GoPro Project Claims Technology Is Making People Lose Empathy For Homeless
EwanPalmer (2536690) writes "A project involving GoPro cameras and people living on the streets of San Francisco has suggests technology is making people feel less compassionate towards the homeless. Started by Kevin F Adler, the Homeless GoPro project aims to 'build empathy through a first-hand perspective' by strapping one of the cameras onto homeless volunteers to document their lives and daily interactions. One of the volunteers, Adam Reichart, said he believes it is technology which is stopping people from feeling sympathy towards people living on the street as it's easier to have 'less feelings when you're typing something' than looking at them in the eye"
I wasn't giving pandhandlers money before, either, now I just have my phone to look at instead of nothing.
I usually don't blame "technology" in the abstract for anything...IMHO it's too reductive of a concept to be useful and always glosses over the actual technical details
This, however, strikes me as different. This is a good thing because it communicates a *need* in a way that our modern society has made obsolete.
In the 18th Century, cities were so small and mixed that the rich **had to see the poor** daily. They had to see how they lived, open on the streets.
Today, for several reasons related to technology, the rich are able to go about their business completely obvlivious to the struggles of the poor.
Those struggles become nothing more than another voice in the din of TV/internet media...in the endless news cycle...easy to marginalize and ignore, even for a really civic-minded rich person...it's just not on their radar screen
This project aims to correct that with technology...I think it's valuable
Thank you Dave Raggett
The cameras get traded for food...or worse.
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Yeah, but looking a homeless person in the eye and then giving them spare change is worse for them than donating to a charity on your computer since the spare change just goes to alcohol and drugs.
Will it be one of the part-time homeless who make a full days' wage standing a few hours on the corner and then retreating to their suburban home because they have a juicy location?
Will it be a "gutterpunk" who has chosen homelessness as his lifestyle - playing the ukulele on "college" street between heroin injections?
[Panhandling, apparently, nets about $8/hour, depending on where you live -- more than enough if you aspire to only shoot up and go back to your crappy hotel after a few hours.]
which is stopping people feel sympathy towards people living on the street as it's easier to have 'less feelings when you're typing something' than looking at them in the eye"
If you are not looking them in the eye, then you are not experiencing the Identifiable Victim effect.
It's having to step over trash strewn everywhere around refuse cans. It's having to avoid unknown streams down the sidewalk and then getting a lung-full of the reek of old urine. It's the constant begging. That is why people are less empathetic. After years of this and nothing working, you have to ignore it or go crazy with the constant assault.
Why didn't I think of that. It can't possibly be that they're overly agressive, bordering on violent when demanding spare change/cigarettes and tell you to eff off when you have none.
Using an iPhone has no bearing on my dislike of professional aggressive panhandlers who lie, manipulate and intimidate women with children for handouts illegally as a lifestyle choice.
In San Francisco you "have to see the poor" daily as well. Hows that working out for them?
The trouble with the homeless is that they are not just poor, there are usually multiple problems at work including mental issues... so seeing them and giving them money is usually not helping much.
If you really want to help the poor I suggest going to Modest Needs, that is the best place I've found to help the truly poor directly before they fall off the bottom rung of the ladder.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
because of technology less and less people carry cash and there are few homeless who take square or paypal
They'll sell the cameras.
What a shameful marketing campaign.
As someone who walks around with earphones in most of the time, believe it or not, it makes me more empathetic to the homeless.Nothing says "disposable income" more than having headphones, and as such, i'm very self-conscious about that fact. Instead of aimlessly walking on by when a homesless guy tries to chat or ask for money, i'll often stop, have a chat, and give them my spare change. Sure, they might spend it on Special Brew or hard cider, but at least they'll spend all of my change on getting though their day.
Only 30% of the money you put in collection boxes actually goes to doing charitable work, the rest is spent on administrative costs, advertising, and other costs. When I give change to a homeless guy, i know that 100% of my money is going to do that homeless guy some good, and there's nothing like the feeling of making someone's day. Put that money into a collection box, and only 30% is going to go to good causes, and you'll probably never meet the guy who's day you made.
All in all, i believe charity should start at home. And for the people who get my spare change, a home is something they can only dream about.
