In Portland, Oregon, a woman heroically stood up to the violence perpetrated by an Antifa-affiliated group and its homeless camp. She denounced their strategies, which have often singled out homeless people to fill the coffers of some influential people. The answer? She was threatened with setting her house on fire if she didn’t give in, illustrating the tremendous pressure placed on individuals who dared to question this unfair status quo.
According to KPTV, there was a worrying occurrence in north Portland where Vivica Elliott found a huge canvas tent beyond the boundary of her property. Elliott concerns about the expanding homeless population because she has noticed more trash and dangerous items, like needles, being dumped on her property.
JUST IN: Trump 24K Golden Dollars – Available Now!
She bravely confronted the tent-dweller and requested his departure because she was fed up with the predicament. In an unexpected turn, he responded by threatening to set her home on fire. “He said ‘I’m gonna burn your house down’,” Elliott claimed. “He said it four times!” Elliott called police, yet, no arrests were made, and the tent was left alone.
Portland’s People’s Housing Project LLC has stepped up to provide tents for the homeless, filling a gap left by new city laws, in a story of resiliency and community solidarity. Since 2021, the group has been a beacon of hope, and their commitment increased after City Commissioner Rene Gonzalez suspended Portland Street Response due to worries over previous tent fires. The struggle against homelessness and the collaborative spirit are now evident in the tents that dot the city’s streets.
On its website, The People’s Housing Project makes an effort to conceal its owners, stating “there are currently 5 of us who collectively run” the group. In a recent inquiry, The Post Millennial discovered an intriguing turn that exposed four self-described communists: Bryan Kim, Zachary Forster, Breeze Pollard, and Joseph Cambroni (alias Jorah Hollander). These interesting personalities have vehemently defended their purpose in establishing tents all over the city in a strong statement to KPTV.

In Portland, Oregon, in October 2020, a Black Lives Matter-Antifa riot broke out during which the local office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement was attacked. Forster was detained at the scene. Pollard, a 27-year-old woman from Green Acres, Florida, was detained in Palm Beach County in October of last year on suspicion of resisting an officer. His Instagram handle is “@Commie.Otter,” and in one picture, he stands in front of a sign that reads, “Queers shoot first.” Kim posted a picture of herself and Forster from October 2021 as follows: “The greatest fear of the right wing: a Judeo-Bolshevik conspiracy against whiteness and capitalism” and used the hashtags “culturalmarxism” and “revolution.”

Zachary Forster was detained in 2020 during a bloody Antifa clash in Portland.

Bryan Kim, the project manager for People’s Housing, and Zachary Forster stand in front of a picture with the words, “conspiracy against whiteness and capitalism,”
Homeless person Natasha Melton urged People’s Housing Project manager Bryan Kim to stop using pictures of her and other people at a campsite at Jason Barns Landing in November 2022. Attorney Kimberly Pray issued a cease and desist on behalf of Melton, claiming that the defendants were running a “fake charity scam” and “exploiting houseless people for profit.”
Pray and her colleagues described how the business had “fraudulently raised at least $60,000 in the name of houseless communities throughout the City of Portland” since October 2021 by donations on GoFundMe, Patreon, and Venmo.
She said that just 20% of that money went to homeless populations, with the People’s Housing Project purportedly spending a staggering 80% on “personal and other expenses, such as t-shirts.”
Intriguingly, the company managed to avoid registering with the Charitable Activities Section of the Oregon Department of Justice, making the collected assets legally taxable. We were able to get hold of the lawyer to get some advice.
The People’s Housing Project claims on their website that they “never take money from any large corporations, capitalist political parties, or government entities.” The company prides itself on being adamantly anti-capitalist and states that it works to abolish class conflict and address the homelessness epidemic. However not everybody concurs.
The Portland resident Vivica Elliott, who is dealing with a homeless camp next to her property, said to local media: : “I don’t think they see really what they’re doing to the neighborhoods and to the people that live here.”