Hunter Biden—the scandal-plagued son of former President Joe Biden—is back in the headlines, this time announcing a new job in California’s increasingly lawless landscape: he’s now the director of development for a tenants’ rights group that openly aids illegal immigrants and rejects federal funding.
In a bizarre and profanity-laced interview posted Tuesday by far-left YouTube personality Andrew Callaghan, Hunter revealed he’s working with BASTA, a nonprofit based in South Los Angeles that “prevents evictions” and represents people “regardless of legal status.”
“I just think there’s such an opportunity to be of service right now,” Hunter said, rambling through a monologue about people “getting the s— beat out of them out there.”
That “service,” it turns out, includes prioritizing undocumented immigrants—including Ukrainians and Salvadorans—over American citizens, in a state already buckling under a historic homelessness crisis and skyrocketing crime.
“We don’t take any federal money,” Hunter proudly declared. “We’re the only group—at least in southern California—that represents undocumented [immigrants].”
The announcement comes just weeks after President Donald Trump signed a bold executive order empowering cities and states to remove homeless encampments from public streets and restore law and order to America’s collapsing blue-run cities.
But critics argue groups like BASTA—and now Hunter Biden himself—are doing the opposite: enabling illegal immigration and obstructing efforts to clean up neighborhoods plagued by drugs, violence, and open-air encampments.
“When a child becomes homeless, the road back to any chance of normalcy just becomes exponentially harder,” Hunter said, attempting to strike a compassionate tone. But nowhere did he address the causes: weak borders, failed sanctuary policies, and a lack of support for American families.
In a separate part of the interview, Hunter didn’t hold back in blaming fellow Democrats for their catastrophic 2024 loss, saying party elites had “no guts” and “undermined” Kamala Harris’ short-lived campaign after his father declined to seek re-election.
One insider described Hunter’s comments as “a bitter attempt to stay relevant” after a disastrous few years marked by criminal investigations, failed art sales, and ethics scandals that haunted the Biden White House.
BASTA, which began in 2005, brags about taking all eviction defense cases to jury trial—tying up California courts and delaying action against tenants who refuse to pay rent. The organization claims it has more than 15 attorneys and 10 staff members across four locations.
“We’ve won more jury trials in eviction cases than all other organizations in Southern California combined,” BASTA says on its website.
That aggressive strategy may be about to face fresh scrutiny under Trump’s new federal push to cut off funding and legal protections for groups that prioritize non-citizens over Americans.
Hunter Biden’s latest move is raising eyebrows among conservatives who see it as yet another chapter in the Biden family saga—one where political privilege shields the powerful from accountability while American communities continue to suffer.
Whether BASTA’s work will collide with Trump’s executive orders remains to be seen. But one thing is clear: the First Son is once again stepping into controversy. And this time, it’s in a city crumbling under the weight of its own progressive policies.
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Going frog hunting????
When will it end
IS IT WHOREMONGERING?
NOT A GOOD IDEA YOU FKING CRACKHEAD !!!
Hunter should not have any problems finding his true calling in California as a discount Cocaine dealer and low budget male prostitute!