If you gave me a choice between a printer and a giraffe with explosive diarrhoea, i'll get my ladder and my raincoat
We're being driven from our humanity by various forms of corruption in civilization, and technology is helping us escape...inward.
Strange things are afoot at the Circle-K.
Perhaps part of the problem is that San Francisco is overloaded with homeless. So people become desensitized to the plight of the homeless there. Obviously this is pure speculation on my part. But I know that hospitals from other areas, and even other states bus their mentally ill to San Francisco
Maybe, just maybe, showing how many resources and $ are being spent to give homeless people options, especially in San Francisco, only to have that money pissed away and people still soiling our streets and public transport systems, tends to decrease how sympathetic you feel towards the chronically homeless?
I never cared about those bums!
It was just as easy to ignore homeless people before I had a phone to stare at.
thanks for the link!
and yes, I see your point about SF today...
Thank you Dave Raggett
but there are many more homeless than i can afford to feed or give money to, as a matter of fact i may end up being homeless myself someday. who is going to give me something to eat or a few dollars so i can have an occasional pint of whiskey
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
...in yet another marketing stunt.
How many homeless volunteers took off with the camera and sold it to buy booze?
Isn't that the plan for humanity? We slowly recreate everything organic as inorganic, including ourselves, passing through cybernetics into full synthesis. Emotions will have no place in our world once we get there. We can't possibly hope to colonize the solar system, and eventually the galaxy, as organic organisms so the only logical avenue is to shed our corpuscular prison and become robots. Immortality and galactic imperialism is the goal, and this was the plan from the beginning. It's too costly to build a robot factory on every planet in the universe, but what could be easier than just infecting billions of planets with DNA seeds and letting us roboticize ourselves? But you say the timescales are too large to make sense. To a human, yes, but a race of immortal robots could easily wait as long as they need to. Make no mistake, we will soon be cyborgs, and once that happens the cyborgs will have a distinct advantage over humans and that is the tipping point, from where there is no return.
Let's be honest, people rarely even think about the homeless until they are looking them in the eye.
I don't give money to the homeless on the streets for several reasons.
1. I used to eat at the same restaurant every day. Saw homeless people come every couple of days with a new sob story every time.
2. See the Stossel report or any other investigation of the homeless. Usually, you can make enough in a medium density area to hire a hotel room and people will give you decent free food if your not to picking about having eaten from it first. Or just get your food and housing from the government...
When I do feel bad about the homeless, I reach in to my pocket and send a couple of bucks on paypal.....
Many of our "homeless" are either drug adicts unwilling to change, choose that lifestyle willingly, or are cons. Also, the standard of living for a "homeless" person in the USA is usually much better than a normal person in a place like Africa, not mention the services offered and opportunities available here vs an underdeveloped country.
Nothing persuades technically competent people like an argument that something is true because you "really feel that way" based on no empirical data at all.
That's just the way it is, some things will never change.
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
I live in in a urine- and feces-infested landscape where the homeless regularly shout racial slurs at every race and threaten to cut the throats of neighborhood children, and the cops don't care. SF bay has problems, and I feel like I'm losing my mind when I'm around them. I feel sorry for the homeless, but we need serious mental health facilities with involuntary imprisonment to help them.
Technology is just a tool, it's the people, us.
The hustling scammers, the druggies and drunks, the mentially ill, or the real homeless that are down on their luck and actually trying?
Because the first two I ignore completely. The mentially Ill I feel really bad for, and the onesthatare really down on their luck are not on the street corners hustling for money. Those people are helped by my donations to homeless shelters and to women and children shelters.
The fake hustler that is claiming they are a veteran standing there with a sign? Or the one guy I see push his wheel chair up to the corner then get in it with his hand out? they can stuff it.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Never had it.
Get a fucking job.
The best one has an early retirement at government expense.
Beat a cop almost to death. It's even better if you rape them after.
3 squares, a cot, free hellcare, sweet.
I think it's 30 years of declining wages. Half of all Americans live paycheck to paycheck. We're too busy trying to keep ourselves afloat to worry about anyone else, which is probably the whole point.... Keeps us at each other's throats :(.
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Look, what homeless people need is to not be homeless.
And there are various ways of dealing with that.
1. Rehabilitate them if possible. A lot of them can't be but some can.
2. Get them off the streets and into institutions.
3. Consider alternative social arrangements we could create... communities apart from society that are more healthy for homeless people then our current one.
