@k3llyz_: #drawing #shading #chicanoart #fyp

𝕶𝖊𝖑𝖑𝖄🙎🏻‍♀️
𝕶𝖊𝖑𝖑𝖄🙎🏻‍♀️
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Sunday 28 September 2025 22:57:42 GMT
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e.akaza.s
𝔼𝕣𝕚𝕔𝕜 :
draw my name
2025-09-29 06:31:52
0
jahkelmeee
⃟ :
I LAB UR ARTWORK 🥹✌
2025-09-29 04:03:42
1
ricky.lxmxrashh8
Ricky LxMxrashh :
Como lo haces para difuminar hermano 💯
2025-10-16 17:35:59
0
klanrecor413
𝕶𝖑𝖆𝖓𝖗𝖊𝖈𝖔𝖗413 :
no lo tienes completo para tatuar melo
2025-10-07 01:37:23
0
emanual85
Emanual :
💯love the art work😊
2025-10-01 03:19:45
0
raremuerte
𝓡𝓪𝓻𝓮𝓜𝓾𝓮𝓻𝓽𝓮 :
😍😍😍😍😍😍
2025-09-30 20:43:14
0
iancruz237
ian_052_cj :
😁
2025-09-29 04:57:30
0
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Other Videos

The $40 Billion Immigration Math That'll Make You Laugh Then Cry So here's a fun little math problem that would make even the most optimistic accountant weep into their spreadsheet. The United States is about to spend roughly $40 billion annually on ICE operations thanks to recent congressional funding that tripled their budget to around $30 billion per year, plus additional enforcement costs bringing the total to approximately $40 billion. Now, coincidentally, that's almost exactly what it would cost to end homelessness in America entirely. The Department of Housing and Urban Development estimates it would take $20 billion to house every homeless person in the country, while comprehensive studies suggest providing universal healthcare through a Medicare for All system would actually save Americans $450 billion annually compared to our current system. But here's where it gets deliciously absurd. While we're spending $187 per day to detain each person in ICE facilities, costing taxpayers $6.9 million daily, the average American family is drowning in healthcare costs. We're paying an average of $1,787 in deductibles alone before insurance even kicks in, with families facing out-of-pocket maximums as high as $18,400. Some couples need to save up to $413,000 just to cover their healthcare costs in retirement. Meanwhile, medical debt has become the number one cause of bankruptcy in America, with Americans collectively owing $220 billion in medical bills. So let's recap this beautiful irony. We could literally provide housing and healthcare to every American for less than what we're spending on immigration enforcement, and it would save money compared to our current disaster of a healthcare system. But instead, we're choosing to spend astronomical amounts on detention facilities while families choose between medication and groceries. It's like choosing to burn your house down to keep warm when you have a perfectly good furnace sitting right there. The truly maddening part is that universal healthcare isn't some radical pipe dream. Studies consistently show it would reduce national healthcare spending by 13 percent while covering everyone. But apparently, we'd rather spend $40 billion on enforcement operations than invest in systems that would actually improve American lives and save taxpayer money. Because nothing says fiscal responsibility quite like choosing the most expensive, least effective option available. American healthcare system immigration policy government spending healthcare costs medical debt universal healthcare Medicare for All ICE budget taxpayer money political commentary social issues economic policy healthcare reform
The $40 Billion Immigration Math That'll Make You Laugh Then Cry So here's a fun little math problem that would make even the most optimistic accountant weep into their spreadsheet. The United States is about to spend roughly $40 billion annually on ICE operations thanks to recent congressional funding that tripled their budget to around $30 billion per year, plus additional enforcement costs bringing the total to approximately $40 billion. Now, coincidentally, that's almost exactly what it would cost to end homelessness in America entirely. The Department of Housing and Urban Development estimates it would take $20 billion to house every homeless person in the country, while comprehensive studies suggest providing universal healthcare through a Medicare for All system would actually save Americans $450 billion annually compared to our current system. But here's where it gets deliciously absurd. While we're spending $187 per day to detain each person in ICE facilities, costing taxpayers $6.9 million daily, the average American family is drowning in healthcare costs. We're paying an average of $1,787 in deductibles alone before insurance even kicks in, with families facing out-of-pocket maximums as high as $18,400. Some couples need to save up to $413,000 just to cover their healthcare costs in retirement. Meanwhile, medical debt has become the number one cause of bankruptcy in America, with Americans collectively owing $220 billion in medical bills. So let's recap this beautiful irony. We could literally provide housing and healthcare to every American for less than what we're spending on immigration enforcement, and it would save money compared to our current disaster of a healthcare system. But instead, we're choosing to spend astronomical amounts on detention facilities while families choose between medication and groceries. It's like choosing to burn your house down to keep warm when you have a perfectly good furnace sitting right there. The truly maddening part is that universal healthcare isn't some radical pipe dream. Studies consistently show it would reduce national healthcare spending by 13 percent while covering everyone. But apparently, we'd rather spend $40 billion on enforcement operations than invest in systems that would actually improve American lives and save taxpayer money. Because nothing says fiscal responsibility quite like choosing the most expensive, least effective option available. American healthcare system immigration policy government spending healthcare costs medical debt universal healthcare Medicare for All ICE budget taxpayer money political commentary social issues economic policy healthcare reform

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