If you think the left’s compassion carnival can’t get any stupider, buckle up for this gut-punch from Prince George’s County, Maryland. Right there in Hyattsville, the Marylander Condominiums—home to families who’ve scraped by paying mortgages and fees for decades—are getting the boot from their own pads. Why? Not because they’re deadbeats or crooks, but because a squalid homeless tent city next door has turned the place into a war zone of drugs, gangs, and vandalism. These invaders wrecked the heating system, leaving 100 units freezing since Thanksgiving Eve 2025, and now the county’s solution is to evict the victims instead of the villains. A judge just rubber-stamped this madness on February 20, 2026, proving once again that in blue-run hellholes, law-abiding citizens are the real disposable trash. This ain’t justice; it’s a taxpayer-funded farce that’s about to make hundreds homeless right as a winter storm barrels in. And the kicker? The same county clowns who let this rot fester blew over 43 grand on a luxury hotel junket for themselves during a January snowstorm while residents shivered in 32-degree units. Welcome to the Democrat dream—where “compassion” means screwing the middle class to protect the chaos-makers.
The Tent City Takeover: From Neighborly Nuisance to Full-Blown Nightmare
This mess didn’t erupt overnight; it’s the rotten fruit of years of limp-wristed policies that treat vagrants like sacred cows. The Marylander sits smack next to “The Mountains,” a sprawling encampment that’s become a one-stop shop for open-air drug deals, prostitution rings, and gang turf wars. Residents have dealt with nonstop break-ins, assaults, and property destruction—millions in damages that tanked values and scared off any bank willing to finance fixes. But the breaking point hit on November 26, 2025, when vandals trashed the boiler room, knocking out heat for half the buildings just as winter clamped down.
Fast-forward to December 2025: The county’s permitting goons slap a label on those 100 units as “unfit for human habitation” because, duh, no heat in sub-zero temps leads to burst pipes, flooding, and fried electrical from desperate space heaters. Some folks lost water and power too, turning condos into iceboxes. One family matriarch hit hypothermia hard, chilling in 32-degree digs, feeling like death was knocking. Her son nailed it: “We’re all past the breaking point.” Up to 77 kids are caught in this crossfire, rolling home on school buses to a complex that’s falling apart. And get this—the county even floated asking schools to brace for a wave of homeless students, like they’re planning the fallout from their own screw-ups.
Property managers at Quasar have been screaming for help, but they can’t snag loans for a new boiler until the tent city gets bulldozed. It’s a vicious loop: Encampment breeds crime, crime blocks repairs, no repairs mean evictions. Meanwhile, police brass at town halls spout nonsense like “We’re not criminalizing the unhoused,” letting the squalor fester while law-abiders pay the price. This is peak liberal logic—protect the perps, punish the producers.
The Court’s Cruel Joke: Evict the Innocent, Ignore the Invaders
Enter the courtroom circus. Prince George’s sued Quasar, dragging them before District Court Judge Bryon Bereano. On February 5, 2026, he drops the hammer: Property’s unsafe, vacate in 14 days—meaning by February 19. Residents dig in, some holing up in hotels at $3,000 a month on top of $1,600 condo fees, yelling this ain’t survivable. The county pushes for a final green light in a sneaky emergency hearing on February 17, 2026, barely notifying anyone. Bereano holds off signing that day, buying a 24-hour breather, but signals he’s all in on the evictions.
Then, on February 20, 2026—yesterday—he inks the final order, authorizing cops to “take all action necessary” to clear those 100 units. Notices went up Friday afternoon, but with a storm dumping inches of snow Sunday, who knows when the boot drops. One board member summed it up: “They are going above and beyond what they need to be doing here in terms of trying to shut this place down.” Families like the Barbers, who’ve owned for over 40 years, can’t sell because the place is a wreck. “It’s sad that the county wants to protect the homeless and support them but at the same time make law-abiding people homeless,” one said. “We feel trapped.” And why not? The system’s rigged to reward the wreckers.
BREAKING: After a 48 hour delay, a judge has officially authorized Prince George’s County to evict residents of the Marylander Condominiums.
Hundreds of people will now become homeless due to the county’s failure to clear a homeless encampment.
The court order was posted on… pic.twitter.com/5qSS63ldeZ
— Aaron Sibarium (@aaronsibarium) February 20, 2026
Oh, and while residents froze during that January blizzard, county execs cozied up in a ritzy hotel, burning $43,000 in public cash for “real-time decisions.” One resident watching his 73-year-old mom suffer spat, “They’ve been living better than us.” This hypocrisy reeks—elites in luxury while the little guy gets evicted for problems the elites won’t fix.
Fixing This Farce: Time to Unleash Some America First Muscle
Alright, enough raging—let’s talk brass tacks on turning this train wreck around. First off, appeal the hell out of Bereano’s ruling. Take it up the chain to Maryland’s Appellate Court; argue the county’s negligence in tolerating the encampment caused the “unfit” status, not the owners. Slam them with a countersuit for damages—millions in lost value, health hits like hypothermia, and emotional gut-punches. Make the bureaucrats bleed for their “compassionate” cowardice.
Next, crank up the political heat. Prince George’s is a Democrat stronghold, but voters are waking up to this soft-on-crime slop. Rally residents, flood town halls, and demand the encampment gets cleared yesterday. Look to winners like Florida under DeSantis—they’ve nuked tent cities with tough enforcement, no excuses. Pressure the county exec and council to guarantee those repair loans now, or face recalls. And don’t stop local—go state-level to Governor Wes Moore, or even federal if it ties into broader homelessness failures. With Trump back in the White House pushing America First, maybe nudge HUD or Justice to probe this as a civil rights violation against hardworking families.
@AAGDhillon would @CivilRights be able to help these residents?
It appears the State of Maryland has failed to help and now they could become homeless. https://t.co/44zSKdUEVj
— Life & Liberty (@LifeLiberty3) February 21, 2026
On the ground: Community GoFundMes are popping for displaced folks—chip in, organize supply drives, or hook up with legal aid for pro bono eviction fights. Property managers need to hammer that February 17 court-ordered boiler fix deadline—get it done, even if it means private security to guard the work. Long-term, zone out encampments, beef up patrols, and enforce vagrancy laws like it’s 1980 again. This ain’t about hating the down-and-out; it’s about protecting the folks who play by the rules from the ones who don’t.
Prince George’s, you’ve got a shot to right this wrong before families hit the streets. But if you keep coddling chaos, don’t whine when the backlash buries you. America First means putting citizens first—not the squatters turning neighborhoods into no-go zones. Get it done, or get out of the way.