4. etc...
There is no cure for what causes homelessness but there are probably better ways to deal with it then just letting them shamble around towns begging for money.
Empathy is not really the issue here. We have a lot of empathy. We just don't want to spend money enabling bad choices.
Are they spending the money they get begging on booze, drugs, etc? Well then why would we give them money? Are there lots of free shelters that offer food, clothing, and medical aid? Yes.
Then where is the lack of empathy?
What we are rather is beaten down and apathetic about the situation because we don't think we can do anything. But that doesn't mean we don't feel. It means we've given up.
Its ache that hurts every day and we put up with it.
There are better ways to deal with it but it involves thinking outside the box.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
I ignore homeless these days because they are assholes and scammers. Seriously; there's this guy in my neighborhood I used to give money to multiple days per week. He reminded me of myself; i could be in his situation if I had fallen on hard times as well. A few years later, I find him on a news story where it turns out the asshole makes 60K a year doing nothing but panhandling for 5 hours a day. He never got another dime from me. But this is just a one-off, right? They're not all like this?
Wrong.
I was pulling into a drive-thru a few weeks back, and some guy in a wheelchair is sitting near the place panhandling. He gets mad that people are ignoring him, and pulls his wheelchair out into the middle of traffic. Its a 2 "lane" road to get in where the two cars going in opposite directions have to barely squeeze by each other to make it through. This asshole pulls his wheelchair in the middle of the road and makes people try to drive around him and up on the curb to get past him, wrecking their alignment just to avoid hitting his ass.
I felt sorry for the guy right up until I saw him trying to cause thousands of dollars in damages to other peoples cars. That guy got a damn earful, and he sure as hell didn't get any change. Fuck these people. You deal with enough scammers and shitheads and you start avoiding them like the plague they truly are.
I see lots of hate in this thread for the types of homeless commonly observed in SF. I visit the Bay Area often and recognize the descriptions.
OTOH here in my midwestern hometown, where we always have winter and just had a doozy, only the tough ones stick around. I don't claim to know what their deal is, but they certainly seem more dedicated than the bums in California.
There's one guy who is constantly begging on the New Jersey Transit trains in Penn Station NYC, he claims he just needs a few bucks for a ticket to get home (common scam actually, this guy is just more regular than most). Of course he's full of shit, as another guy on my car proved by offering him a ticket to where he wanted to go, and when he refused it, lit into him about how he was a pathetic loser who was making his race look bad.
Then there's the "Why Lie, I Need a Beer" guy also in Penn Station NYC. Though I think he's actually not homeless at all but a cop of some sort, he seems a bit too healthy.
And the bunches who fake some sort of deformity. They seem to have shifts worked out; maybe there's an organization who controls it. Anyway, they get in their contorted positions and hold out a cup or a sign or whatever. Then when their shift is up, they straighten up, pick up their stuff, and go.
What makes people ignore the homeless is the fact that there are hundreds if not thousands of them roaming the streets of major (and not so major) cities. When I was in Regina, you couldn't walk 4 blocks without being accosted with demands for money, cigarettes, etc.
After a year or so of living there I used to just give them the finger and keep walking. It's not that I'm heartless -- I just don't care to be badgered everywhere I go when these lazy fucks could go on welfare and be housed like anyone else. Aside from that, I'm on disability -- I have no more money to spare than someone on welfare after I pay for my meds. Adding to that, I'd actually stopped to talk to and gotten to know a few of them, and found most of them were *on* welfare and did their begging to pay for booze and drugs, not because they needed the money to survive.
Sympathy. You'll find it between "shit" and "syphilis".
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
"has suggests", really?
Um, no, the problem is the helpless/hopeless/homeless crapping and camping on sidewalks. These people need to be institutionalized if they cannot live in society without endangering the rest of us. Personally, I look forward to even more development and gentrification. It's apparently the only way to dislodge these parasites.
some kind of basic income better then jail / prison
yes some homeless people are in and out of local jails alot some even use them as there doctor
I live in a beach community, which attracts the homeless for its nice weather and numerous tourists.
A few years ago, I watched a visiting friend's mother give a fiver to a "homeless" couple, living in a park with an ocean view.
