yes, this is the biggest problem. years ago, people who could not cope lived in institutions, with a warm bed, maid service, orderlies to handle their worst epidsodes, and herded to the cafeteria for meals. (Think One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest) Then the great dumping occurred. The people still could not cope, but well-meaning social science types conspired with cost-cutting bureaucrats to “free” these people. Unable to cope anyway, the people quickly failed to maintain a normal lifestyle, could not handle income or maintain rent or avoid behaviour that got them evicted. This was compounded by some places where rules required a fixed address for welfare, so now the person was disturbed, homeless and penniless and probably incapable of obtaining meds. In that situation, you build a cardboard home under the bridge and wander the streets raving nonsense.
Wow, you manage to assume that all homeless people are mentally ill AND misrepresent the history of deinstitutionalization.
Chicago is very similar. Emergency warming shelters during particularly cold stretches, workers out there trying to get the homeless to use said shelters, and those who choose to stay outside wear a lot of layers.
[Moderator Note]
Molesworth2, accusations of trolling are not permitted outside the Pit. No warning issued, but don’t do this again.
Colibri
General Questions Moderator
Oh, yeah, that’s right…
You know what? The waiting list for public housing in my area in ten years long. I don’t know what the bleep people are supposed to do in the meanwhile.