Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who remembers when the Mall was full of homeless sleeping?
Anonymous wrote:Funny how liberals are all for affordable housing then turn around and say not in my backyard. Homelessness and affordable housing are dem created problems. Doesn’t happen where republicans control because they fix the issues for the blue collar working class.
Anonymous wrote:Finland’s “housing first” approach to homelessness seems supportive. They are providing housing and services for all who are homeless. It is cheaper than criminalizing homelessness or providing “safe sleeping sites” aka parking lots like we have done. It is a policy choice. Too logical and compassionate to be taken seriously in the US, I fear.
Anonymous wrote:Homeless tents are creeping? Why don't the tents have homes? How do they creep? Are they self-creeping tents?
Anonymous wrote:Funny how liberals are all for affordable housing then turn around and say not in my backyard. Homelessness and affordable housing are dem created problems. Doesn’t happen where republicans control because they fix the issues for the blue collar working class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's bad enough that tents are in all the public spaces downtown, but I was dismayed driving in this morning to see a tent in one of the little green public spaces off Mass Ave near the Cathedral.
I'm worried DC will into SF (and I mean the bad parts of SF). Why are city officials letting homeless people live in tents in all the public spaces? It's unsanitary and extremely unpleasant.
I'd bet my house you are a dem.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh. We had one pop up in a neighborhood park in the town of Vienna. I called the police and they told me they can't do anything about it.
Anonymous wrote:It's bad enough that tents are in all the public spaces downtown, but I was dismayed driving in this morning to see a tent in one of the little green public spaces off Mass Ave near the Cathedral.
I'm worried DC will into SF (and I mean the bad parts of SF). Why are city officials letting homeless people live in tents in all the public spaces? It's unsanitary and extremely unpleasant.
Anonymous wrote:Good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lived in DC for 20 years, in a bunch of different neighborhoods close to downtown (dupont, logan, CH, petworth etc). I left in 2017, and visit a couple times a year (usually for work, so mostly spend time just downtown). I visited this summer for pleasure, and holy crap, what a difference from a few years ago. DC always had it's problems, and I woke up more times than i care to remember with trash or junk on my front stoop. But the tent cities are a new level of terrible. My friends were surprisingly chill about it, and I don't know why.
DC has been poor and underserved for pretty much all of modern history, so i'm not sure why "high rents" would cause this issue to first crop up in 2020. There's obviously something cultural that's changed.
+100 and if you look closely, all the tents look relatively high quality. Clearly someone if giving away nice tents to homeless people. Anyone know who?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Finland’s “housing first” approach to homelessness seems supportive. They are providing housing and services for all who are homeless. It is cheaper than criminalizing homelessness or providing “safe sleeping sites” aka parking lots like we have done. It is a policy choice. Too logical and compassionate to be taken seriously in the US, I fear.
Finland does not compare to the US. Despite the Sami, they are homogeneous.
+1 Finland just doesn’t have the violent crime rates that comes with a diverse population like the US has.