I stepped in and berated the homeless woman for having a cell phone that she deigned to stop talking on while she accepted the pity-money, after which she went back to the phone. It was quite a scene, and I did my best to impress upon this visitor that she should not "feed the bears."
I also get tired of seeing their dirty laundry on the sidewalk. This occurs when they get a new, free, donated set of clothing from some charity. Not even an effort to put them in the trash can 10 feet away!!!
Homelessness, a symptom of the squeeze on the middle class, is indeed a problem. But why should the homeless get to live in a beach paradise for free, while I pay extra taxes for social services, recycling collection (which they thieve from), and so on? It's not right.
So if they say technology "is making" things worse, I assume they have videos from 10 or 20 years ago to compare to this new footage?
I've lived near and worked in SF and have plenty of experience ignoring the homeless. You just have to. As a friend of mine -- who has a degree in theology -- once said, "If I sold everything I owned and gave all the money to the homeless, the end result would be that there's one more homeless person in the world." I've given money to some and ignored others.
Homelessness is a very complex issue with many sides. Some people are homeless by choice, some due to losing a job/house/etc., some due to mental issues or addictions. Some are benign, some are dangerous. And the #1 issue for anyone who thinks homelessness can be easily "solved": Some would work if given the chance, some wouldn't.
Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
I have empathy for the homeless. I help some of them through donations, in-person or through an agency. Unfortunately I can't help everyone. So to the people who I can't help, it seems like I'm an uncaring jerk. To the ones I help, I'm a generous person. You can't please everyone.
I think the government wants the homeless to die as as soon as possible so they won't be a drain on their paycheck.
What could be worse than food!?
Taco Bell
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Considering nearly all of what Americans call Christianity has purged "the good samaritan" from what they teach and instead taken a "if you have money it proves you deserve the love of Jesus" approach then what empathy was there for the poor in the first place?
Also people just cannot see themselves falling into that position so they blame the victims. The attitudes to and of the Katrina refugees pointed that out very well - we had "pious" people like Barbara Bush saying that people who were homeless before Katrina should not be helped and we had people that suddenly found themselves becoming the "worthless homeless person" they never imagined they would be and having to rely on charity, even if it was only for a short time.
Another way to look at it is at this time any homeless person in the USA has a more positive financial balance sheet than Donald Trump. He defaulted on a couple of vast fortunes in debt and comes nowhere near matching them since, but his connections allow him to be respected instead of despised like the homeless people that also ran out of money.
You don't have money to do much for the homeless and neither do I. However we both pay taxes to people with the resources to deal with the problem in bulk.
The least they could have done was to pony up for some Google Glass.
At least the homeless could have pawned them for some spending money.
Have gnu, will travel.
If someone is homeless and living on the street, they need treatment and training, and in San Francisco there are lots of agencies providing that. It doesn't seem like a good idea to hand out money to random people on the street.
http://www.theatlantic.com/bus...
If you feel compassionate above and beyond the taxes you pay, donate to charitable organizations that provide professional help.
It's absolutely disgusting that the inventors of GoPro would stoop as low to exploit the homeless to spread the public awareness of their product.
The whole thing is a sham, except for the poor homeless guy who got suckered into doing viral marketing.
I'll never understand why the GoPro people will (as of this story) literally do anything to promote their product, but they WON'T fix the longstanding firmware bugs and plethora of other problems that have users have been complaining about for years.
Maybe it's cheaper to strap a camera to a homeless guy than do real, meaningful R&D. There's really nothing more disgusting than seeing poor people being exploited for financial gain, and this is probably the worst example yet.
I don't like the homeless because I met a bunch of them. They sincerely are lazy, unmotivated, and/or drug addicts. There's a temp agency in town where if you show up sober in the morning, you work. The end. If something is preventing you from doing that, it's probably your fault. So that's why I dislike and don't empathize with the homeless. I'm CIO of one company and the rest of the day run a computer repair shop just to make ends meet. I typically work 12 hour days. One of my homeless friends...well, he spends all day playing Magic the Gathering at a hobby shop, hanging out at various locations, bumming rides off people, and stays at the homeless shelter. When we told him to get a job at a temp agency for even just a week, he said he doesn't do that kind of work because he doesn't like it. He's also convinced he's unhireable because he's homeless but it's a cover for being lazy. THAT right there is the homeless. So take your Go Pro and shove it up your ass.
