Every homeless person out there is an alcoholic drug user? I do not think this is true. |
So if a cop wants to arrest a homeless person who has a dog, the cop has to take the dog to a no-kill shelter. Thus, having a dog protects you from being arrested for loitering or pandhandling. |
| most homeless have mental issues that are not addressed because they cannot afford care and/or they have no family. It is no secret that the homeless abuse alcohol - not hard to blame them since living on the street in hunger is hard to deal with. I almost always give money - how they choose to spend the money is up to them. I feel if you are a point where you are asking others for help, completely putting yourself out there, then yes, those more fortunate should help. |
| No, because in MD/DC/VA we have a huge support system in terms of shelters, housing programs, food (WIC and food stamps) and much much more that many don't realize even exists. Many of them choose not to use services, although sometimes it is that they are not capable because of mental health issues. Others are heavy drug users. Most are getting some kind of gov't help. |
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https://www.arlnow.com/2015/09/18/police-dont-give-to-roadside-panhandlers/
“There’s no telling what the cash will be used for,” said an ACPD captain, referring specifically to those to beg for money on traffic medians. “Officers have even seen those who appear to be indigent drive off in their own cars after working an intersection.” “Most panhandlers are not homeless, and most homeless are not panhandlers,” Kathy Sibert, CEO of A-SPAN, told the Arlington Connection newspaper earlier this summer. |
Yep, this sums it up. Homeless people did not get a survival camp experience so they chose to be homeless. Each and every one of them. Too bad they did not have a smart, hardworking American like yourself to mentor them in pulling themselves up by their big ole' boot straps. Hail to the Chief! |
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I always give food if I have it, but never money.
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It depends. In Paris (we are French but live in DC) I give to the Syrian refugees, it is heartbreaking, especially if they have children. But not Roma. Roma beggars are in the DMV now too, and if you have a lot of experience with them you can recognized them a mile away. But usually they try to scam. They are now doing a similar scam here that they've been doing in the EU for a long time: pretending to be broken down on the side of the road, waving drivers to pull over to help, and asking for money to pay for a repair or gas or taxi or tow (or saying I don't have any cash but need it for a tow, if I sell you my watch here On the side of the road will you give me some cash). I think there was even a story about this in the post.
Anyway, I will always buy them something to eat, but often if the beggar has a mental issue they may not want anyone to buy them food because they are skeptical (I've been yelled at for trying to poison them, is it dirty, etc.). I won't give to the people who hold the signs on street corners usually, especially since they all have signs that look like they are written by the same person with the same handwriting. |
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Im going to give you a very honest answer that I am sure will get flamed - I dont alwasy give money, I know there are lots of scammers and drug addicts among those on corners seeking handouts but, on the occaisions I do give cash, its because I think two things: "That could be me" and some bible quote I wont get exactly right, but was basically Jesus telling us that any beggar could be him.
I have never been poor, I have never been hungry, I have never worried overly much about money, at least not for basics. I am white from an upper midle class background and I dont for a minute think its because I did anything to deserve my life, my luck, my good fortune. Life isnt that simple and its isnt that linear, that I do know with absolute certainty. I am very vgrateful to have the life I have and know it could, with the right twist of circumstance, a string of of poor decisions, or just the the vagarieties of fate, disappear in an instant. So I try to be compassionate and open minded and kind in the hope that someone would give me the same. |
| I only see them at dangerous intersections, so never, because I want to discourage anyone from risking their life there. |
Similar experience. We are French too, and I steel myself never to give to Roma, but those little kids are heartbreaking. They would never get a whiff of my money anyway, but I wish something could be done about their enslavement. Because this is really what it is. |
| I did when I was younger. |
Yes, what I mean is that most people would prefer to work, rather than beg, IF they could. OP assumes that they don't need help and prefer begging as a job. That makes no sense to me. |
| Seeing people beg with dogs and children for "pity points" was very common in Cambridge, MA. They never allowed them to do that on the Boston side of the river. |
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I sometimes give to the ones that look like beggars.
But not the ones who look well fed and like they have been working out. I also don't give to the 20-something beggars with nice shoes who look like they spent as much or more on their haircuts as I do. |