Normal people do not want sex offenders living near children playgrounds and schools.
Only a decadent and moral decayed governments allow this under the disguised of tolerance.
You are missing the larger picture. All the fuss is for just one reason: these homeless guys were dumped into New York's most prominent upscale Jєωιѕн neighborhood, the Upper West Side, the area extending roughly twenty-five blocks north of Lincoln Center and west from Columbus Avenue to the Hudson River. As
Andrew Anglin wrote in the Daily Stormer, rich Jews are having done to them what they've been doing to the rest of us for decades on end. This thing you are in a dither about would never have seen the light of day had this been an area of New York that was home to the despised goyim.
In the late eighties, after the Jєωιѕн takeover of the Upper West Side was complete and virtually all middle-class white Christians had been driven out with the active assistance of the Jew-run city planning commission, a consortium fronted by Donald Trump bought vacant land along the Hudson and secured the air rights over the old Penn Central train yards. Their plan was to build a dozen or so super-high-rise buildings that would deprive the Jews in the less-super-high-rises of their much-loved views of the river and New Jersey's Palisades. (These, of course, were the same Jews whose insistence on living in Only the Best had made all the narrow crosstown streets into places where direct sunlight could no longer penetrate even at midday. So much for environmental and "quality of life" concerns!)
To no one's surprise, the
New York Times and every Jєωιѕн group on the planet went crazy when Trump's plan was announced. Virtually overnight, "changing the character of a residential neighborhood" became the Jews' version of the sin against the Holy Ghost. Trump being Trump, of course, he backed out of the consortium within a year or so, but unfortunately for the Jews, four or five view-blocking buildings were built anyway. Needless to say, their apartments are now filled with Jews who don't give a damn about the other Jews they've screwed out of a view.
Nor should we!!
_________________
I should add that I worked at Lincoln Center from 1969 to 1993, and I witnessed at first hand everything I recount above. When I began working at Lincoln Center, the Upper West Side was a typical New York neighborhood, in ways both bad and good. People had to be wary of dark streets and black faces. But the community was livable in important ways that it no longer is.