Compared to when The Great Recession Started.
"California, with just under 12% of the nation's population, has 22.43% of the nation's homeless population, giving it a homelessness quotient of 0.88. Quite high, in other words. Almost double the number of homeless people one would predict, given its population."
"Texas, which has roughly 8.2% of the nation's population, only has 4.85% of the nation's homeless population (meaning: Texas has a quite low homelessness quotient of -0.41)."
Growing economy = less homeless, contracting economy = more homeless.
Go look at the statistics if you doubt it.
Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)
http://www.lawrenceperson.com/
how hard is it to not look at all, even without a piece of technology distracting you?
I KUT J00 M4NG!!!
How many homeless volunteers took off with the camera and sold it to buy booze?
I think there's a more important question... how many mountain lions, gazelles, and other animals took off with the Harmless Radio Collars(tm) that Marlon Perkins had Jim Fowler attach to them while filming Mutual of Omaha's "Wild Kingdom"?
use them as there doctor
Where doctor?
Seriously, you Republicans are morons. If you can't spell words that the rest of us learned in first grade, why should the rest of us listen to your insane rants? We get it. You hate people because they're poor. Your kind is disgusting.
We live in an era of shallow, politically-correct, vapid, obnoxious, insular denial. We don't like to face facts, we don't want to speak facts, and we do not want to have people think we might be "judgmental" ..... so rather than focus on the things that matter most in life (people, and the philosophies that drive them) we find it easier to blame STUFF. We'd rather be seen blindly (and insanely) blaming inanimate objects for the things that go wrong than be accused of thinking a politically-incorrect thought about somebody.
When we have a mass-shooting, we blame the STUFF (gun or video games ... sooner or later somebody's gonna start blaming the bullets themselves)
When we have terrorists trying to board planes, we grope children and grannies looking for STUFF (because we DARE not look at the people and question what they believe...)
When banks or credit reporting firms screw-up, we blame STUFF (computers)
Has there been a rape? Blame the STUFF (porn)
As an increasingly secular people show less charity to the poor, we can blame the STUFF (it MUST be the GoPro/iPad/iPhone/etc .... it certainly cannot be that we've been insisting that people believe their fellow man to be just an evolved animal with no more "value" than a pig or a dog. Nope. That can't be it! )
"A rat is a pig is a dog is a boy. They are all mammals." - Ingrid Newkirk, co-founder of PETA
We human beings are complex actors who choose to do things based on what we believe and what we think. Beliefs MATTER, and NOT in some mundane mealy-mouthed delusional "it doesn't matter what you believe, as long as you believe in something" sense. The PRINCIPLES we each believe in MATTER ...... they inform and motivate us.
We need to stop blaming the STUFF; it's a destructive and delusional form of escapism. Like addiction to any drug used to escape reality, withdrawl might be tough, but we need to do it.
The article says he has been homeless for 6 years and recently feel on hard times due to a loss of his wife and mother turning to alcohalism.
However this video from the same project says that he has been on the streets for 30 years. (21 seconds in)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
The story doesn't jive.
Go print your own house!
Or maybe we lack empathy for an apparently homeless man who clearly has a hundreds-of-dollars camera strapped to his chest.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
Non-Norwegian here. Isn't Norway one of the richest countries in the world with a strong social support system? So the situations which make somebody homeless in other countries don't apply to Norway?
For example - in USA, I believe that people have to pay for healthcare, and after a certain period of time, no longer get housing benefit support when unemployed (USA person will have to help me here) - so it is possible to be a hard working member of society, but due to illness, get in debt (paying for medicine) and end up homeless (because you can't work, so can't pay your housing bills) so get made homeless, and can't get another place to live because you don't have the money to rent a new place?
If somebody is ill in Norway, do they have to pay for healthcare? if somebody is unemployed, will the state give them financial support to pay their housing costs? If so, you have a very different environment from other countries in the world.
Im so sorry, but if I endup with nothing.. I will start to work for almost nothing, build my life up again.
And I do mean it, I would rather ask a person for a book then for spare coins.
Then I would sit and read it, getting knowledge, getting out of there.
Some would say "thats harder then you think".. I say "we all done that" I for sure wasnt born with my knowledge about how things works, and noone is obligated to employee me.
