Monte wrote:
That was not his point, DE. His point was to compare the homeless and the destitute to animals. His point illustrated his absolute willful ignorance on the topic of the causes of abject poverty, the reality of homelessness, and his own lack of human compassion.
Except that it wasn't, and you're taking his point excessivly literally in order to strawman him. So, once again, do you think he is unaware of the different life cycles of humans and stray mammals?
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That people would defend him is even more depressing.
Oh well. I'm sure you'll get over it.
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People like to look at the poor and make themselves feel better by claiming that poverty is entirely the fault of the impoverished. It's a stupid, fool-headed ideology, and is in no way based in the way the real world works.
Except that it's exactly the way the world works, and you're just attributing your own motivations to others. The fact is you have no fact-based counter, just your own assertions and appeal to emotion, and it makes it easier to ignore reality if you demonize people who point it out.
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The vast majority of homeless people are severely mentally ill. They can't just "get a job" as folks like this guy must spit out at the "animals" he sees all around him.
We're talking about poor people in general, not the homeless, and neither was Bauer. He was talking about welfare dependancy, which is not in any way limited to the homeless. You're just fabricating **** about what he said and hoping no one notices.
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The majority of homeless families fled their homes because of domestic abuse, in addition to mental illness, and got stuck on the streets because of inadequate support structures for such families. Once you are on the streets, the likelihood of ever getting off decreases substantially. It is nearly impossible to land a job when you have no home address. Businesses know the addresses of shelters. They watch for them. PO Boxes are also a red flag.
Show your work. First it was "the majority are mentally ill" and now it's "the majority are victims of domestic abuse". I know exactly where this canard comes from. It comes from counting all the women at the shelter as "homeless" because they're not living at home with whoever was beating them... or wasn't beating them, since a good 20-30% are lying about it and may have been the abuser and relied on the predjudices the domestic violence system perpetuates to claim their victim was really their abuser. That person may or may not be male, much less their husband or boyfriend. Strangely, you won't find male victims of domestic violence included unless they actually live on the street.
This is how both homeless and DV advocates inflate their numbers in order to create a worse problem than really exists and scam more money out of the taxpayer.
Don't give me this **** about how buisnesses watch for shelter addresses either. There are job-finding services, temp agencies, and plenty of ways to get help getting a job.
In any case, it's all just moving the goalposts from "welfare recipients" to "the homeless", and as for the mentally ill, I've already pointed out that those
unable to hold any kind of job are not the ones we're talking about.
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Desperation to feed yourself and/or your family, to keep them safe, will drive a parent to do anything, no matter how desperate. Many turn to prostitution because that's truly the only option they have. The shelters are poorly funded and dangerous, the churches can only handle so many people, and in the end, when all you have is your body, you sell it.
What's your point? Aren't you also in favor of legalized prostitution?
Not going to a shelter because it's "poorly funded and dangerous" is a line of horseshit. It's there; if you don't use it you have no excuse.
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And when you sell it, you are inevitably drawn into that world, addiction is likely to be forced upon you (yes, forced. As in, drugs will be injected into your body weather you want to them to be or not, in order to better control you).
Now you're just conflating what usually happens to a person imported to this country by means of human trafficking with an average street prostitute of American origin. No, it is not at all likely that such a person will have addiction forced on them. They may or may not have a pimp and even if they do he most likely won't be doing that because it A) costs him money and B) he doesn't need to.
Prostitutes who are not human trafficking victims and are addicted are generally addicted because
they chose to start taking drugs.
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So, when someone refers to people like this as animals, it isn't a slip of the tongue. It isn't a poor choice of words. He knew damn well what he was saying, and all that it implied. That people on the board here agree with him just goes to show that his vicious, hateful opinions are shared by others too intellectually lazy or simply too hateful to look deeper into the root causes of poverty.
Except that you don't have the foggiest idea what causes poverty. It is not getting beaten up or mental illness, and your dishonest attempt to shift the goalposts from poverty and welfare in general to the homless, the mentally ill, and prostitutes illustrates that perfectly. What causes poverty is unwillingness to do what's necessary, whether that's going to school, giving up cigarettes to have an extra $60 a week, or not working for the drug dealer beause it means not having to work at McDonalds and being able to get more bling.
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Apparently, Ayn Rand's simplistic, sociopathic views are just easier to accept whole-cloth.
Apparently it's easier to just strawman people's views than deal with them. I've never read anything by her and have no intention of doing so.
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It's easy to believe that everyone on the streets is there because they chose to be there. It's easy to ignore high unemployment or the dozens of other factors that contribute to poverty including the very capitalistic system we use as a basis for our economy. It's easy to ignore *our* part in homelessness, because we like to imagine we all live in our own individual bubble. Sadly, that is not the case.
We don't have a part in homelessness. There is no "our part". It is not the fault of some "capitalist system" and the issue is not just "people on the streets".
As for people choosing to be there, huge numbers DO CHOOSE TO BE THERE. They get set up with jobs and a place to live, and less than a year later.. back on the street. When asked why, it was "just too many rules" or "I didn't want to be away from my husband 8 hours a day" or some nonsense.
You don't know the first damn thing about poverty, homelessness, crime, prostitution, or how to help them. You think having been poor, or having been exposed to people like that gives you knowledge. It no more informs you than having a crack habit gives you an idea of what to do about the drug problem. All it does is feed the endless demands for money and the attempts to pass the blame onto others for being successful.
It doesn't. You've taken the line of bullshit these people and their overly-emotional advocates feed hook line and sinker. It no more gives you understanding
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This guy, and his line about animals and breeding, is scum. He's scum because he believes that he is better than the people on the streets. He believes he is more human. That his success, weather self earned, inherited, or stumbled into, is evidence that he is a superior being.
You evidently believe you can read minds. You also evidently think that his view that he's done more and achieved more somehow translates to a "superior being" which is just strawman horseshit.
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There but for the grace of luck goes he. And he refuses to see that. He refuses to see that he's one neural disconnect away from the very "beasts" he spits on with such venom and hate.
Of course he is.
I'm sure your massive experience in neurology gives you the ability to say that.
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And in the end, so are you. You are all one step away from that condition. No matter how much you have saved, no matter how many toys you have collected, no matter how strong you think your job is, or how much you have done to shore up your life, at any time you could very easily be that guy on the streets. *No one* is immune. One illness, one bump to the head, one car accident, one IED when you are serving in Iraq or Afghanistan - and that's you there, on the street, talking to angels and begging for change.
Except that no, it is not that precarious. Most of us are not "one step" away from it.
All this "one this, one that" ignores the fact that for most of us here it would take a series of serious failures in several areas of life without time to recover between them to end up like that. One IED blast does not send veterans onto the street, one illness does not send most people here there, or any of the other hogwash examples. That is
why people plan ahead for such things; if it didn't work no one would do it. You're just fearmongering and appealing to emotion.
More importantly, no one has said nothing should be done for those who
cannot do any useful work because of physical inability or complete mental deficiency. Those people, however, are not the majority of the poor or even the majority of the homeless.
The vast majority of the poor, not just the homeless, are people who don't make any attempt to get a better job than working at the IHOP. School was a drag and stupid, and why do I need to go? Now they're adults, and anything that would require actual effort is rejected because it would take time away from their social life, their sex life, their boyfriend/girlfriend, or they can't smoke there, or whatever imagined reason keeps them from making some ****
effort.