MarAzul
LongShip
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2008
- Messages
- 21,370
- Likes
- 7,281
- Points
- 113
He has those at the ready.I got no problem with Lanny. He is entitled to his own opinions.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
He has those at the ready.I got no problem with Lanny. He is entitled to his own opinions.
I used to be homeless. I am not an addict. I do want to work. I nearly always have. When I was a teen my dad lost his job. He tried to find other work. It didn't come. We lost our home. I lived on the street for most of a summer. I was able to get a job, save, and get back on my feet. I gained a lot of humility though. I have never forgotten the experience. I have respect for people in that position.
Yes, I found there are some who want to be homeless. Who like that life. But, there are others who were living paycheck to paycheck. They lost their jobs or rent kept going up till they drowned. A lot of people don't want to be homeless. They have just found themselves there because they were failed by a society that leverages the rich against the poor. The disparity is real.
Everyone deserves a roof over their head. That should be a basic human right. It is terrible to have to wonder if you are going to be able to pay the rent next month. How you are going to put food on the table, pay utilities, etc. It adds up and for millions of Americans the bill is higher than the paycheck.
I actually think that this is a description of the real problem at least IMO. It's not the existence of the ultra-rich or the wealth disparity. It's the cost of living, especially in larger cities. A lot of people are homeless and have jobs. The costs of all that stuff is just to great and going up faster than their ability to make money. Yes you can make good arguments that the ultra-rich, and crony capitalism have enriched themselves at the expense of others, but there is not anything wrong in being successful financially, there is something wrong in using that wealth to hold back lower /middle-class people from finding success themselves.I used to be homeless. I am not an addict. I do want to work. I nearly always have. When I was a teen my dad lost his job. He tried to find other work. It didn't come. We lost our home. I lived on the street for most of a summer. I was able to get a job, save, and get back on my feet. I gained a lot of humility though. I have never forgotten the experience. I have respect for people in that position.
Yes, I found there are some who want to be homeless. Who like that life. But, there are others who were living paycheck to paycheck. They lost their jobs or rent kept going up till they drowned. A lot of people don't want to be homeless. They have just found themselves there because they were failed by a society that leverages the rich against the poor. The disparity is real.
Everyone deserves a roof over their head. That should be a basic human right. It is terrible to have to wonder if you are going to be able to pay the rent next month. How you are going to put food on the table, pay utilities, etc. It adds up and for millions of Americans the bill is higher than the paycheck.
I actually think that this is a description of the real problem at least IMO. It's not the existence of the ultra-rich or the wealth disparity. It's the cost of living, especially in larger cities. A lot of people are homeless and have jobs. The costs of all that stuff is just to great and going up faster than their ability to make money. Yes you can make good arguments that the ultra-rich, and crony capitalism have enriched themselves at the expense of others, but there is not anything wrong in being successful financially, there is something wrong in using that wealth to hold back lower /middle-class people from finding success themselves.
There are a lot of homeless people, some from bad decisions, some from bad decisions of their parents, some by choice, there's lots of reasons.
That's definitely part of it.It's greed. The problem is greed
It's the number one problem humanity faces....only an airborne virus will humble the 1% as to the dangers of people breathing air that have no healthcare or sanitation...when they make your family sick, it starts to have value. I was in Taiwan for the SARS epidemic and it was amazing to see the effect it had on all walks of lifeThat's definitely part of it.
I'd probably call it selfishness, but greed is part of that, and it's mostly semantics. Even in epidemics though, there is plenty of history of people willing to take advantage of it. Hard times do tend to bring people together though.It's the number one problem humanity faces....only an airborne virus will humble the 1% as to the dangers of people breathing air that have no healthcare or sanitation...when they make your family sick, it starts to have value. I was in Taiwan for the SARS epidemic and it was amazing to see the effect it had on all walks of life
Many very wealthy Taiwanese paid pilots to fly them out of the country...breaking the law to escape under quarantine...some doctors did...nurses stayed behind and died saving lives...those who tried to buy their way out, risked lives of others and died as well. The nurses were heroes …..the triads, mafia bought all the face masks everyone had to wear and charged top dollar for them...bleach saved the country. These are not generalities or speculation, they're real. Invisible assassins are the scariest ones..it was one hell of a life lesson I think about whenever I see homeless campsI'd probably call it selfishness, but greed is part of that, and it's mostly semantics. Even in epidemics though, there is plenty of history of people willing to take advantage of it. Hard times do tend to bring people together though.
When I was about 9 there were days when we had nothing to eat. I remember one time when my mother stole my little brother's piggy bank so we could get milk to go with the cornbread we had for dinner. Maybe that's why I, too, have empathy for those who are disadvantaged. No kid should have to go through that.I used to be homeless. I am not an addict. I do want to work. I nearly always have. When I was a teen my dad lost his job. He tried to find other work. It didn't come. We lost our home. I lived on the street for most of a summer. I was able to get a job, save, and get back on my feet. I gained a lot of humility though. I have never forgotten the experience. I have respect for people in that position.