Sorry, but to get a job, you need to work for it, you even have to take the jobs you really do not want to have. I done it, Im sure you have too, just think back to your first encounter with the jobmarket.
And yes, Im a rich basterd that suppored my unemployeed girlfriend for 3 years, in a hope of humanity that she would fixup her life.
She didn't, that was the end of that.
I will not comment on your rant about Romani, everyone in Europe may have his own experience regarding those people, and I do as well.
However, mentioning this group seems a bit off-topic, since there are not homeless living in the street:
They always quickly setup their slum camp in any 'free' area they can find.
Those are not great homes, but a two years old slum camp will have upgraded the garbage tents into small homes with heating, electricity and TV Sat.
It usually isn't the technology its usually the lack of soap. Also I don't have much sympathy for people that half the time I see drinking sodas, smoking cigarettes, and yes playing with their own phones while I on the other hand have to go to work.
I firmly believe most people on the streets are there due to their own decisions in life, which falls under the category of "tough cookies".
Funny, you sound kinda ungrateful, lazy and full of shit yourself..
I honestly think it's hard to feel empathetic for more and more people when WE ourselves are doing what we can to just get by...
Sure, we have our luxuries (cell phones, cable tv, internet, car) but then again more and more of these things are becoming necessities in today's world.
Need to do some work from home? internet needed. Emergency work call? Phone needed
Car? To and from work.
But just being tax day, and I owned another 3600 in taxes, it's hard to truly "give". Sure I'll toss a dollar or two when I've been asked. I don't do it out of guilt, I do it because that's the kind of guy I am.
Now I have it in my abilities to give a lot more, but I don't. Why? I feel that when I pay so much in taxes that I know are sadly going to people sucking off the system, EBT cards in strip clubs, etc. I have no more respect for the system and feel I've given more than enough.
Give me my money back, show me you're cracking down on abuse in the system, and I'll gladly give you more directly to those in need.
www.slightlycrewed.com - Because aren't we all?
No. The problem with having the government do things is that then there is no choice. The government uses force to make people do things, like give up their money to the poor. Don't like it? Jail for you. That doesn't make anyone charitable. It makes the "rich" resent the poor, and the poor feel entitled from the rich. The limited government intervention we have now is one of the causes of our current social problems. Eff the government, leave them out of everything possible.
I'll kickstart a go pro video made of all the "deleted scenes" highlighting just how rude, crude, dangerous, and disgusting the hopeless homeless really are. For this one, I'll keep my earned money in my own pocket.
Gotta get ready for work so can't rtfa, but I might indeed pay for split-screen, two-viewpoint bumfights.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
That is a mighty fine consolation price for being unable to think, I am impressed. Since that is what you're stuck with, you should probably make the best of it, and beat people up whenever you get the chance.
Regards from China!
I was expecting some kind of study or evidence to back this claim up, based on what they've found from attaching GoPros to homeless people.
But apparently all it comes down to is the personal opinion of one homeless person who agreed to take part. Nothing factual at all.
So a better headline for this would be "Homeless Man Thinks Technology Is Making People Lose Empathy For Homeless".
GoPro Project Claims Technology Is Making People Lose Empathy For Homeless
They can only make that claim if they have hard data that shows people in the past being more emphatic towards others. Without that, the claim is bogus.
There has always been compassionate people, before and now. And there has always been nihilistic, selfish people, before and now. Technology has nothing to do with it.
There's definitely a lot of people in this thread with no fucking empathy, and this is a technology-related site. Checkmate, Obama! Or something.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Why is this something that the government is considered a good candidate for handling? I pay a bureaucracy millions of dollars so that they can hand out more money that I gave them to other people. And look how good governments have been at doing that today and historically. It creates corruption, abuse and waste. Not to mention the simple fact that the overhead is higher.
If I gave $10,000,000 to the Government right now for the explicit purpose of helping the poor, and gave another $10,000,000 to a not for profit charity doing the same thing, which do you think is liable to provider more good? The government, whose workers are their for their paycheck, cushy job and benefits? Or the volunteers who are there because they truly want to help?
My feelings don't do the homeless any good. There are a ton of safety nets around; those that fall through usually have mental health issues and refuse them.
