florida man posting msn links, definitely 80+ guy who got banned from ls1techwhy are all your links from msn lmao
Rather have pops and bangs over tent cities around every corner.it's hard to explain just how nice it is to walk around and not hear straight-piped pops and bangs all the time. honestly california is a much nicer place as a result
Having both is best, for me. I wish there were a good solution for homelessness but I can’t pretend to know what that is.Rather have pops and bangs over tent cities around every corner.
There's more empty apartments and homes that their are homeless people, but the govt would never do something like that.Having both is best, for me. I wish there were a good solution for homelessness but I can’t pretend to know what that is.
Most homeless wouldn't stay in one of those apartments or homes for more than a night before moving on somewhere else. Drug access is the name of their game.There's more empty apartments and homes that their are homeless people, but the govt would never do something like that.
Just let the tent city folks be, all they're trying to do is live their lives as best as they can given the circumstances.
Have you considered what direction it goes?Most homeless wouldn't stay in one of those apartments or homes for more than a night before moving on somewhere else. Drug access is the name of their game.
LA and SF has some of the nicest weather in the entire country and drugs are still a huge problem in the homeless population thereHave you considered what direction it goes?
Like is it drugs->homeless
or is it homeless->drugs?
Honestly, I'd bet money on the second. Being homeless in a city like Chicago, in the middle of winter? I'd also want drugs to not feel mind numbingly cold.
In all of these cases, it's still rough to blame the person who's homeless for getting hooked to very addictive drugs.LA and SF has some of the nicest weather in the entire country and drugs are still a huge problem in the homeless population there
Most of the time they either suffer from mental illness, trauma, chronic pain, or a combination of those things and the drugs are used as an escape.
Lots of opiate addictions start with a car accident, workplace injury, etc and when the prescribed painkillers runs out they turn to street drugs like heroin or fentanyl