Author Topic: LA’s Homeless Crisis  (Read 723 times)

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Online Elderberry

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LA’s Homeless Crisis
« on: July 01, 2019, 01:11:06 am »
Lawrence Person's BattleSwarm Blog 6/30/2019

    Everybody knows about the 36,000 homeless on the streets of LA, over 60,000 in the county, replete with human feces and syringes littering the sidewalks, along with rats, typhus and even rumors of bubonic plague.

    And those figures are what we’re told. No one, if you can trust the comments sections in the LA Times or the Next Door app for my old Hollywood neighborhood, remotely believes them. They could be three or four times the number. And how do you take a census of the homeless anyway? They are inherently nomadic. But everyone knows they are everywhere, along those sidewalks, under the freeway underpasses, even in the brush up by Mulholland Drive. Maybe they should add homeless encampments to the Disneyland Mulholland ride.

    But why has this happened in a place that is so rich it is the fifth biggest economy in the world by itself, ahead of the United Kingdom and just behind Germany? Can’t they just throw money at the homeless and make them go away?

    Not so easy. It’s been tried, at least to some extent. Shelters, some of them well built, have been constructed all over the city but the homeless don’t want to stay in them. The reason is these shelters are drug-free zones and the homeless of LA (and San Francisco and Seattle) are anything but drug-free. Most are addicts. They prefer to live in tents where they can smoke what they want, shoot what they want, pop what they want.

    So homeless encampments keep growing and sprout up everywhere as the syringes pile up.

Building costs in California are far above those in other states. A recent report indicates that a home that costs $300,000 to build in Texas would cost about $800,000 to build in California. The report cites factors that increase California costs, including the fact that approval of a major development in California is uncertain and that, once approved, construction can take up to 15 years. Another report shows that building “affordable housing” costs about $425,000 per unit in a multi-family development.

More: https://www.battleswarmblog.com/?p=40961

Offline truth_seeker

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Re: LA’s Homeless Crisis
« Reply #1 on: July 01, 2019, 01:40:09 am »
Same story LA, SF, Seattle.

see:

youtube vid "Seattle is Dying."

--one party rule,
--LEO prevented from enforcing whatever laws remain
--voters enact legalization of drugs
--voters enact minimal penalties

Comng to a big city near you.

Seattle cops state 100% of homeless are drug addicts.
"God must love the common man, he made so many of them.�  Abe Lincoln