apperant that there is a fine line between it being a economic boon (I think of all those car dealerships I saw in East Lansing that were selling really really nice cars to all the Chinese students that had parents wealthy enough to pay for their entire Undergrad/Masters education with cash paying the highest out of state rates making the townies mint) and a dangerous vulnerability when it is weaponized like buying up all the housing stock and holding it so that they create a housing 'bubble' which leads to inflated rents.

https://www.bostonfed.org/news-and-events/news/2023/11/china-massive-us-real-estate-investment-housing-shock-major-impacts-leslie-shen-boston-fed.aspx
View attachment 5380807
It is a bit disturbing that they own over 380,000 acres of American soil. ... not to mention the businesses/factories. At some point, you have to draw a line, and say no more. I mean, how much land can a US citizen/Company buy in China?.... and from what I've read, you can only own it for 7 years.
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
Yeah.. it's kinda sad that we don't have solid citizens that are willing to work for a living. As I have said before, [immigrants] are the hardest working people I've ever seen. I just would like to to see it done in a legal process...
Sure looks that way sometimes, kids these days rather want to be famous online instead of getting their hands dirty and grow some calluses. Although immigration is a complex topic, it's easy imo when it comes to people who are willing to work and thus can support themselves. If you can get a job and afford a place to live, you're welcome imo. Unfortunately, asylum seekers are often not allowed to work even if they want.

So how do you feel about doing something like this:

Expedite Access to Work Authorization for Hundreds of Thousands of Migrants
  • Ensures that those who are here and qualify are able to get to work faster. It provides work authorization to asylum seekers once they receive a positive protection screening determination. This will allow asylum seekers to begin to support themselves and their families in the United States much earlier than the current 180-day statutorily required waiting period, which only begins after an individual submits an asylum application. This will also reduce the resource strain on our cities and states who have been supporting asylum seekers during this existing waiting period.
  • This bill provides work authorization to approximately 25,000 K-1, K-2, and K-3 nonimmigrant visa holders (fiancé or spouse and children of U.S. citizens) per year, and about 100,000 H-4 spouses and children of certain H-1B nonimmigrant visa holders who have completed immigrant petitions (temporary skilled workers) per year, so they no longer have to apply and wait for approval before they can begin working in the United States.
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
Sure looks that way sometimes, kids these days rather want to be famous online instead of getting their hands dirty and grow some calluses. Although immigration is a complex topic, it's easy imo when it comes to people who are willing to work and thus can support themselves. If you can get a job and afford a place to live, you're welcome imo. Unfortunately, asylum seekers are often not allowed to work even if they want.

So how do you feel about doing something like this:

Expedite Access to Work Authorization for Hundreds of Thousands of Migrants
  • Ensures that those who are here and qualify are able to get to work faster. It provides work authorization to asylum seekers once they receive a positive protection screening determination. This will allow asylum seekers to begin to support themselves and their families in the United States much earlier than the current 180-day statutorily required waiting period, which only begins after an individual submits an asylum application. This will also reduce the resource strain on our cities and states who have been supporting asylum seekers during this existing waiting period.
  • This bill provides work authorization to approximately 25,000 K-1, K-2, and K-3 nonimmigrant visa holders (fiancé or spouse and children of U.S. citizens) per year, and about 100,000 H-4 spouses and children of certain H-1B nonimmigrant visa holders who have completed immigrant petitions (temporary skilled workers) per year, so they no longer have to apply and wait for approval before they can begin working in the United States.
Complex indeed..... However, I could get behind this. The sad thing is that our own citizens (as you said) are afraid of skilled labor because I guess they feel entitled to a cozy lifestyle. Adding to that complexity would be funding (by our tax dollars) to jump start these people. You can't just come in with no place to live, no food, supplies, etc. It would prob have to be on the hiring Company to ease the burden off of the taxpayers. But, hell... what's another 12 Billion? ... and then there's going to be bad actors in this scenario .. kinda like (and I don't know that this is true), Tyson firing high salary positions, and replacing them with asylum seekers and putting a black eye on the good ol' USA.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Yeah.. it's kinda sad that we don't have solid citizens that are willing to work for a living. As I have said before, they are the hardest working people I've ever seen. I just would like to to see it done in a legal process, and not try to break down the doors to get in here without being vetted, tested for disease, or given financial assistance. If that were the case, I'd slip across the boarder and cross back again myself...... joking of course.
Notice where this clip ends on Fox

Then watch this one on NBC news.


Notice the difference?

Here is something in a different language not showing the last part either:

id keep looking but what's the chances I find another with the ending saying they were all arrested?
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
If you're talking about Fox showing a total break through, and NBC showing them just trying to pull the fence down without breaking through, I believe Sheriff said there were 2 locations.... maybe they showed both?... and the 3rd clip looks like it's from the Mexican side.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
If you're talking about Fox showing a total break through, and NBC showing them just trying to pull the fence down without breaking through, I believe Sheriff said there were 2 locations.... maybe they showed both?... and the 3rd clip looks like it's from the Mexican side.
Looks like the same guy standing there to me on both.
Screen Shot 2024-03-25 at 1.16.02 PM.png

The endings of the clips are very very different.


Screen Shot 2024-03-25 at 1.16.43 PM.png


Fox and the other propaganda videos show the breaking down the fence, but then stop it before they get to the real fence where they were all arrested. Much scarier if the viewers showing all those big scary ppl getting through a shit little dog fence with nasty barb wire. Did you really not see that or are you just not wanting to say you did?
 
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doublejj

Well-Known Member
Sounds about right.






Are you talking about the white people that came here and murdered everyone and then destroyed the land?

Or just in the post Vietnam era when every white man was not given free land and homes?
Make Oklahoma great again....
The Oklahoma Land Rush of 1889 was a land run into the lands of former Indian Territory. The event took place on April 22, 1889, when 50,000 settlers raced to stake their claims on the land owned by native Americans.
 
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doublejj

Well-Known Member
Make Oklahoma great again....
The Oklahoma Land Rush of 1889 was a land run into the lands of former Indian Territory. The event took place on April 22, 1889, when 50,000 settlers raced to stake their claims on the land owned by native Americans.
The term "Oklahoma Sooners" is a reference to Oklahoma land grabbers that illegally entered the Indian territories prior to April 22 1889 and hid out to stake out the choicest pieces of Indian territory.
 
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