These people need to be institutionalized
-- Liberals
-- Conservatives.
Keep chasing those dreams, buttercup.
I know, all the alpha-females are already taken by people who need to talk shit about homeless and Chinese people to feel better about themselves. They like their sex angry and bitter, with an aftertaste of frustration and pettyness, and I for one cannot blame them.
but if you make $100M a year from investments you will pay 15%
My understanding is that capital gains tax is lower because the business you're investing in has already paid its half in corporate income tax. It's like the FICA (Social Security and Medicare) tax in the United States: part of it gets deducted from gross income, and part of it the employer has to pay separately.
Food, shelter, education and healthcare are all the result of human labor
There are areas where land's contribution to the cost of food and shelter can far exceed the contribution of labor. How much does farmland cost again? And where can one lawfully pitch a tent to sleep for the night?
Now that I see so many homeless people carrying cell phones and even using smart phones, this makes me far less likely to hand over a few dollars to a bum with an iPhone who asks me for spare change. You aren't really that poor if you're puffing on a Marlboro while you check your email on your smart phone, as you're sitting on the sidewalk amidst trash bags full of junk and a rolled-up sleeping bag. If technology has changed my compassion for the less fortunate, it is because they have more expensive gadgets than I do, and I work for a living.
Disclosure:
I lived in San Francisco (the Marina) from 1992 until 2006. Ex girlfriend's mother was one of the homeless. I knew one of the former mayors and was privy to some inside information on why the was such a terrible homeless problem in San Francisco.
Onwards
One important historical factor is that judges from states in counties far north of San Francisco would frequently hand problem repeat offenders who were habitual drug offenders one way bus tickets to San Francisco because of its tolerant care of the homeless.
Until Gavin Newsom stopped it, bi-weekly support checks would be cut by the city for many of the homeless. As a result of this reliable cash cow, many of these people directly took their checks to check cashing stores on Market St. and the heroin dealers would often stand in line by these stores to handle their customers who were these homeless.
Off of Haight Street is Golden Gate Park. Loads of homeless beg on Haight St. and then camp out in Golden Gate Park at night and shoot up. Under the bushes, you'll be hard pressed to not find years of dirty needles under bushes stinking of urine.
Years of dirty needles.
At the South of Market train station to Silicon Valley, there used to be several unoccupied buildings. These buildings were often occupied by several homeless drug addicts.
Several minutes after the trains would leave, it was common that these drug addicts (heroin/meth) would walk Townsend St. and break into cars to steal stereos that they would then fence to get a quick high.
One habitual drunk in the Mission district would occasionally become sober, but then drink so much that he was 1/2 naked, passed out and covered in his own urine and feces. After the police were regularly called, the fire department would be called to hose him off, then the ambulance would be called and he would be taken to San Francisco General. Of course he paid for none of this.
After he got out, he'd stay sober for a little while and start the process all over again. This one man cost the city of San Francisco $50,000 annually in police, ambulance and hospital fees.
Every year.
The problem is NOT the homeless.
The problem IS the drug addicted homeless. Heroin addicts, meth addicts and habitual/chronic street drunks. They have stopped being people and have started becoming problems. They have become addicts who have really lost all parts of their minds that do not pertain to getting the next score. Their high is so good, their habits so strong that they can't live life without being high or drunk and do anything they can for that next sweet score.
The problem is the tolerance of the dealers of heavily addicting drugs.
The problem is the counties who provide one way bus tickets to failure for their society's rejects.
After you see so many people on Van Ness St. who inject so much that their veins collapse and legs rot off, then wheel themselves out to beg another day, you see that these people will do nothing, can do nothing, to change their situation. They still will break into your car and cost you 2,500 dollars in damage. If you live on Haight St, they will still shit in your doorway every morning. They will still sit in a pool of their own urine to beg for enough money for their next score. They will not even recognize the face of their own daughter trying to give them food.
Empathy is the last thing you have for these people and for the reasons they have ended up in it.
Watching this for 14 years as you drive through the middle of it to battle the 101, 280, or East Bay traffic on your 1.5 hour commute you lose much more than all respect for them.
Empathy is the last thing you have for them.
It is a terrible situation they are in, but empathy is the last thing you have for them.
So, how do you fix this?
- Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
if you fail, you're a failure, so you either try to get up or you start drinking to smooth the way down.
