What's their plan going to be when the evictions inevitably go to court? Not trying to make a statement or anything, just genuinely curious what they're going to do if/when the sheriffs' deputies start rolling up and drilling out their locks and dragging out their furniture.
From what I've been able to find in my short time researching this, many states allow tenets to withhold rent from their landlord if the landlord fails to make a rental habitable.
There are a couple options here.
You simply stop paying rent entirely. In some states, a failure to make a home habitable is grounds for a tenet to prematurely terminate their lease. The landlord can still try to evict you, but this is often a drawn out process, and the entire time the property will be burning a hole in their pocket. This is ultimately a gamble that the property owner will choose to repair the property as the most cost-effective solution, and to avoid potentially being sued for uninhabitable conditions (but that assumes the tenants can collectively afford to sue them). Also, the tenets could appeal the eviction, citing the uninhabitable conditions to a judge, and hope that the Judge sides with them and negates the eviction despite the lack of paid rent.
FYI I spent fifteen years as a property manager for one of the bigger development/rental companies in the US and represented them hundreds of times in court in four different states. Judges are generally pretty hostile to tenants unless you bring a really solid case, and even then, if the landlord is making an effort to address your grievances they're most likely going to side with the landlord (in my experience).
What would be really convenient is if you included the YouTube link in your post text. That way I can copy and paste it into new pipe on my mobile device.
Though I should mention Freetube is available for Android as well, and libredirect should work with it, eliminating the need to manually copy and paste links.