Why Dems are only in the social justice game for money

For Democrats, social justice is big business.
Witness Southwest Key Programs: As part of the migrant money machine, it pulled in around a brain-busting $3 billion in taxpayer funds between fiscal 2021 and 2024.
The group is the largest housing provider for unaccompanied migrant kids — and clearly rotten to the core.
The Biden Justice Department sued it in July, over accusations of “severe” and “pervasive” rape and abuse of the kids in the group’s care between 2015 and 2023 — and a congressional probe found evidence suggesting SKP even turned kids over to traffickers.
But that didn’t stop the creeps in charge from padding their salaries!
As underlings were allegedly busy molesting the kids they’d been charged with caring for, CEO Anselmo Villareal’s pay soared from about $500,000 (already waaaaaay too much) in fiscal 2021 to almost $1.2 million in fiscal 2023.
Meanwhile, Chief of Staff Christina Cantu’s pay jumped about 280%, from $86,300 to $326,228.
This was more reason for Dems to keep the border open: If it wasn’t, these big bucks would stop flowing to their partisans (SKP’s top lobbyist and a cadre of other officials were, of course, handing over some of the money they mulcted from Joe Taxpayer to Dem campaigns).
And it ain’t just border baloney.
An NGO consortium linked to failed gubernatorial candidate and election denier Stacey Abrams got $2 billion from Biden.
Power Forward Communities was set up to push ahead another Dem policy insanity — i.e. forcing a “green energy transition” by making everyone use crappy “energy efficient” appliances and rewire their homes.
It did this in some cases by reportedly buying new stoves and other appliances, which sure sounds an awful lot like “goodies-for-votes” to us.
Especially since this outfit was so unqualified it reportedly was forced to undergo training on how to set up a budget as part of the grant.
So remember, kids.
For all lefty Dems’ screeching about “migrant justice” and “sustainable energy” and the like, they’re less about doing good than making good.