Posted on Jul 7, 2024
Supremes Refuse to Normalize Sleeping Rough | Frontpage Mag
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Posted 5 mo ago
Responses: 5
Good article. From the article - “Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for the majority, cited data from many cities showing that most homeless are living on the street by choice, refusing offers of shelter in favor of easy access to illegal drugs and no shelter rules. San Francisco attested to the court that it has seen over half of its offers of shelter and services rejected by unhoused individuals” who prefer and demand “to permanently occupy and block public sidewalks.”
Extremely tragic America situation in not even a Depression time. Needs a solution YESTERDAY.
This scenario may be righted by cutting off the flow of drugs, putting the addicted into in-house substance abuse programs/ mental residential facilities [Pres Trump supports more of such places], then upon release, ensuring they get jobs and their own housing. Physical access to street living needs to be cut off.
Extremely tragic America situation in not even a Depression time. Needs a solution YESTERDAY.
This scenario may be righted by cutting off the flow of drugs, putting the addicted into in-house substance abuse programs/ mental residential facilities [Pres Trump supports more of such places], then upon release, ensuring they get jobs and their own housing. Physical access to street living needs to be cut off.
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SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
Those are very valid points You make and apparently one's that tend to be withheld from the public. As long as these people can get away with that type of behavior it will continue.
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SGT Mary G.
Sgt (Join to see) Tragic all the way around. There are failures in the system too that seem to encourage addiction.
In some places cities are building tiny home communities to put individual homeless folks in (they have to meet standards, no drugs) with a shared area inside and outside..
My heart goes out to Street Kids, many runaways, not necessarily into drugs. They won't stay in shelters either because they try to return them home, or put them in foster homes, and the didn't take well to proselytizing.
In WA state (a few decades back) someone (from the city probably) gave a parking meter key to one of the kids in the area where I lived, and they would open the meters to get the coins so they at least had food to eat. They would also steal things and the local "fence" would buy them, or surreptitiously provide a room in the house he managed in the University area that had been changed into a place where mostly college students rented. One of the kids showed me the room where he stashed all the stuff they brought to him.
In some places cities are building tiny home communities to put individual homeless folks in (they have to meet standards, no drugs) with a shared area inside and outside..
My heart goes out to Street Kids, many runaways, not necessarily into drugs. They won't stay in shelters either because they try to return them home, or put them in foster homes, and the didn't take well to proselytizing.
In WA state (a few decades back) someone (from the city probably) gave a parking meter key to one of the kids in the area where I lived, and they would open the meters to get the coins so they at least had food to eat. They would also steal things and the local "fence" would buy them, or surreptitiously provide a room in the house he managed in the University area that had been changed into a place where mostly college students rented. One of the kids showed me the room where he stashed all the stuff they brought to him.
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Seattle's addiction: The fentanyl crisis destroying the city
There have now been more overdose deaths in King County this year than in all of 2020, according to data from Public Health – Seattle and King County.As of M...
Cities like Seattle.Call it a homeless problem , but it's actually a drug addiction problem...
https://youtu.be/Xmu-hIgFmIA?si=btX9BPc-NxacrAHP
President biden doesn't stop the fentanyl from in coming as well not stopping illegal aliens...
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel LTC Eugene Chu
SMSgt Lawrence McCarter Lt Col Charlie Brown Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen CPT Jack Durish LTC Stephen F. CSM Charles Hayden 1SG Russell Scott 1SG Patrick Burke SFC Dr. Jesus Garcia-Arce, Psy.D SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SFC John Davis LTC Trent Klug CDR Andrew McMenamin, PhD Col (Join to see) 1st Lt Padre Dave Poedel CPT (Join to see)
Sgt (Join to see) LTC Thomas (Tom) Jones
https://youtu.be/Xmu-hIgFmIA?si=btX9BPc-NxacrAHP
President biden doesn't stop the fentanyl from in coming as well not stopping illegal aliens...
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel LTC Eugene Chu
SMSgt Lawrence McCarter Lt Col Charlie Brown Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen CPT Jack Durish LTC Stephen F. CSM Charles Hayden 1SG Russell Scott 1SG Patrick Burke SFC Dr. Jesus Garcia-Arce, Psy.D SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SFC John Davis LTC Trent Klug CDR Andrew McMenamin, PhD Col (Join to see) 1st Lt Padre Dave Poedel CPT (Join to see)
Sgt (Join to see) LTC Thomas (Tom) Jones
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Sgt (Join to see)
LTC (Join to see) “President Biden doesn't stop the fentanyl from coming in, as well not stopping illegal aliens” -THATS ON PURPOSE! ALL the Democrats’ liberal destructive decisions foisted upon Americans since Obama are not an accident. People should dig deep and ask WHY.
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CPT Lawrence Cable
In the Past, I did work for a number of the groups that supported the local homeless shelters. The problem goes far beyond addiction. A huge part of it is simply because we decided to close psychiatric resident facilities for all but the most violent because most mentally ill patients weren't "dangerous". They also aren't capable of caring for themselves. At the local shelters, my best guess is at least 40% are mentally ill and unable to cope with society, and a lot of those self medicate. The rest are either drug addicts or alcoholics. A large portion of the mentally ill will end up in prisons.
So we closed resident facilities and throw them in jail instead.
So we closed resident facilities and throw them in jail instead.
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My personal thoughts are that addiction is a major driving factor in homelessness in this country. They're taking the welfare money they're getting and buying drugs to escape the life they have put themselves in. I know that's not a popular opinion, but there is truth in it. I also know that addiction isn't something you can just walk away from. My time in Detox was absolutely the worst time i can remember from my past. I went through it as an inpatient with medical intervention and still I never want to do it again. It's the big reason I've stayed clean and sober. I never want to go through that process again. Everyone on welfare needs to be looked at as a potential candidate for for a recovery program. Its time to get proactive on this. Don't wait until they're found dead of an OD or have made in to the criminal justice system.
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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
Very true, Rick. I was on morphine for seven years when my primary care doc came up with a plan to put me on Buprenorphine instead. The hitch was that I had to go into withdrawal before I could start taking the new drug. Wow! I had no idea how horrible it is. I will never again think ill of a junkie trying to give it up. I went through hell for four days. Then, after I had my right knee replaced in Feb. '11, they put me back on morphine.
I finally went to my VA primary care in 2023 and asked to go back on Buprenorphine if they had come up with an easier way than going cold turkey. Turns out they had, so I did it in January of '23 without any problems. . . .
I finally went to my VA primary care in 2023 and asked to go back on Buprenorphine if they had come up with an easier way than going cold turkey. Turns out they had, so I did it in January of '23 without any problems. . . .
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