This is amazing! Homeless people are just people who have fallen on hard times or have problems that prevent them from being able to function in mainstream society (PTSD, mental illness for example). I have done outreach for years and this is such an excellent temporary solution.
I have NEVER encountered such liberal leftist BS in all my life! I see you conveniently forgot the majority who are addicted to drugs alcohol or both. And the ones with a criminal history. And people like you always seem to forget the filth and crime these people cause. taking over side walks, attacking people the theft and harassment the murders by crack heads. But you left see them all as victims of a cruel and uncaring society. Maybe if it wasn't fir the devastation they cause to decent citizens. We would have a little more empathy!!
@Gale Grazutis you have never spent any time with the homeless. That is obvious. A generous portion are the working poor. Veterans with PTSD are another significant size group. There are far more criminals and drug abusers who have homes than don't. There are lots of people who have been evicted and can't rent another place because of the eviction. There are families who can't afford rent, and a years long wait for section 8. There are prostitutes, drug abusers and criminals, but not more than in the housed population. There is a significant number of mentally ill people who can't manage housing and the rest, self medicate with drugs and alcohol, and are homeless when they should be cared for. I have never been afraid when working with the homeless. It is the people who live in the areas (drug abusers, gang members) that they end up in that have ever made me nervous. The homeless rarely are armed, because they can't afford guns and ammunition. They are frequently victims of crime themselves.
@@andrewcx Gulag, re-education camp, re-integration camp, internment camps, whatever. Not that i care, i am all for putting bums away.. these MF come at me lately with fighting words.
After having been in there, I can tell you that it is far too small to put a real wall. I think a dividing curtain would function best. That is a great idea though.
Pockets of these around the entire city with access to on site medical care, addiction support, job support, and rehousing support, would be ideal but the cost I don't see those greedy politicians approving of projects like these any time soon, cuz what I see this is yes as an excellent middle step but it doesn't matter if after they get a job and get back on their feet, they find themselves unable to afford a tiny studio for $1000-$1500 a month on a minimum wage, the whole thing is not an easy fix but I still see this as a positive
No able person in that state should face homelessness. 70-80% of the "government" funding comes from where? The Taxpayer. The rest, speculation, corp. & moneyed donors, for, tax write-offs.
Bro did you have a vid of driving to TJ and eating a Detroit style pizza, alfornos pizza that's the name of the place? Ps sorry this comment has nothing to do with this vid.
This is 2 miles from me. Have you ever been to Los Angeles? They ARE in the community, They are a community of people in similar situations being brought together and given a chance to pull themselves out of their situation. They need to walk a block to get to anything. Did you watch the video? I know mommy told you you're a genius, etc. You are not.
@@MaRINoL I live in Oakland and we have all the same urban problems. Not enough affordable housing and no solid plans for it. I grew up in public housing and even though it was a roof over our heads and very much a community it still felt like a prison. I think you are missing my point. This is not a critique of the folks living and working there, I just think more can be done for the vulnerable ones in our communities to feel more apart of the greater community. Don't you agree? I sense you care or you wouldn't have gotten so defensive.
This is such a good idea, it will help thousands of people get their lives back.
Thank you for watching!
This may not solve the homeless problem but it could put a good dent in it.We need more of these.
Put this on the news on public TV we need these places everywhere!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks Rose - I'm unsure if we could get this on the news but in the meantime please share this video to everyone you can.
This made me cry, its so wonderful a place like exsist.
Thank you so much for watching!
Bless you all...Hope & Grace...
Great idea!!! Don't give up. Too much of mankind has.👏👏 ❤
Our new generation make us soooo proud THANK YOUUUU ❤️
housing is a human right. seeing communities like these pop us is an incredible step in the right direction
A human right ! Yes mabe but nobody deserves that for free if you have chosen a life of crime and addiction!
This is amazing! Homeless people are just people who have fallen on hard times or have problems that prevent them from being able to function in mainstream society (PTSD, mental illness for example). I have done outreach for years and this is such an excellent temporary solution.
I have NEVER encountered such liberal leftist BS in all my life! I see you conveniently forgot the majority who are addicted to drugs alcohol or both. And the ones with a criminal history. And people like you always seem to forget the filth and crime these people cause. taking over side walks, attacking people the theft and harassment the murders by crack heads. But you left see them all as victims of a cruel and uncaring society. Maybe if it wasn't fir the devastation they cause to decent citizens. We would have a little more empathy!!
@@galegrazutis964 you have to be capable of empathy to have any.
@@MiracleFound Again ignoring the crime and filth they bring. Help the working poor. Not self inflicted addicts and criminals!
@Gale Grazutis you have never spent any time with the homeless. That is obvious. A generous portion are the working poor. Veterans with PTSD are another significant size group. There are far more criminals and drug abusers who have homes than don't. There are lots of people who have been evicted and can't rent another place because of the eviction. There are families who can't afford rent, and a years long wait for section 8. There are prostitutes, drug abusers and criminals, but not more than in the housed population. There is a significant number of mentally ill people who can't manage housing and the rest, self medicate with drugs and alcohol, and are homeless when they should be cared for. I have never been afraid when working with the homeless. It is the people who live in the areas (drug abusers, gang members) that they end up in that have ever made me nervous. The homeless rarely are armed, because they can't afford guns and ammunition. They are frequently victims of crime themselves.
About time already
Best Concentration camp i have ever visited. Will come back.
Concentration camp?
@@andrewcx Gulag, re-education camp, re-integration camp, internment camps, whatever. Not that i care, i am all for putting bums away.. these MF come at me lately with fighting words.
Cool video
Thank you for wtaching bill smith!
Great Video Bro 👍🏾
Thank you man!
This is good
Thank you so much for watching!
Easy fix would be to put a wall down the middle and and have a separate door. That way people would have there own space
After having been in there, I can tell you that it is far too small to put a real wall. I think a dividing curtain would function best. That is a great idea though.
@@andrewcx I was thinking a curtain too.
Pockets of these around the entire city with access to on site medical care, addiction support, job support, and rehousing support, would be ideal but the cost I don't see those greedy politicians approving of projects like these any time soon, cuz what I see this is yes as an excellent middle step but it doesn't matter if after they get a job and get back on their feet, they find themselves unable to afford a tiny studio for $1000-$1500 a month on a minimum wage, the whole thing is not an easy fix but I still see this as a positive
Great video, we need these all over the world …… just loose the background music
No able person in that state should face homelessness. 70-80% of the "government" funding comes from where? The Taxpayer. The rest, speculation, corp. & moneyed donors, for, tax write-offs.
Bro did you have a vid of driving to TJ and eating a Detroit style pizza, alfornos pizza that's the name of the place? Ps sorry this comment has nothing to do with this vid.
Yes, that video was removed. The driving footage was all inside of TJ though. Why do you ask my friend?
@@andrewcx well,me and my girl we were trying to find some great place in tj for pizza and we did beacuse of that vid so thank you I guess
I'm sure this helps but we need a permanent solution. This feels like a prison/concentration camp, because it's removed from the greater community.
This is 2 miles from me. Have you ever been to Los Angeles? They ARE in the community, They are a community of people in similar situations being brought together and given a chance to pull themselves out of their situation. They need to walk a block to get to anything. Did you watch the video? I know mommy told you you're a genius, etc. You are not.
@@MaRINoL I live in Oakland and we have all the same urban problems. Not enough affordable housing and no solid plans for it. I grew up in public housing and even though it was a roof over our heads and very much a community it still felt like a prison. I think you are missing my point. This is not a critique of the folks living and working there, I just think more can be done for the vulnerable ones in our communities to feel more apart of the greater community. Don't you agree? I sense you care or you wouldn't have gotten so defensive.
Madison came up with a solution that feels more like it's part of the greater community. ruclips.net/video/C4QAb61aqAs/видео.html
So noisy there. They should all have bathrooms and showers.
REALLY?! Mabe they should all have spa's and a stae of the art entertainment centre!!!😅😅😅😅
@@galegrazutis964 I will take that in my apartment.
where's the barbed wire and armed guards
한국인도 들어갈수있나요?
Hello, I used translator to enter your question. Are you referring to enter as a guest to tour the place or for getting housing as a homeless person?
OK as long as they are required to be sober and work