
The Yiddish word “schvitz” was recently used by The Pulp in a cute attempt to introduce Democrat candidate, Sam Forstag, to its readers. This interview took place in Forstag’s backyard sauna, a European trend being pushed on Missoula by some idiots who got shocked when they realized ignoring zoning laws wasn’t a smart business idea for their new business on Toole Street:
Built in 1930, the building Johnson and Raddue hope will house Montana Sauna Co. was originally a grocery store called the Toole Avenue Food Center, but for years the property, not even two blocks away from neighborhood anchor Draught Works Brewery, has been conspicuously underused. Its mixed-use designation would welcome, say, a daycare or plant nursery, but not any business that offers “personal improvement.” They knew this, they admit, but, determined to open in the fall and short on cash (the rezone application fee typically costs around $5,000 and the process lasts several months), they opted to forge ahead anyway.
If you read Forstag’s pitch for himself he hilariously thinks working class men–or “labor”, as it once was known– will vote for him because once upon a time that’s what poor, working class men did.
When I was a kid growing up, what being the Democratic Party was about, as I understood it, was being the party of the working class. And we just lost people making under $100,000 a year. If we aren’t winning working-class voters, we are literally not the party of the working class. Whatever our policy priorities are, even if the Democratic Party’s policy priorities would be relatively helpful to working-class people. It clearly doesn’t work to be the less shitty option.
It’s adorable that Forstag can articulate why his party is despised, but what about HIS involvement in the Homeless Industrial Complex, the one currently involved in a toxic empathy offensive in Missoula?
Before I get to that, it should be noted that the era of identity politics under Obama was designed to hide the deep fealty to big money that the Clinton monsters constructed for themselves, and this financial infrastructure is absolutely tied to the Epstein network.
So, what was Forstag doing during the TOO BIG TO FAIL era of his party’s final sellout to dark money?
We had this huge conversation about representation in the last 15 years on the left. And it was healthy in a lot of ways. But also, it seems like we forgot about the most fundamental kind of representation, which is economic representation.
If you have a multi-millionaire running for office who has to manufacture anger about how hard it is to afford housing or childcare for the last 10 years, they probably do feel a lot more pressure to hedge on one issue or another. But I don’t want to hedge on any of this shit. You saw me. I worked for the ACLU, and I worked for homeless shelters. And I will tell people exactly what I told my coworkers on the fire line when they said something out of pocket about queer people: We don’t have to agree on everything. We just have to agree that none of that is in the top 10 list of issues making your and my life harder.
In case Sam Forstag is retarded I’m going to explain something to him: cancel culture DOES MAKE LIVES HARDER when it is YOUR LIFE being “canceled”. And the agenda to push alternative sex lifestyles on children is VERY SERIOUS if your own child is being targeted and considering life-altering medical procedures.
It’s clear that Sam Forstag doesn’t understand, or can’t admit, what is happening in our country, and one reason is because our media fucking sucks. Here’s an example of that suck from the “business” reporter, David Erickson, and his article about a dead homeless man (the bottom article in the image).

As the FIRST coordinator of the Poverello Center’s Homeless Outreach Program, and I’m able to translate what’s going on in the quotes below because I’m not susceptible to the tugging of heart-strings that comes right before the most important aspects of THIS homeless corpse, which our newspaper is suddenly concerned about. Here is the first quote:
Katie Leahy and Sophie Shrom, both staff members at the nonprofit Poverello Center homeless shelter in Missoula, worked closely with Eisenbarth for a long time. They were both devastated when they found out their friend had died.
“It was shock, disbelief and tears, immediately to your face, right?” Leahy recalled. “Like, all three emotions. Wait … is this real?
She’s the lead for the Pov’s Homeless Outreach (HOT) Team, and Shrom, a housing navigator with the team, and been working with Eisenbarth to try auto find him a stable place to live for a long time. There had been a few spots that became available, but it was a complicated situation, and those places didn’t work out. His medical and mental health conditions eventually made it impossible for him to stay at the Pov, which is a congregate shelter.
The first red flag is the word “friend” because if that’s the word PAID staff are using to describe their relationship with a homeless client, then there are already boundary issues. Just ask the Great Unifier of Code, Eran Pehan, and she will confirm the concerning lack of professionally this term denotes.
The second red flag is the phrase “complicated situation”. This phrase indicates someone is about to piss on your head and call it rain. Additional vague qualifiers explaining it was because of “medical” and “mental health” reasons don’t help.
Further down we get a little more idea about WHY the housing placements didn’t work. After this quote I’ll provide my professional assessment on which Missoula County entity is responsible, in my opinion, for killing this homeless man.
Because of his chronic homelessness, he qualified for permanent supportive housing vouchers with the Missoula Housing Authority.
Leahy and Shrom tried to find places that were a good fit.
They showed him one unit at The Palace Apartments downtown, but Eisenbarth found the maze-like interior too confusing for his mental state. Another place called the Maple Street Flats was also problematic, because he would get lost and knock on other people’s doors.
When I read this I knew exactly what was going on, since I had VERY similar cases with some chronically homeless clients (not friends), which is why I can say, with confidence, that the MISSOULA COUNTY ATTORNEY’S OFFICE killed Lorrie Eisenbarth.
At Missoula Aging Services, where I worked from 2016 to early 2020, I had a few very frustrating conversations with the Missoula County Attorney’s Office regarding the process for determining someone didn’t have mental capacity and had become a danger to themselves or others. For more context on what this process entails, Lewis and Clark County has a helpful guide that includes this:

When the County Attorney’s Office REFUSES to legally involve themselves in protecting adults who can no longer protect themselves, they die. Apparently in the five years since I left the non-profit sector in disgust, nothing has changed.
I’m glad Sam Forstag is running for political office because the historical role of smoke jumping is a BIG reason Missoula became a spook town, with Smoke Jumpers fronting as the useful idiots for one of the most corrosive elements this country has ever unleashed on itself.

Speaking of corrosive influences, people interested in pizza gate really should check out Orit Oged’s Vimeo page before it goes away. It has everything–murder, cannibalism, severed worms, pineapples getting ping-ponged, but one of my favorite screenshots is this one:

Thanks for reading!





















