Robovski wrote: ↑Thu Jul 19, 2018 9:02 pm
Should we jail the homeless? Oh sorry, put them in a poor house/farm or workhouse which is essentially minimum security prison but a concept we ended that had previously existed.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poorhouse
Poorhouses need to be brought back, but not as a form of punishment, but to give people a chance to sort themselves out and get a chance of reentering society if they want to.
Those that are vagabonds who want nothing to do with society can refuse to go on their way, those with addiction issues can be offered help for work so long as they follow societal rules and don't do things like steal given chances on a case by case basis while the only sticky wicket remains are those that are those dealing with homelessness and addiction do to chronic health issues that may not have any cure, let alone treatment.
What we ignore in Western society is the need to work and the sense of fulfillment and meaning it brings to our lives. If they can do menial things then it's up to them to accept it and get over any sense of entitlement they may feel, which is what A LOT are feeling here where I live expecting the city to build them apartments and give them free wifi..... because they're here, demand it and thus it's their right.
The ones pushing that angle are the young addicts too. They've been protesting with hammer and sickle flags outside city hall and passing out leaflets to the other homeless demanding they politicize the issue to get their way.
Fuzzy Necromancer wrote: ↑Fri Jul 20, 2018 3:23 am
No actually, we already have Poorhouses. They're called jails.
You get fined for sleeping on sidewalks or camping in public part or malicious lingering. Then you can't pay the fine so you're charged with something else. Then you get imprisoned and you have no money for bail.
Homelessness is already treated as a crime.
There is no work angle with a jail, which for once would be an aspect of reformative prison policy I'd support.
Riedquat wrote: ↑Thu Jul 19, 2018 9:08 pm
What I said shows that I've no interest in helping the lazy, not that I generalise that all people who starve and go homeless do so because they are lazy.
You're mistaken that he wants to treat the problem of homelessness. The real issue here is wants to
cure it.
It is not a disease, it is an aspect of the human condition and will exist no matter how hard society aims to eliminate it. That does NOT mean give up and not care, but recognize that many do not want help, don't want to be apart of society even if you disagree and others are too far gone or their demons cannot be treated to make it efficient for government on a local and national level to go to the extent required to even have a chance of possibly helping them.
For those that can be helped, they need to realize it's up to them to get better, to offer a hand and for us to not act as if we're allowing homelessness to exist as if we can live in a world free from it.