Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's private property so you can report it but most here will attack you for it. They'll tell you to leave them alone or give them your phone number, bake them a casserole and hand them a gift card.![]()
Where do you think they should go?
People act like there are zero resources for them. There are if they want to use them. Many of them don't want to but that doesn't mean they can just loiter about.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/homeless/emergency-shelters
You can’t go to a shelter during the day.
You can go to work though.
It is very hard for people to work without a fixed address, showers, and clean clothing. How many restaurants or stores are going to hire someone who smells?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am more concerned with the (housed) scammers who pretend to be homeless and harass people.
Yes! There is a guy who stands on a street corner daily near Trader Joes who has a sign with his Venmo and Cashapp handles on them. He also puts out a wheelchair and never sits in it but chooses to sit in the back of his pick up truck. I've also seen some of these people "tag" in and out with others on the corner like they are a group who owns it. Then there are the people who choose to use babies and their young kids to illicit sympathy by having them sit on the sidewalk with signs saying they are hungry then get into a newer mini van and drive off. Gross.
I went to a store in a large strip mall in Prince William county yesterday. There was a family gathered in the grassy area between the parking lot and the main road (Sudley Rd. in Manassas, if you're familiar.) It was a man, a woman, a toddler, and another child that looked to be about 5 or 6 years old. Holding a sign saying they were hungry; the little one was running around (I was worried she might run into traffic) and the dad was chasing/playing with her. The interesting thing is just about every shop/restaurant in that strip mall has a sign up saying that they are hiring--yet an able bodied man brings his babies to sit outside and beg for money, instead of going into the establishments and inquiring about work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's private property so you can report it but most here will attack you for it. They'll tell you to leave them alone or give them your phone number, bake them a casserole and hand them a gift card.![]()
Where do you think they should go?
People act like there are zero resources for them. There are if they want to use them. Many of them don't want to but that doesn't mean they can just loiter about.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/homeless/emergency-shelters
You can’t go to a shelter during the day.
You can go to work though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's private property so you can report it but most here will attack you for it. They'll tell you to leave them alone or give them your phone number, bake them a casserole and hand them a gift card.![]()
Where do you think they should go?
People act like there are zero resources for them. There are if they want to use them. Many of them don't want to but that doesn't mean they can just loiter about.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/homeless/emergency-shelters
You can’t go to a shelter during the day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am more concerned with the (housed) scammers who pretend to be homeless and harass people.
Gypsies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am more concerned with the (housed) scammers who pretend to be homeless and harass people.
Yes! There is a guy who stands on a street corner daily near Trader Joes who has a sign with his Venmo and Cashapp handles on them. He also puts out a wheelchair and never sits in it but chooses to sit in the back of his pick up truck. I've also seen some of these people "tag" in and out with others on the corner like they are a group who owns it. Then there are the people who choose to use babies and their young kids to illicit sympathy by having them sit on the sidewalk with signs saying they are hungry then get into a newer mini van and drive off. Gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is a sleeping person harassing someone? How is it different than middle class grandpas snoozing at the mall between cups of senior coffee at McDonald’s?
Yeah these 2 situations are not the same. Like at all. Let me know when Gramps screams and harasses at you at the mall for $1 and then takes a piss in public while dropping a few heroin needles along the way.
But that’s not what the OP is complaining about. The OP is complaining about “sleeping”. So the two situations are the same.
The stuff you’re fantasizing about are multiple different complaints— with quite different possible solutions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am more concerned with the (housed) scammers who pretend to be homeless and harass people.
Yes! There is a guy who stands on a street corner daily near Trader Joes who has a sign with his Venmo and Cashapp handles on them. He also puts out a wheelchair and never sits in it but chooses to sit in the back of his pick up truck. I've also seen some of these people "tag" in and out with others on the corner like they are a group who owns it. Then there are the people who choose to use babies and their young kids to illicit sympathy by having them sit on the sidewalk with signs saying they are hungry then get into a newer mini van and drive off. Gross.
Sure. Bet you've also seen "welfare queens" using food stamps before getting in their brand new cars. Tell us more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am more concerned with the (housed) scammers who pretend to be homeless and harass people.
Yes! There is a guy who stands on a street corner daily near Trader Joes who has a sign with his Venmo and Cashapp handles on them. He also puts out a wheelchair and never sits in it but chooses to sit in the back of his pick up truck. I've also seen some of these people "tag" in and out with others on the corner like they are a group who owns it. Then there are the people who choose to use babies and their young kids to illicit sympathy by having them sit on the sidewalk with signs saying they are hungry then get into a newer mini van and drive off. Gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is a sleeping person harassing someone? How is it different than middle class grandpas snoozing at the mall between cups of senior coffee at McDonald’s?
Yeah these 2 situations are not the same. Like at all. Let me know when Gramps screams and harasses at you at the mall for $1 and then takes a piss in public while dropping a few heroin needles along the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's private property so you can report it but most here will attack you for it. They'll tell you to leave them alone or give them your phone number, bake them a casserole and hand them a gift card.![]()
Where do you think they should go?
People act like there are zero resources for them. There are if they want to use them. Many of them don't want to but that doesn't mean they can just loiter about.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/homeless/emergency-shelters
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is a sleeping person harassing someone? How is it different than middle class grandpas snoozing at the mall between cups of senior coffee at McDonald’s?
Yeah these 2 situations are not the same. Like at all. Let me know when Gramps screams and harasses at you at the mall for $1 and then takes a piss in public while dropping a few heroin needles along the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am more concerned with the (housed) scammers who pretend to be homeless and harass people.
Yes! There is a guy who stands on a street corner daily near Trader Joes who has a sign with his Venmo and Cashapp handles on them. He also puts out a wheelchair and never sits in it but chooses to sit in the back of his pick up truck. I've also seen some of these people "tag" in and out with others on the corner like they are a group who owns it. Then there are the people who choose to use babies and their young kids to illicit sympathy by having them sit on the sidewalk with signs saying they are hungry then get into a newer mini van and drive off. Gross.