Yes, I found there are some who want to be homeless. Who like that life. But, there are others who were living paycheck to paycheck. They lost their jobs or rent kept going up till they drowned. A lot of people don't want to be homeless. They have just found themselves there because they were failed by a society that leverages the rich against the poor. The disparity is real.
Everyone deserves a roof over their head. That should be a basic human right. It is terrible to have to wonder if you are going to be able to pay the rent next month. How you are going to put food on the table, pay utilities, etc. It adds up and for millions of Americans the bill is higher than the paycheck.
Not necessarily. I grew up in Oswego where there weren't an awful lot of disadvantaged people. I remember this poor girl who was the same age and went to school with me. My father used to buy raw milk from a a guy who owned one cow which gave him a tiny income. I remember going with my father one day to pick up mild and seeing this same little girl peeking out the living room window from behind curtains. She always wore the same tattered dress. Now, that family was disadvantaged but we never bonded. We were half an inch above them and I had to disassociate from her or be branded in the same lower social strata. Looking back on it I feel terrible but that's the way the advantaged society that I grew up in made me. Luckily for me my father changed and realized the plight of the disadvantaged and got me on the right track to feel the plight of the disadvantaged.I'd probably call it selfishness, but greed is part of that, and it's mostly semantics. Even in epidemics though, there is plenty of history of people willing to take advantage of it. Hard times do tend to bring people together though.
Damn, that's rough, man. I never would have guessed.
I know that some homeless people are just bums, but I've also heard stories like yours...good people with bad luck.
fwiw, kudos to you for hanging tough.
There are a lot of issues that added together, have created this homelessness issue. Economics(the inequality of cost and pay), mental health, drug addiction, etc. All in all it's a failed system at play. The problem is only going to get worse, because no one wants to truly look at it. Instead the solution is to throw homeless people in jail, send them to other cities on buses, etc...anything but really trying to solve it. It is a complex problem. It will take a complex solution.
It is a complex problem. It will take a complex solution.
Almost all of us in here are being subjective. Subjectivity can be ok, we've all got different experiences.I think anyone making blanket statements about homeless situations is being subjective. Guys get out of prison broke and homeless ...my first marriage I woke up one day and my ex drained the bank...took the car and moved thousand miles away leaving me with 6 bucks in my wallet and filed for divorce....I stayed with a friend for a week until I could get a decent job painting houses , rented a room and started over. It was having a friend that gave me shelter that first week....then if you get divorced in California...the child support requirements are tough to keep up and pay rent, bills, etc...I have a strong work ethic but not everyone could get through something like that. I think its rarely a "choice" to become homeless but it is a choice to become a drunk or lazy. Those young kids who play at being street people will get tired of the plastic tent soon enough....the people who just need to stop having withdrawals won't. Social science is complex.....lot of homeless commit crimes so they can go to jail, get shelter and medical care they don't get on the street.....homelessness increases desperation and that often leads to criminal behavior
When I got out of the Army, I worked at Tektronix for less than $2/hr. I believe it was actually $1.75/hr. Lucky for me that my car was paid for and I found a really cheap studio apartment that was furnished with utilities included for less than $100/mo. It was with that pay that I saved up enough to buy my fiancee a 1/4 carat diamond ring. Her wealthy parents payed for the wedding. My parents paid the groom's share. When I married my current wife, my parents refused to pay a nickel for the wedding. My wife had no money so I took out of my retirement account to pay for the wedding.I think anyone making blanket statements about homeless situations is being subjective. Guys get out of prison broke and homeless ...my first marriage I woke up one day and my ex drained the bank...took the car and moved thousand miles away leaving me with 6 bucks in my wallet and filed for divorce....I stayed with a friend for a week until I could get a decent job painting houses , rented a room and started over. It was having a friend that gave me shelter that first week....then if you get divorced in California...the child support requirements are tough to keep up and pay rent, bills, etc...I have a strong work ethic but not everyone could get through something like that. I think its rarely a "choice" to become homeless but it is a choice to become a drunk or lazy. Those young kids who play at being street people will get tired of the plastic tent soon enough....the people who just need to stop having withdrawals won't. Social science is complex.....lot of homeless commit crimes so they can go to jail, get shelter and medical care they don't get on the street.....homelessness increases desperation and that often leads to criminal behavior
Yes he did. I know a ton of people who work there!Wait, did Lanny work for Tektronix??
14 years.Wait, did Lanny work for Tektronix??
Impressive. Should I post my resume every time I post also?14 years.
Huh?Impressive. Should I post my resume every time I post also?
Huh?
Funny. I thought you were being ironic.Oh horseshit. Wealth disparity has nothing to do with the homeless problem.
Impressive. Should I post my resume every time I post also?
Funny. I thought you were being ironic.