Because the richest people and the most powerful people want them to remain homeless and down, as a warning to the rest of us to "keep in line", otherwise we'll be made to live like them.
The solution to homelessness needs to come from the top, down. However the 'top' isn't terribly interested in really doing anything about it, otherwise we wouldn't have a homeless problem anymore. Instead those of us not at the top are expected to shoulder the burden in addition to our own responsibilities. This of course is utter bullshit and won't work. The homelessness problem all over the world will cease to exist when the people at the Top are forced to invest their resources in solving it, once and for all. And by 'once and for all' I don't mean 'round them up and make them disappear', either. There are homeless who are only such because they couldn't find a job, and since they're now homeless nobody will GIVE them a job; fix that problem! There are homeless who are mentally ill or stuck in a cycle of drug abuse; get them the help they need! I think we'd find there is a surprisingly small number of homeless people who want to be homeless and be leeches on society. Identify them and 'deal' with them appropriately, because that's something we just can't have anymore. I'm a firm believer in 'pulling your own weight', and the people that think they can be exempt from that need to be taught otherwise. But as I say I think those are a small percentage. Everyone else who is in the 'homeless' category should be allowed the help they need to not be homeless anymore -- and it needs to come from the TOP, not the BOTTOM.
Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
I don't have to support the homeless lifestyle choices, if they're incapable of handling priorities they don't deserve any money.
The real problem is the nonsensical jobs people work that contribute negatively to our society more than any homeless person can.
>> So, how do you fix this?
You legalize ALL drugs, and tax them to raise money to help people get off of them. This is done in steps:
1) Legalize, which will create a market for clean, safe, well-produced drugs
2) Tax, which will raise a lot of money that can then be parlayed into recovery programs
3) Wean, recruit those who are adversely affected by the drugs (which won't be all of them) into recovery programs to manage their decline to a safer level of usage. This way they can become productive instead of destructive.
4) Subsidize, you keep the homeless in a subsidy program that ensures they don't fall back into their bad ways of overdosing or using bad drugs. You know they're going to do drugs, so you provide them with clean, safe drugs at manageable doses and keep them under observation. This is called "social work" and we don't do enough of it.
Presto, drug problem solved.
I used to have empathy for them, but then I realized I'm giving the government $1000 every two weeks to have empathy for me.
Government wants to be the solution. Fine, let it. I am not lifting a finger or giving a shit anymore.
This is the most ass-backwards, head-up-your-ass argument...it's opposite to logic but it *sounds* so logical to people who don't think analytically
Take this **same philosophy** that you're accusing all people who receive assistance of having and apply it to your personal finances...
**ANYONE** who doesn't take advantage of all the government's programs for their benefit is an idiot, wasting resources
corporations spend **BILLIONS** to do just as you describe...maximizing their benefits
people don't want to be broke and poor...your whole logic is fallacious and it's obvious you're a closet Republican...just spouting the same tired bullshit
Thank you Dave Raggett
Just like frog might be colored bright red indicating that it might be poisonous, a cat arching it's back and sticking up it's fur to appear bigger, or a dude dressing tough to indicate he can beat the shit out of you, I wear my headphones as a signal to communicate that I simply want to get from point A to point B without being bothered by anyone.. There's a difference between lack of empathy and simple defense mechanisms. If urban dwellers are expected to interact with every single pan handler they'd never get anything done and would soon be homeless themselves. Why are people judged for just wanting to get to fucking work?
you should pay your fair share of taxes at a fair rate and just maybe it will trickle down to the less fortunate.
The US is allegedly a rich country, that your government chooses not to help is the problem.
We choose not to have the government help much, because government is inherently wasteful.
Instead many Americans donate money to charitable organizations that waste far less of the money, so more people obtain help... America by far has the highest rate of donation to charity.
I've always wondered how god-fearing republicans can choose to not the help poor people
That's where you are utterly, terribly wrong - I am an independent, and do not attend church. But I know a lot of "god-fearing republicans" that donate a large amount of charity, plus every church I've every know has lots of missionary work they do to help the poor.
In fact if you look at statistics you'll find that Republicans donate quite a lot more (on average thousands more) than Democrats do - because like you they don't really care about helping the poor, they just want to feel like they are.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley