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On July 15 2019 22:40 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:Show nested quote +On July 15 2019 22:35 Gorsameth wrote:On July 15 2019 22:34 IyMoon wrote:On July 15 2019 22:16 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:On July 15 2019 11:13 JimmiC wrote: I’m thinking this was a bad move for Trump. I get his base will eat it up but the dems were starting to fight amongst themselves and this was a great reminder who the real enemy is. I think a big reason incumbent’s do so well is they don’t face the same fracture as their opponents do when picking who to run against them. If Trump keeps them focused on him that is a win for the Dems and I think Trump will since he needs to be the center of focus always.
I wish Serm was not so cryptic because I really struggle to see how this benefits Trump. Dems never win when they get baited by Trump. This is just another distraction from Trump to draw attention away from Epstein or the Muller testimony this week. Muller got postponed by a week I thought? Yeah, its currently set for the 24th I believe. Epstein connections make more sense anyway. Didn't realize that Mueller got pushed back.
Is epstein really that big though? These things tend to blow over.
Muller got postponed because they need to figure out how long the questions will be asked
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I honestly don't think its a distraction, I just think its Trump being annoyed about being attacked by some women.
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United States41470 Posts
On July 15 2019 22:42 IyMoon wrote:Show nested quote +On July 15 2019 22:40 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:On July 15 2019 22:35 Gorsameth wrote:On July 15 2019 22:34 IyMoon wrote:On July 15 2019 22:16 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:On July 15 2019 11:13 JimmiC wrote: I’m thinking this was a bad move for Trump. I get his base will eat it up but the dems were starting to fight amongst themselves and this was a great reminder who the real enemy is. I think a big reason incumbent’s do so well is they don’t face the same fracture as their opponents do when picking who to run against them. If Trump keeps them focused on him that is a win for the Dems and I think Trump will since he needs to be the center of focus always.
I wish Serm was not so cryptic because I really struggle to see how this benefits Trump. Dems never win when they get baited by Trump. This is just another distraction from Trump to draw attention away from Epstein or the Muller testimony this week. Muller got postponed by a week I thought? Yeah, its currently set for the 24th I believe. Epstein connections make more sense anyway. Didn't realize that Mueller got pushed back. Is epstein really that big though? These things tend to blow over. Muller got postponed because they need to figure out how long the questions will be asked A member of the government publicly admitted that he illegally conspired to release a child rapist. There aren’t many smaller scandals I can imagine.
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On July 15 2019 22:55 KwarK wrote:Show nested quote +On July 15 2019 22:42 IyMoon wrote:On July 15 2019 22:40 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:On July 15 2019 22:35 Gorsameth wrote:On July 15 2019 22:34 IyMoon wrote:On July 15 2019 22:16 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:On July 15 2019 11:13 JimmiC wrote: I’m thinking this was a bad move for Trump. I get his base will eat it up but the dems were starting to fight amongst themselves and this was a great reminder who the real enemy is. I think a big reason incumbent’s do so well is they don’t face the same fracture as their opponents do when picking who to run against them. If Trump keeps them focused on him that is a win for the Dems and I think Trump will since he needs to be the center of focus always.
I wish Serm was not so cryptic because I really struggle to see how this benefits Trump. Dems never win when they get baited by Trump. This is just another distraction from Trump to draw attention away from Epstein or the Muller testimony this week. Muller got postponed by a week I thought? Yeah, its currently set for the 24th I believe. Epstein connections make more sense anyway. Didn't realize that Mueller got pushed back. Is epstein really that big though? These things tend to blow over. Muller got postponed because they need to figure out how long the questions will be asked A member of the government publicly admitted that he illegally conspired to release a child rapist. There aren’t many smaller scandals I can imagine.
I am not saying it's small in the sense of how bad it is. I am asking does the public care?
