Homeless centers and hostels
Like the 1930s
Build it and they will come.

LYNNWOOD, Wash. — The only place in South Snohomish County where people experiencing homelessness can take a shower or use a restroom may soon close its doors. ¶The Jean Kim Foundation’s Hygiene Center in Lynnwood needs to raise $300,000 by mid-December to keep operating. Without it, more than 700 people who rely on the facility could lose access to one of the few consistent sources of sanitation, food, and safety in the area.
Break it up. That's a mob 700 strong clamoring for undesirable services, and beat cops are showing up on a regular schedule, along with private investigators and process servers. That's too many homosexuals in the communal showers and you don't want a private room with a shower buddy if you aren't one of those people.
People disappear and bum around for different reasons. They're being followed and have to hide, not necessarily from "the law" as such. Pack a rucksack and hop a freight train or something like they did in the 1930s.
This place is starting to stink like free love when people cry clean and safe like that.

She continued: “What I don’t want to have happen is women, young women in the city, look to the government as a solution to put off having a family or a marriage because you’re relying on the government to support you instead of being united with a husband.” ¶However, Kirk clarified that she doesn’t believe women need to be solely dependent on their husbands, adding “you guys can all combine together.”
There's an extremely pernicious policy or unsound philosophy of women with women and men with men at play. People who start getting a philosophy like that are high on weed. And spice it up with one of most expensive spices in the world.

"I love saffron so much," he said. "I'm Lebanese, and Middle Eastern folks cook with a lot of saffron. And there's actually folklore in Iran: If you're too happy, you must have had saffron." … "As a psychiatrist, I don't want to ruin my patients' love lives," he said. "Saffron increased sexual function [in research]." … A recent study, published in Reviews in Clinical Medicine 2025, also linked saffron to decreased symptoms of premenstrual syndrome (PMS). … Additional research published in the Cambridge University Press in May 2025 revealed saffron's potential to ease depression symptoms.
Saffron and not marijuana?


