
Two years ago an RV started on fire in a vacant lot near the Town Pump on Reserve Street. After one person was taken to the hospital, the “news” report simply stated that the fire was “under investigation”. Like most local media “news” reports, no subsequent reporting was ever done to give readers a better idea WHY this vacant lot has become such a problem.
To confirm that Brad Morris owns this vacant lot I went to the Montana Cadastral website. Who is Brad Morris? Brad is a former surgeon who bought Snowbowl in 1984 with some other doctors who, after less than a decade, all divested themselves from the skiing business, leaving Morris and his wife the sole owners of both Snowbowl and the vacant lot by Town Pump.

According to Montana law, Brad Morris, as the private land owner of this lot, has a “duty of care” to fix or warn of hazards on his property. When the Facebook group that regularly organizes volunteers to CLEAN this private land, the comments from a handful of dumbasses were worth documenting for posterity, like this proud defender of private property rights:

Does Brad Morris have a right to allow illegal drug use on his private land? What about the right to litter, or the right to let people dump piss and shit on the ground? The answer is NO because laws do exist that set limitations on what can be done with private land. Got that, JP?
Another commenter provided the predictable victim card defense that excuses ALL behavior generated by those living marginally in our community.

This assumption that enforcing existing laws is somehow criminalizing being homeless is complete bullshit. When you listen to those who are actually dealing with this issue on the ground, like volunteers picking up needles or people actually WORKING in proximity to this shining example of RV tweaker culture, you get a much more accurate description of reality than what the “Jacob Noahs” of this dumb town choose to see.

If Missoula virtue-signalers would like MORE reality to help cure them of being willfully retarded, here’s someone from the frontlines of Seattle’s “homeless” problem explaining the differences between working-poor homeless and drug addicts:
I’ve spent years working directly with Seattle’s homeless population, not studying them from university offices, or analyzing data sets from a comfortable distance, but on the streets, in the encampments, doing street-level engagement and intervention. When I read yet another opinion piece (“Homelessness in Seattle: We can’t unsee it,” Dec. 28, 2025) attributing our homelessness crisis primarily to housing costs, I have to ask: Are we really going to continue trusting consultants and researchers over what our own eyes tell us?
The December piece by Walter Hatch follows a familiar pattern in academia: Start with a conclusion, in this case, that “it’s a housing problem,” then find data to support it. However, those of us working on the ground are aware of a critical fact that these analyses consistently overlook: There’s a fundamental distinction between the “crisis population” living in visible squalor on our streets and individuals who are the working poor — couch-surfing, living with family or struggling with roommates to afford rent.
We cannot conflate these populations. They are not the same.
Walk through any encampment in Seattle. What you see is not a collection of people who simply can’t afford first and last month’s rent. What you see, what we all see, is the devastating evidence of severe mental health crises and, far more commonly, active drug addiction. The refuse, the chaos, is not created by economic hardship. This is the visible manifestation of untreated addiction and serious psychiatric illness.
Thank you, Andrea Suarez, for stepping up and telling all the Homeless Industrial Complex FAILURES more politely than I can muster that their models are fucked and their scam is no longer viable.
Lee Enterprises–one of the main culprits exacerbating Missoula’s retardation problem–is doing its best to leverage empathy for clicks, but I’m here to counter this disingenuous effort to go BOO HOO about the most recent corpse the virtue-signalers are eager to get you to feel sorry for.

Congratulations, Lorrie, your death is now a leveraged talking point for the “professionals” who turn their failure into job security through an amazing process of emotional alchemy, which couldn’t happen without Lee Enterprises stoking the fire.
I don’t expect a Lee Enterprises article on this contested dirt lot to appear any time soon, but if they DO decide to engage in another manipulative attempt at “reporting” on the local Homeless Industrial Complex, I would be willing to bet the angle will be a critical one aimed at the volunteer group and NOT the private land owner who has a legal responsibility to maintain his land.

Prove me wrong, Missoulian.
If you appreciate the FREE info I provide at great personal cost, especially when it comes blowing the whistle on our local Homeless Industrial Complex, please consider donating to my gofundme page. Any little bit helps.
Thanks for reading!