It's a weird time to live in where I honestly am not sure they do
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United States41470 Posts
On July 15 2019 23:01 IyMoon wrote:Show nested quote +On July 15 2019 22:55 KwarK wrote:On July 15 2019 22:42 IyMoon wrote:On July 15 2019 22:40 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:On July 15 2019 22:35 Gorsameth wrote:On July 15 2019 22:34 IyMoon wrote:On July 15 2019 22:16 Blitzkrieg0 wrote:On July 15 2019 11:13 JimmiC wrote: I’m thinking this was a bad move for Trump. I get his base will eat it up but the dems were starting to fight amongst themselves and this was a great reminder who the real enemy is. I think a big reason incumbent’s do so well is they don’t face the same fracture as their opponents do when picking who to run against them. If Trump keeps them focused on him that is a win for the Dems and I think Trump will since he needs to be the center of focus always.
I wish Serm was not so cryptic because I really struggle to see how this benefits Trump. Dems never win when they get baited by Trump. This is just another distraction from Trump to draw attention away from Epstein or the Muller testimony this week. Muller got postponed by a week I thought? Yeah, its currently set for the 24th I believe. Epstein connections make more sense anyway. Didn't realize that Mueller got pushed back. Is epstein really that big though? These things tend to blow over. Muller got postponed because they need to figure out how long the questions will be asked A member of the government publicly admitted that he illegally conspired to release a child rapist. There aren’t many smaller scandals I can imagine. I am not saying it's small in the sense of how bad it is. I am asking does the public care? It's a weird time to live in where I honestly am not sure they do Oh, then no.
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SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by.
Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop.
I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were.
You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many.
In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless.
If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency.
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yikes...on that whole take but
Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop
I'm a communist because downtown, without money, there's nowhere to shit but the street.
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On July 15 2019 21:25 Danglars wrote:Show nested quote +On July 15 2019 12:32 GreenHorizons wrote:On July 15 2019 12:06 iPlaY.NettleS wrote:As the homelessness crisis in left wing San Francisco continues to get worse rich people are opposing the construction of a homeless shelter on environmental grounds, after previously raising $100,000 in a crowdfunding campaign to stop the homeless shelter.Are these hypocrites also supporting illegal immigration into the USA thus exacerbating the crisis? As long as they don't have to live near poor illegal immigrants coming in it's all gravy i guess. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/jul/11/san-francisco-navigation-center-shelter-lawsuit Opponents of infrastructure and affordable housing projects often call upon the California Environmental Quality Act as a stalling ploy to delay construction. The law requires developers to explore any environmental effects a project might have, and take steps to reduce them.
Attorneys for the residents, paid for by the more than $102,000 raised through the GoFundMe campaign, argued in the lawsuit that the project did not undergo a full environmental review process.
The city has argued that the project – a 200-bed temporary homeless shelter – is exempt was from such reviews.
“I question if this a legitimate concern or a last-ditch attempt to block the shelter by any means necessary,” said Kelley Cutler, the human rights organizer for the Coalition on Homelessness. “Methane emissions are bad for the environment, and this smells like bullshit.”
"Siri, what is quintessentially neoliberal?" (the story not the commentary) I heard about this when it happened but I've been saying for a while that neoliberal ideology values property/wealth above human safety, so that's not really the hypocritical part imo. Honestly, the NIMBYism is the quintessential part of liberalism. Consider the evolution of the “limousine liberal pejorative.” Sam Francisco liberal elites easily hurdle environmental assessment burdens, but use it to defeat lower class property developments. They send their children to elite private schools, and don’t care when their legislation makes public schools awful. NIMBYism is NIMBYism. What this liberalism you are refering to and what is it's alternative that is not NIMBYism?
NIMBYism is the quintissential part of conservatism. Consider the evolution of the "fox news conservative pejorative". They care not for the poor, the community, the environment. They send their children to publically funded schools, and don’t care when their legislation makes public schools awful.
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On July 16 2019 00:24 GreenHorizons wrote:yikes...on that whole take but Show nested quote +Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop I'm a communist because downtown, without money, there's nowhere to shit but the street.
You don't think just replying with a condescending "yikes" is a bit shitty? Why not just explain why you think its such a bad take rather than this silly drive by condescension?
You may as well say "y'all on the left don't seem to understand"
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On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by.
Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop.
I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were.
You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many.
In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless.
If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency.
Sounds to me like San Franciscan exceptionalism. If your city is one of the richest in the world, but has homelessness problems worse than Mumbai, that isn't because you have a larger-than-normal number of deranged people...
E: although I guess living for months in a cess pit with no means of escape would drive most people mad. So maybe cause and effect are just backwards here.
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LA's homeless issues are getting worse every year too, the difference is that due to the size of the metropolitan area it's very widely spread out rather than concentrated tightly like San Fransisco's.
One thing that's lost in all of this is that both LA and San Fransisco are Earthquake cities, if a major quake hits one of them, and citizens WITH homes are now suddenly homeless, it's going to become really obvious really quick just how badly prepared and equipped the cities are to deal with the refugee crisis that will come out of it.
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On July 16 2019 00:40 Acrofales wrote:Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by.
Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop.
I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were.
You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many.
In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless.
If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency. Sounds to me like San Franciscan exceptionalism. If your city is one of the richest in the world, but has homelessness problems worse than Mumbai, that isn't because you have a larger-than-normal number of deranged people...
Both SF and Portland have huge amounts of homeless immigration. It is not that a bunch of SF people end up homeless because they only make $200,000/year. It is that a bunch of people are told they'll be fine if they just make it to SF and Portland. That makes them start to need competing for stuff. It also means there are a lot more extremely volatile people all setting each other off. They make each other worse and the populations grow enormously every month. SF+Portland forms some kinda west coast mecca of homelessness.
When we let people camp wherever they want, but don't help people work towards overcoming whatever makes them scratch off every piece of skin on their legs, we don't fix anything. If you give someone a meal, then they throw their shit at some people (yes, they do), then bloody themselves up in a big fight, then get their blood all over the street or within a business, all you did is feed someone. You didn't make the situation better. My entire point is that feeding these people isn't sufficient. They need to be cured of their mental illnesses. Making a homeless shelter is a useless pat on the back and doesn't help anyone.
More clearly stated: Doing anything less than 10x our current investment into homelessness will have such a small impact we would likely not be able to detect it. We need to be housing them for years while we iron out all their issues, give them job training, then release them. We need to consider it a full "refurbishing" of humans, not putting a bandage over a tumor.
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On July 16 2019 00:48 Mohdoo wrote:Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:40 Acrofales wrote:On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by.
Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop.
I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were.
You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many.
In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless.
If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency. Sounds to me like San Franciscan exceptionalism. If your city is one of the richest in the world, but has homelessness problems worse than Mumbai, that isn't because you have a larger-than-normal number of deranged people... When we let people camp wherever they want, but don't help people work towards overcoming whatever makes them scratch off every piece of skin on their legs, we don't fix anything. If you give someone a meal, then they throw their shit at some people (yes, they do), then bloody themselves up in a big fight, then get their blood all over the street or within a business, all you did is feed someone. You didn't make the situation better. My entire point is that feeding these people isn't sufficient. They need to be cured of their mental illnesses. Making a homeless shelter is a useless pat on the back and doesn't help anyone.
The issue I have with this is that people are becoming homeless all the time. Homeless shelters don't only help the homeless who have been homeless for 25 years and have awful mental and physical health problems as a result - they help people who have just become homeless and have no idea what to do about the situation. They can help those people find the resources they need to get out of their situation before they end up on drugs or with massive PTSD issues.
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On July 16 2019 00:34 Mohdoo wrote:Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:24 GreenHorizons wrote:yikes...on that whole take but Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop I'm a communist because downtown, without money, there's nowhere to shit but the street. You don't think just replying with a condescending "yikes" is a bit shitty? Why not just explain why you think its such a bad take rather than this silly drive by condescension?
Mostly because I thought you would probably take it personally and worse than "yikes", but if you wanna know...
On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by.
That part was mostly fine. It has a slight aura of blaming the people for their mental states but it's largely fine. This is where it goes off the rails.
Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. This reads as a more overt indictment of the character of people living on the streets of SF and reads as implying they don't deserve basic human dignity because of some character flaw.
Then you switch back to mentally ill people that need medical attention (and aren't getting it) and the discomfort it must cause the affluent people who pass it on their commute.
One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody.
Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop.
I thought I could sum up my opposition to your take by pointing out the poop you're complaining about is a direct result of neoliberal/Democrat policies that try to push homeless people into more rural communities rather than address their suffering.
I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were.
More right wing rhetoric about how "these people" are not the decent humans but the defective ones and a "LARGE" portion of these people are beyond repair (so what are you implying happens with them?).
You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many. You continue to talk about homeless people (particularly of SF) like they are practically another species making clear you believe homeless people in SF are some especially different than not just the people commuting around the city but homeless people elsewhere.
In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless.
They need universal healthcare (that includes real mental health services). If they had it, many of them would have never been living on the street in the first place.
Finally you manage to corrupt an argument of concern into an excuse for why nothing will be done and why it's your empathy that will cause you to oppose assistance for the people
If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency.
So after this rant against homeless people we're left with no critique of the systemic progenitors, a scathing indictment of people exploited by capitalism, and a solution that says they need to fix it, but anything productive is unrealistic and anything realistic is unproductive.
That's the nicest I could put it.
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On July 16 2019 00:54 Jockmcplop wrote:Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:48 Mohdoo wrote:On July 16 2019 00:40 Acrofales wrote:On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by.
Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop.
I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were.
You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many.
In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless.
If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency. Sounds to me like San Franciscan exceptionalism. If your city is one of the richest in the world, but has homelessness problems worse than Mumbai, that isn't because you have a larger-than-normal number of deranged people... When we let people camp wherever they want, but don't help people work towards overcoming whatever makes them scratch off every piece of skin on their legs, we don't fix anything. If you give someone a meal, then they throw their shit at some people (yes, they do), then bloody themselves up in a big fight, then get their blood all over the street or within a business, all you did is feed someone. You didn't make the situation better. My entire point is that feeding these people isn't sufficient. They need to be cured of their mental illnesses. Making a homeless shelter is a useless pat on the back and doesn't help anyone. The issue I have with this is that people are becoming homeless all the time. Homeless shelters don't only help the homeless who have been homeless for 25 years and have awful mental and physical health problems as a result - they help people who have just become homeless and have no idea what to do about the situation. They can help those people find the resources they need to get out of their situation before they end up on drugs or with massive PTSD issues.
Right, there basically 2 different groups:
1. Homeless without mental illness or drug addiction
2. Homeless people WITH mental illness or drug addiction
They need entirely different solutions. If someone has advanced schizophrenia, a bed, a meal, a temporary address and some job leads won't help. We need to have a solution for the people who are downright broken as humans. In Portland and SF, there are a ton of support networks for people who are down on their luck. We don't have ANY method of dealing with the people who are fundamentally non-functional as humans. We just give them some bread, socks and say "nice, I defeated homelessness".
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+ Show Spoiler +On July 16 2019 01:00 GreenHorizons wrote:Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:34 Mohdoo wrote:On July 16 2019 00:24 GreenHorizons wrote:yikes...on that whole take but Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop I'm a communist because downtown, without money, there's nowhere to shit but the street. You don't think just replying with a condescending "yikes" is a bit shitty? Why not just explain why you think its such a bad take rather than this silly drive by condescension? Mostly because I thought you would probably take it personally and worse than "yikes", but if you wanna know... Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by. That part was mostly fine. It has a slight aura of blaming the people for their mental states but it's largely fine. This is where it goes off the rails. Show nested quote +Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. This reads as a more overt indictment of the character of people living on the streets of SF and reads as implying they don't deserve basic human dignity because of some character flaw. Then you switch back to mentally ill people that need medical attention (and aren't getting it) and the discomfort it must cause the affluent people who pass it on their commute. Show nested quote + One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Show nested quote + Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop. I thought I could sum up my opposition to your take by pointing out the poop you're complaining about is a direct result of neoliberal/Democrat policies that try to push homeless people into more rural communities rather than address their suffering. Show nested quote +I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were. More right wing rhetoric about how "these people" are not the decent humans but the defective ones and a "LARGE" portion of these people are beyond repair (so what are you implying happens with them?). Show nested quote +You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many. You continue to talk about homeless people (particularly of SF) like they are practically another species making clear you believe homeless people in SF are some especially different than not just the people commuting around the city but homeless people elsewhere. Show nested quote +In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless. They need universal healthcare (that includes real mental health services). If they had it, many of them would have never been living on the street in the first place. Finally you manage to corrupt an argument of concern into an excuse for why nothing will be done and why it's your empathy that will cause you to oppose assistance for the people Show nested quote +If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency. So after this rant against homeless people we're left with no critique of the systemic progenitors, a scathing indictment of people exploited by capitalism, and a solution that says they need to fix it, but anything productive is unrealistic and anything realistic is unproductive. It sounds like most of your critique is misunderstanding my conclusion. I am not saying they aren't worth helping or that they can't be helped. I am saying that they need significantly more and that giving these people a meal is just that, a meal. I am saying building another typical shelter in a SF neighborhood will not help the actual problem. The problem is that we need to give these people years of mandatory support while we fix them.
In many areas I have been, homeless people are not nearly as out of control as SF. People who have never been to SF likely wonder why a homeless shelter wouldn't help. The answer is that they need significantly more because they have debilitating mental illness.
In addition, when we let politicians impose bandage solutions, we let them off the hook, It allows them to say they did something. But they didn't accomplish anything. So they still get to say "I advocated for $10M of homeless stuff! I am hella progressive! xD!", and yet nothing happened. So people get complacent. If we stopped letting people impose policies that do nothing except pat ourselves on the back, and only accepted (actual) solutions, I think we would be in a better place 10 years from now. When we let ourselves try things that we know won't work, we only set ourselves back.
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On July 16 2019 01:00 Mohdoo wrote:Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:54 Jockmcplop wrote:On July 16 2019 00:48 Mohdoo wrote:On July 16 2019 00:40 Acrofales wrote:On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by.
Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop.
I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were.
You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many.
In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless.
If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency. Sounds to me like San Franciscan exceptionalism. If your city is one of the richest in the world, but has homelessness problems worse than Mumbai, that isn't because you have a larger-than-normal number of deranged people... When we let people camp wherever they want, but don't help people work towards overcoming whatever makes them scratch off every piece of skin on their legs, we don't fix anything. If you give someone a meal, then they throw their shit at some people (yes, they do), then bloody themselves up in a big fight, then get their blood all over the street or within a business, all you did is feed someone. You didn't make the situation better. My entire point is that feeding these people isn't sufficient. They need to be cured of their mental illnesses. Making a homeless shelter is a useless pat on the back and doesn't help anyone. The issue I have with this is that people are becoming homeless all the time. Homeless shelters don't only help the homeless who have been homeless for 25 years and have awful mental and physical health problems as a result - they help people who have just become homeless and have no idea what to do about the situation. They can help those people find the resources they need to get out of their situation before they end up on drugs or with massive PTSD issues. Right, there basically 2 different groups: 1. Homeless without mental illness or drug addiction 2. Homeless people WITH mental illness or drug addiction They need entirely different solutions. If someone has advanced schizophrenia, a bed, a meal, a temporary address and some job leads won't help. We need to have a solution for the people who are downright broken as humans. In Portland and SF, there are a ton of support networks for people who are down on their luck. We don't have ANY method of dealing with the people who are fundamentally non-functional as humans. We just give them some bread, socks and say "nice, I defeated homelessness".
People with mental illness and drug addiction living on the street tend to still need food and socks too. Not providing that as well as not providing mental healthcare isn't better. Are you making an accelerationist argument that were we to do less to keep up with the need for socks and food, that the pervasive mental health crisis that undergirds homelessness would reach a crisis point demanding action?
On July 16 2019 01:07 Mohdoo wrote:+ Show Spoiler +On July 16 2019 01:00 GreenHorizons wrote:Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:34 Mohdoo wrote:On July 16 2019 00:24 GreenHorizons wrote:yikes...on that whole take but Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop I'm a communist because downtown, without money, there's nowhere to shit but the street. You don't think just replying with a condescending "yikes" is a bit shitty? Why not just explain why you think its such a bad take rather than this silly drive by condescension? Mostly because I thought you would probably take it personally and worse than "yikes", but if you wanna know... Show nested quote +On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by. That part was mostly fine. It has a slight aura of blaming the people for their mental states but it's largely fine. This is where it goes off the rails. Show nested quote +Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. This reads as a more overt indictment of the character of people living on the streets of SF and reads as implying they don't deserve basic human dignity because of some character flaw. Then you switch back to mentally ill people that need medical attention (and aren't getting it) and the discomfort it must cause the affluent people who pass it on their commute. Show nested quote + One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Show nested quote + Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop. I thought I could sum up my opposition to your take by pointing out the poop you're complaining about is a direct result of neoliberal/Democrat policies that try to push homeless people into more rural communities rather than address their suffering. Show nested quote +I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were. More right wing rhetoric about how "these people" are not the decent humans but the defective ones and a "LARGE" portion of these people are beyond repair (so what are you implying happens with them?). Show nested quote +You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many. You continue to talk about homeless people (particularly of SF) like they are practically another species making clear you believe homeless people in SF are some especially different than not just the people commuting around the city but homeless people elsewhere. Show nested quote +In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless. They need universal healthcare (that includes real mental health services). If they had it, many of them would have never been living on the street in the first place. Finally you manage to corrupt an argument of concern into an excuse for why nothing will be done and why it's your empathy that will cause you to oppose assistance for the people Show nested quote +If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency. So after this rant against homeless people we're left with no critique of the systemic progenitors, a scathing indictment of people exploited by capitalism, and a solution that says they need to fix it, but anything productive is unrealistic and anything realistic is unproductive. It sounds like most of your critique is misunderstanding my conclusion. I am not saying they aren't worth helping or that they can't be helped. I am saying that they need significantly more and that giving these people a meal is just that, a meal. I am saying building another typical shelter in a SF neighborhood will not help the actual problem. The problem is that we need to give these people years of mandatory support while we fix them. In many areas I have been, homeless people are not nearly as out of control as SF. People who have never been to SF likely wonder why a homeless shelter wouldn't help. The answer is that they need significantly more because they have debilitating mental illness. In addition, when we let politicians impose bandage solutions, we let them off the hook, It allows them to say they did something. But they didn't accomplish anything. So they still get to say "I advocated for $10M of homeless stuff! I am hella progressive! xD!", and yet nothing happened. So people get complacent. If we stopped letting people impose policies that do nothing except pat ourselves on the back, and only accepted (actual) solutions, I think we would be in a better place 10 years from now. When we let ourselves try things that we know won't work, we only set ourselves back.
Indeed this sounds like an even more explicit endorsement of accelerationism?
Your "we need to lock them up and fix them" also sounds pretty much like the facilities that were shut down putting them into the streets in the first place.
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A good first step would be a healthcare system which actually covers everyone. If people can get treatment for mental illness before it gets out of control, that is better for everyone. But in the US system, a lot of people who would need that treatment simply cannot afford it.
But homeless shelters do not hurt, either. Even if you had none to start with, the longer you stay homeless, the higher the chance that you develop mental illnesses or drug addiction. Because living on the street is not good for your mental health.
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Unfortunately GH, I have seen this kind of problem first hand. Manchester in the UK has had a pretty massive homeless population for the size of the city for about 5 years now.
Reading the local papers and what the local authorities say about the situation, the biggest priority is getting them out of the way of 'ordinary' folk because they are such a nuisance. Anti-social behaviour is often the accusation, which is ironic because I would say its pretty fucking anti-social to design your society around the idea that one person can have 2000 empty houses and 2000 people can be homeless as a result.
In the UK we have people employed by the police (they usually work for G4S or some other similar private firm) whose main job is to move homeless people out of city center areas by force. We are currently battling local authorities over here who are now pushing for the ability to fine the homeless £100 for 'aggressive begging' or 'anti-social behaviour' (which includes sleeping rough outside a shop/refusing to move when asked by the police).
Also, I totally get what mohdoo is saying here. Unfortunately part of my solution would be to confiscate long-term unused housing for a start and using that as a way of stopping the problem getting worse before we work on fixing those with huge long term issues, and most people I know hate that idea (because they are living under the misguided notion that one day they will be able to buy 10 houses).
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On July 16 2019 00:17 Mohdoo wrote: SF Homeless issue stuff: Based on my time there, there is no way to half ass that problem. If you haven't been in some of the worst areas of SF's homeless stuff, you can't understand. I didn't either. There is an enormous number of people who are mentally not quite right. These shelters give people food and water, but the people remain fundamentally broken and wreak havoc on the surrounding area. These people do not have their qualities of life improved by these shelters. All it does is serve as a meeting ground for people who literally throw their own bloody shit at people walking by.
Consider this: When I was in SF, I was walking by a bus that shuttles people to Facebook's campus. In this area, where FB people work, there were multiple homeless people who were straight up bad. A couple of them would sexually harass anyone woman who got near him. One of the dude's *ENTIRE LEGS WERE BOTH BLOODY* because he was scratching all the skin off of it. He was just sitting there DESTROYING the skin on his legs and it looked like he'd been doing it for days. Imagine watching a dude aggressively scratching flesh that is already bloody. Then there was actual human shit on the sidewalks. You needed to look down as you walk because you will otherwise very likely walk on poop. actual human poop.
I forget the name, but there was this 1 street where it was like all the super messed up homeless people took over in some weird dystopian madmax scenario. It was entirely not safe to walk through that area.
In SF, it is like these 2 entirely distinct populations living side by side. And there are so, so, so many of these people I am describing. It is NOTTTTTTTT some people down on their luck who happened to not quite pay rent, but also had no friends nearby, so here they are sleeping on a bench. No. These people need to be committed to a mental facility. I can't emphasize enough how completely past the point of return a LARGE number of these people were.
You know how in most cities, you see homeless people just kinda mumble to themselves as they look through trash cans, sometimes asking for money? Not in SF. In SF, it is a totally different world. And again: there are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many.
In order for SF to solve their homeless issue, it will require full on billion dollar facilities to house these people, commit them to years of therapy/medication, on-site job training, on-site job counseling, a fleet of psychologists and psychiatrists...there's nothing you can do that is less than that while still doing anything at all. It is so hopeless.
If someone proposed a $100/year tax on me to spend $10M building homeless shelters, I would vote no. If they proposed a $1000/year tax on me to spend $1B on some super-shelter that expects each resident to spend at least 2 years recovering/coping with their mental illnesses, I would vote yes. The current approaches to homelessness do not come close to being sufficient for SF. It is a totally different world. If you have homeless people where you live, the situation looks nothing like SF. Portland is getting pretty bad lately too, but SF was like an actual state of emergency.
On July 16 2019 01:00 Mohdoo wrote: Right, there basically 2 different groups:
1. Homeless without mental illness or drug addiction
2. Homeless people WITH mental illness or drug addiction
They need entirely different solutions. If someone has advanced schizophrenia, a bed, a meal, a temporary address and some job leads won't help. We need to have a solution for the people who are downright broken as humans. In Portland and SF, there are a ton of support networks for people who are down on their luck. We don't have ANY method of dealing with the people who are fundamentally non-functional as humans. We just give them some bread, socks and say "nice, I defeated homelessness".
I think you're missing how your kind of "nice homeless" rummaging through trash cans without destructive or extremely noticeable mental illness aren't a separate creature from "SF and Portland homeless." It's social evolution and hard nights with the catalyst of their high population in certain inner cities. They're literally the same people at different stages of a growing homeless community, that you won't see transitioning unless the community gets large enough. I include access to drugs and development of a separate culture as more people stay away from the areas.
You can see it in the expanding Skid Row areas of Los Angeles. Two years ago, there were a couple trendy areas with studios to 2bedroom apartments running for $3-5,000 a month. Now, there's lines of tents and tarps on the sidewalk for a half mile surrounding. Stench in the air, needles on the ground, trash everywhere. This second area a little ways away you see regular disinfecting crews in white hazmat outfits trying to manage the growing typhus and Hep a by spraying the areas down and carting away trash. I'll probably see them and vermin control somewhere in the city while driving at work today. There isn't a SF poop-everywhere stage right now, but it's getting there quickly.
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