Here's an interesting thing to do with illegal aliens — toss 'em into someone else's neighborhood

Boarded-up windows? Fire code? Forget it, jake, it’s chicagotown

Crypto-currency millionaire hears God’s voice and starts stuffing immigrants into his buildings.

Horrified residents of a Chicago neighborhood called 911 as they watched migrants 'breaking into' an apartment building - only to be told they were allowed in.

Video shot from across the street showed dozens of people trying to enter a three-story building on Essex Avenue on Chicago's South Shore on Sunday.

The building's windows were boarded up as it was being renovated, locals said, and the sign of a construction company was attached to the door.

Footage showed the migrants including children outside the door as one of them tried to open it, before they and many others who arrived later got inside.

Police radio chatter intercepted by scanners showed officers were responding to what the caller said were 40 to 50 migrants who broke in.

However, later discussions revealed the owner of the building had 'authorized the migrants to be there'.

Officers who were at the scene trying to clear out the crowds of migrants responded with surprise, before pointing out there were too many trying to get in anyway.

'Well, there's not enough room for everyone trying to get in here so we're trying to sort that out... that seems to be the problem, there's capacity limitations,' one said.

The neighbor on Tuesday night posted another video saying truckloads of migrants had been dropped off outside earlier that day.

Her video showed more crowds outside the building and a pickup truck with what appeared to be appliances parking on the street.

The building is owned by property developer Chris Amatore, who has bought, rehabbed, and sold more than 600 buildings around the city.

However, since the immigration crisis began in 2022, he is focused on turning buildings he owned into temporary shelters.

'I have dedicated my life for the foreseeable future to housing the homeless Venezuelan asylum seekers in Chicago. To stand with them against the hate,' his Twitter bio read.

Amatore earlier this month said the venture was financed by a sizeable windfall he made investing in cryptocurrency.

'I worship God. I don't worship money. So I decided to put that money to do something good with it,' he told CBS.

There’s much to admire here; a man with compassion, and the resources to act on, it takes matters into his own hands to “solve” a problem — we can only wish that our own liberal friends in Belle Haven would also live up to their principles and open their hearts and their homes to relatives of these new Chicago voters — or if not their homes, surely there’s room in the servants’ quarters.

But I gather that Mr. Amtore doesn’t live in this new squatters shelter himself, nor the neighborhood where it’s located; I wonder whether those who do live there are as enthusiastic about this charitable exercise as he is? From the sounds of it, they now have 50 unemployed, illiterate and illegal people crammed into a building never designed to hold so many, and will soon be experiencing what it’s like to live in the garbage-ridden, violent Third World (whether that will be any different than living in Chicago today, I can’t say, but it might be).

That’s all to the good, because Chicagoans have been voting for Democrats for decades, and it’s their elected officials who dismantled our immigration system by effectively stopping the deportation of illegals — there were already at least 30 million illegals in the country before the current crisis began, and practically no deportation proceedings going on — and then compounded that by opening the border, declaring Chicago a sanctuary city, and as recently as last year, voting in a mayor and his cronies even more liberal that the incompetent woman he replaced.

But still, I’ll shed a quiet tear. Because I’m a compassionate soul.

Shades of Governor Abbott: