I don't get upset if my taxes go to trying to solve homelessness, drug addiction, and mental illness... I get mad when taxes fill politicians' pockets.
The problem is, no matter how much money you put into it; it would still doesn't solve the problem. If you give a homeless drug addict a $1M; he would spend that $1M on drug before sheltering.
And THAT is why homelessness will not be solved. There is big money involved which makes it to where they claim is going to go. LOTS of hands getting a slice the money pie. Follow the money. Homeless Industrial Complex.
@@HeatherHanderson : sad but true. Homeless people who are addicted to drugs make scoring their drug of choice their highest priority - that’s what addiction does to you. I have given people holding up signs asking for money $5, hoping that they would use the money for food or maybe towards a motel room for the night. But I’m not naive and probably some of the money I have given homeless people is used to buy drugs or alcohol. I feel badly for people who are homeless and/or addicted to drugs/alcohol but it seems like it is very difficult to get them the help they need to get off the streets and to get sober. People have got to want to help themselves - you can’t force it on them and as long as that’s the case, there will always be homeless people and many of those homeless will have addiction problems.
When I was diagnosed with cancer in 2017 I decided to move away from the city into a 20 year old single wide mobile home and I purchased a 20 year old suv with cash. The joy I felt after relieving myself of the big city interest based bills and the apartment I couldn't afford was immediate and immense. Living small helped turn my health around for the better. However, our society places so much value on shiny new and expensive things that I felt ashamed to tell my friends and family the source of my happiness. I was ashamed that I have a master's degree and I live so small... I work everyday but I prefer living this way. My point is that we have to stop shaming living small and living cheaply because everyone trying to live beyond their means is what got America into the situation. Living beneath your means needs to be celebrated and it needs to become trendy. Before we can fix poverty in this country we have to change our poverty mindset.
Thank God for you and your learning to live below your means. You should really write a "how to" book on living below your means a loving it and loving life. There's so much superficiality in this country with worldly possessions and brand new this, that and the other that people are no longer human but shallow, empty, superficial androids of a commercial. "You" my friend are what "real" America should be!
I hope you're in recovery, I like your mindset and I would like to live a life without the modern pressures of society. Hussle, grind, job promotions, flash cars, it's not what makes people thrive...take care 🙏
I use to teach High School in North Alabama . I discovered that two of our best students were orphaned and homeless. It turned out that the Principal knew that they were homeless. He would not report them to the authority. The last time , he reported a student for being homeless , she was sent to a home ,where she was raped. Yes the home was that bad. So the teachers all help them out. We brought them food, and Clothes. Both got scholarships to the Local College .
@@johndoe6260 We ask them a number of times if they wanted to go to foster Care. They did not want to go. They did stay with one of the teachers for about a year.
As someone who used to be homeless and was around a lot of people who were also homeless I can honestly say that it's not that they all WANT to be homeless. After you've been homeless for a while, it really starts changing your thought process. Most of the time people do not start off wanting homelessness, but you start acclimating to it. It becomes normal to you. For myself and most of the people I personally knew in the bay area that I have had the conversation with, the first thing that starts the downward spiral into chronic homelessness is hopelessness. If you can't get out of it with in a certain amount of time (time varies per person) you start believing that there's no way out. You start giving up. You tell start telling yourself that your refer it because you don't see an out. You begin to accept it as your reality. After a while the prospect of going back feels just as bad and scary as the prospect of becoming homeless fo r those who are housed. Now, if they're on drugs and/ or become alcoholics, that just puts the last nail in the coffin. Some already have addictions prior, but a lot of them start using to escape from their reality and become addicted, at that point it's not just that they've given up, but now the addiction has taken over their mind. Rehabilitation is necessary for chronically homeless people. Drug and alcohol rehabilitation if they fell into that or if it's what put them there and rehabilitation to reenter society. Homelessness affects your mind that deeply.
Very well said but knowing a number of friends who decided to do drugs or drink all the time you can’t force them to stop drugs or drinking, it has to be up to them.
When I was a kid applying for work was easy. You just walked in & filled out a job application then waited for a call. Now you need a professional CV, 30 second me, letters of recommendation, etc. Then you get to interview with dozens of people. Looking for work is too crazy these days.
My same thoughts and i was actually talking about this with my parents a few days ago. So much bs for a retail job. The world is falling apart and you can’t even get a simple retail job real quick. Blows my mind.
I lived in my car for about a year just to save on rent. Its amazing how quick your money stacks up when youre not tossing half of it down the rent hole.
l was homeless for 5 years. Just got back on my feet. Everything you said in this video is correct. The way the government is printing money now like a printing machine and low interest rate . The long-term outlook looks bleak for most people because the cost of housing will continue to increase all round America. Atlanta Georgia will be the next California. High cost of living and low paying jobs. it causes crime to increase.
I remember a guy in Jacksonville telling me he hasn't eaten in three days..... but was morbidly obese and three blocks from a community outreach that gives breakfast every morning at 8 and one that gives dinner and hands out day old bakery goods at 4:30 each day. All I could do is shake my head. Then outside the grocery store I was asked for "a few bucks" so a homeless guy could supposedly get something to eat. I looked at my phone, told him in about 30 minutes lunch would be served at the soup kitchen about ten minutes walk away and he got mad at me. Ive met formerly homeless that clawed their way out with hard work and I've also seen the same junkies homeless in the park for literally years. My advice is don't help those that won't help themselves.
A recent visit to Jacksonville & Gainesville was disgusting & dismaying in the no. of people on the streets, the abandoned shopping carts far from stores, the panhandlers at every intersection. So much so that local news started including stories of just how many were actually NOT homeless & hungry- THIS WAS THEIR DAILY JOB & they collected so much $$$ from Do Gooders they could pay their housing bills just fine. Obviously not all are stealing like this, but it made it even more imperative to pocket your bills or donate your cash (&/or time, sellables) to charities that do WORK!
Recent visits to Jacksonville & Gainesville, FL were disgusting & dismaying in the no. of people on the streets, the trash left all over, abandoned shopping carts far from stores, & panhandlers at every intersection. Intriguing were local news stories of just how many were actually NOT homeless & hungry- THIS WAS THEIR DAILY JOB & they collected so much $$$ from Do Gooders that they paid their housing & food bills just fine. Obviously not all do this, but it made it even more imperative to pocket your cash or donate it (&/or time, sellables) to charities that do WORK!
Mental illness is not addressed in this country. I was homeless for 15 years until I addressed mental health. For some politicians that's too much work
Nearly everybody will have some degree of mental 8llness but though it may be hard to cope with living with it, it need not prevent one from working and having all all the good things the rest all selfishly grab for themselves. The problem is that some mental conditions are stigmatised. Take Narcissistic disorder, not even a serious one, just a personality disorder. Feminists are fixated on stigmatising Narcissists. Why? The hidden reason is political. Most narcissists will be very successful people and often males 8m positions of power. Though some glamourous eg artistic women feminists envy will also be labelled as narcissists, out of jealous feminist hatred and spite. This term is stigmatised as a way to bring down powerful, successful males and some women feminists hate and envy. It is really such a dirty low down tactic to discredit successful men and women who earned their stripes by honest means and much hard work. Why do they do this? Because feminists are what they are. 6jey play low and dirty, unfair. And they want such high status roles for themselves and "women", though they are useless and lazy and Gail 5o deliver anything of any value or worthless. Our political systems need cleaning out because they are replete with such women and weak men who support them. In Australia, when these feminists fail, they are very bad sports, bad losers. And if all see lost, they play their desperate "rape" card. And all our weak chivalrous men fall all over the to protect them. These are the very types feminists condemn as "patriarchal" pigs. If I were male I'd have more masculine self respect than to rescue and protect trash who deliberately get into work and social situations where they know there is danger for women. And if they are too young, gullible, naive and "feminine" to spot the danger from men in certain occupations, situations etc and handle it alone, my next question is: What are such women even doing in such jobs, places, situations etc? Like in politics, in big business roles etc. They are not fit for such roles because they can't handle them. They are too feminine and weak. Femininity is fine. But not for certain roles. Stick to sex, babies, nice homes, looking pretty etc. That is where you can excell as a feminine female. Stop boring everybody in boardroom meetings with your pathetic fabricated feminist tales of work about how you were subjected to imaginary rapes and sexual harrassment on the job you wish, but who'd bother?). Because nobody really gives a shot about your tragic rape tale of sexual abuse and all your feminist bullshit stories. And you'll be shocked to know that, among those who don't give a shot about you areany older women who have been genuine rape and abuse victims but dealt with it and didn't make a public show of it. And learner to readjust their own demeanour as women and self protect, to ensure it could never happen again. Take a leaf from the book of those women who really do know and can advise those 3ho don't. Why won't young female sexual harassment and rape and other female abuse so called "victims"???? take advice from older real ones' wisdom on how to be safe as a woman? Because they would be exposing themselves as the frauds and liars most of these younger ones are. Because a genuine abuse victims can instantly and instinctively pick another person who is also a true victim, especially if it is another woman or child.
@@glorialovesChrist yes sir I agree.i was homeless for 15 years now I work with the homeless it's so sad how there's so much hatred for the homeless. But I have to admit there's a lot of love also but most rich society has no compassion for homeless people
They launder the money that they alocante for government aide , back into their political party and personal greasing their pockets along with the officials who receive the money in the foreign countries . Example is what was being sent to the Ukraine for HIV side. It was sent by our dear Deborah Birx to the ambassador that testified against trump . The email that went with the money said , here go have fun .First stimulus bill had lots of pork and one requested allocation was for HIV side.
bullshit.....you voted for BREXIT. So "your" country is the most importnat issue. Bu if you are still voting for spoiled Etonians and there elite clique , you are done like the US.
I grew up in California. I've never seen as many homeless people in one place as Denver, Colorado though. I once visited 20+ years ago, and the city was absolutely flooded with homeless people on almost every block. I was so shocked. I have to also say that, when I first entered the city, I was so overwhelmed by the stench that I vomited a couple hours later. The whole city smelled like an open latrine and I was so relieved to be on my way a couple days later.
I don't know where in Denver you visited 20 years ago but Denver's homeless were not everywhere but was confined to one area surrounding the homeless shelter, now that we legalized marijuana, there are tent cities everywhere. And now we look like California.
Are you sure it was Denver? Twenty years ago? Colfax street was rough but even then there were just a few people experiencing being homeless and no tents.
Stop all foreign aid. Australia should do the same. Our own people must come first them help others if we can. Foreign charity recipients live very well but our own people do it hard.
Speaking as a taxpayer, I would be less upset if my tax dollars were used to help the homeless instead of shipping US funds to foreign countries. How about solving our own problems first? Not to mention the government fritters away tax money like a drunken sailor on shore leave.
I do agree that we need to fix our own problems first but we can't just throw money at the problem and expect it to fix itself. You could give every homeless person a home and in 6 months most of them would be back on the streets again because they are too irresponsible to take care of themselves. There are "now hiring" signs everywhere. Yet they choose to just walk around with signs begging for money instead. Many of them just decide being a mooch is better than putting in any effort. They actively decide to live as a homeless person.
@norm simpson Those people are simpletons who feel warm and fuzzy when they see a flag waving. I can't believe people who came up during Vietnam continue to the Dept of Defense deserves a blank check year after year.
I lived in the Seattle, Kirkland, Lake Hills area for ten tears in the late 60s. A top floor of a duplex on Queen Anne hill was $75 per month. A garage apartment on Lake Washington in Kirkland $70 per month. A cabin with incredible scenery on Phantom Lake in Lake Hills was $85 per month. For five of those years I was in college with no job. The other five years I made about $4 per hour and drove a VW, had a motorcycle, raised two children as a single parent father. Money was never a concern. Life was so easy. What happened?
The track that starts at 18:13 is amazing. Thank you for leaving the watermark in the corner so I could track the artist. Needless to say I like your video but that touch made the everything perfect.
One of my friends is technically homeless right now. She’s working 80 hour weeks to save up for a place of her own while she’s currently living out of her Jeep. She refuses any help or assistance. It breaks my heart to see her refuse any help but am also so proud of her for working so hard.
I did this before for 6 months and I agree with the commenter that said accepting help comes with strings. I was offered help by 3 people but I don't like obligations. I was able to save up $9k in those 6 months. No regrets.
@@chrism8180 Not true. I give ten or twenty dollars to homeless folks several times a week, enough for them to buy themselves some comfort. I don't care what they spend it on. Absolutely no strings attached. I just want to reduce their suffering a little bit. I figure with ten dollars, they can buy a pack of smokes, a couple of beers, and still get a hamburger.
Thank you Nick! I’m in Seattle, and just through life circumstance, I gutted out homelessness through all of 2020. Lived in my car and Motel6 most of the time. I kept at it and got a place of my own. Now I get Food Bank donations for people that just won’t do it. Every week I try to feed at least four people. Eating can make some start to think better. I know I do.
" I get Food Bank donations for people that just won’t do it. " Me to. It's so easy, but my 'friends' are just to lazy to get up at 6 am or wait in line for 30 minutes. Oh well, makes me look like I got it together.
@@prestonphelps1649 smh man... If you're homeless, how the hell to you just move with no cash! You sound like one of those people who say pull yourself up by the boot straps and keep taking your boots.
Thank you for sharing all your efforts to document this situation. It is sad to see the inceased homelessness. Also, the money spent in foreign aid, when it could really go to this domestic dire need for help.
2019, over a billion dollars was allocated towards the homeless situation in California alone, but mysteriously ended up in politicians pockets. We should have a receipt where all of our tax money goes to. I’d be fine If we had to pay a little more in taxes if we seen exactly where our money went to. things would be better if we could keep track and hold these politicians accountable like they do us.
I got a housing voucher in SUPER WEALTHY PLACER COUNTY, CA. I am disabled. I was given 30 days to find suitable housing. It was MANDATORY to attend a "Housing Choice" SECTION 8 meeting for 3 hours. There were 4 VOUCHER ATTENDEES present. There were 12 (TWELVE) government paid employees in attendance some with government issued cars. Average salaries $35,000. Another disabled lady had to walk and was late. I have been homeless 18 years, I am considered MENTALLY ILL and I am not a drug addict or alcoholic. I am also educated. This supposedly great nation/government chooses whom it victimizes. I did not choose homelessness and I have HATED EVERY SINGLE MINUTE OF 18 YEARS OF HOMELESSNESS. I REMAIN HOMELESS AND HATEFUL. PATHETIC IS THE UNDERSTATEMENT. 🤑🤮
@@sherileorna8450 I'm sorry to hear about your situation and you're absolutely right the government picks and chooses who they want to help who they don't want to help etc etc and somehow someway finds an excuse for every little thing that happens and or justifies it some way or another . God bless and be safe out there ❤️💯
Heya Nick! I just learned something. I know a guy, who owned at 3-4 hundred dollar home, on a giant lot, and he lost his job in COVID. He took out a 2nd mortgage etc etc but lost his house. Educated, worked his whole life, raised kids, and now, he is homeless. So, now my city has our first homeless person! The other day, I saw him coming back across my bridge, wearing sweat pants, and tennis shoes, and carrying a long bamboo poll, like a tightrope walker. He yelled that he wasn't on my property, he was in the creek! Then I saw him in town standing by a store ranting loud! In the same no shirt outfit. So, I've solved the theory. Homelessness comes before mental health issues or drugs in most modern cases. Sadly, he won't be homeless in my small city for long, and we will be back to zero. I'm in what is still called the bay area, but I'm not saying. " Mappy! Hush!!!" Or I'll tell the Mrs you got a stimulus check, and she will turn it into a coach bag! Ok, bye Nick. Just thought you would be interested.
Thank you! Here in Atlanta, the money addicted gentrifiers cannot ever get enough, with rents skyrocketing to two to eight grand a month, and this is still not enough for the money addicts.( I myself am formerly homeless person)!
Me and my husband where homeless for years he had always worked and took care of our family then he lost his job and I'm glad our kids where grown and out on their own before it happened but even though we live in a hotel and pay out of our paycheck every 2 weeks total rent is about 600$ a month and it's just me and him now but we don't have to ever worry about our lights or water being cut off cause it's all included with the room but so glad we are back on our feet once again this is the 4th time we have gotten back on our feet and I hope we don't have to do it anymore and because of the stimulus we where able to get us a dependable car good luck to those of you that are still out there hope you find your way soon to get out of the situation if you want to
In California hotel are 300 one night ......least amount to pay is 200 dollars.....and California makes bank on people that are homeless....so they don't give the resources.....if they give the resources for stability it's a paycut to them....this why more recently more crime has been happening.....all of these people work together it's a propaganda.....here going on....just like the house fires....I think that's a set up.....
@Wilande Frederici I understand.....it does takes time to master this place .....from last post to now...... currently all resources are opening up for me...I'm glad I kelpt trying...and I also found out.....maybe I was in the wrong neighborhood.....I found a neighborhood that accepted blacks......things are changing now......it's alot more mixed culture ....I keep trying ...I do wanna master my life ......
I am glad you made it out of homeless. Let me ask you something. Where were your grown children when both of you became homeless? You mention they are all grown and on their foot. Should they step in and help their parent? That’s what is family is all about. No offense but America have no family values. No wander why young people don’t have have children. Hope you don’t have to be homeless again.
It’s amazing to you see how much you have grown in followers. I have been following you since the beginning and you sir deserve this! kuddos! Can’t wait till you hit that 1 million mark !
Homeless shelters are usually more dangerous than sleeping on the streets. I had serious plumbing issues years ago and had to leave my home with no warning. Because the cost of moving into a new place was thousands of dollars and I had just had to use my savings on something else, I was homeless for a while. In the shelters I was harassed by pimps, kicked out for having autism and one time even kicked out for getting a severe case of bronchitis in the dead of winter with snow on the ground. The hospital had given me a note and said that I need to rest untill the antibiotics worked because I was close to pneumonia. Tent living is not only safer, but sometimes you get more sleep. At many shelters you are lucky if they let you sleep four hours. On top of that, homeless discrimination in apartment rentals and jobs is legal and common, so many can't find a place before the shelters kick them out. It's not the rules that is a problem for most, it's the safety and the discrimination. Pimps and kidnappers hang around shelters because they know if they kidnap shelter people odds are they will be forgotten, and no one will look for them. Shelter discrimination is also a huge issue. Many are turned away for their sexuality, gender identity, religion, disability, race or even just getting a cold.
Re previously mentioned homeless shelter staff persons referring to the homeless as "flotsam and jetsam": staff persons do verbally abuse their homeless clients. Two staff persons in particular whom I overheard when volunteering proudly announced that "they just loved hearing about what the homeless have been subjected to." My reporting this to the shelter director resulted in being told "Well, we're not perfect. We're not paid that much for working here!" I was told the same when I had asked why donated food and clothing items were taken home by staff persons. Likewise when volunteering at food banks where the best food items are taken home by staff persons.
The combination is a bit of everything. Yes drug addiction, Yes high cost of living, Yes mental illness, Yes a failed government, Yes crime, Yes just bad circumstances. There is no one answer to the reason why this exists in America.
@john lee Being the richest country in the world is an illusion. We are 20+ trillion in debt and rapidly growing with no balanced budget. The is not the definition of rich. And not to get political, but both the right and the left isn't doing a thing about American homelessness. Give me a real solution and i'll gladly participate as part of my share.
Okay boss, you hit home on this one. As usual, your content and research is solid however there are a few items I would like to bring to your attention. Background-wise, I spent six years, feeding, clothing, and housing the homeless in Chattanooga, TN. I did it for another four years in Wichita, KS and four more years in Sioux Falls, SD. My experience was first hand, as a ministry, face to face, dealing with the homeless and the municipalities in addressing the issue. In my experience, the population of homeless breaks down like this: 1/3 are totally committed to the lifestyle. They've checked out of our culture, they don't care to make a deposit to get the power cut on, they don't care to live the lifestyle the vast majority of Americans still choose to live. These people are sane, intelligent, healthy, some very well educated, many very talented, and refuse to remain a part of this culture we have crafted. And they do well in that world. Their numbers continue to grow at a higher rate than the other 2/3rds and at some point they may become a force we will have to deal with, like it or not. These folks look at life and their values system is a vast departure from the American norm. The second third are folks who are just totally incapable of helping themselves and there is no social net to help them. When I was feeding in Chattanooga, there was a man with some form of epilepsy who could not keep food on his fork from plate to mouth. Twice a week I fed him in the same fashion I fed my one year old child. I was told innumerable times by other homeless that those were the only two solid meals he got in a week. I believe that several other members of his community started helping him. But for him, there are twenty others I can bring up as bad or worse with no one to help them. I could help that one and I did, but he was but the tip of the iceberg. Social services has nothing for this segment, hospitals won't take them in, no sanitariums, nothing, just whatever charities and ministries that step forward to help is it. Point is, about a 1/3 of them cannot help themselves, they truly are society's refuse. The last third is a bit more complicated. These are what I called the "one-handers." One helping hand and they'd gladly rejoin society. Some are dodging ages old arrest warrants or lawsuits, many are families trying to stay together while ADC agents are actively trying to take the children, many have accrued onerous indebtedness that once they have a paycheck (turn up on the radar), the court will garnish so much they have nothing left to live on. So what's the point of working? Point is this segment, this 1/3 of all homeless are pushed there because they fell afoul of a very unforgiving system, judicial and societal. With a good attorney and a compassionate judge, most of these people would be back to work in no time. And they would return to normal society again. But without that one helping hand to help keep the family together, to arrange rational garnishment to recoup debts, to reconcile an old warrant for disorderly conduct or fleeing the scene of whatever, they will get locked up and will have to appear undefended before a judge who in all likelihood will remand them without regard that they've lived the last eight years without offense. I do take exception to your repeated use of mental illness in the community. Take ANY American, deprive him of regular meals for two weeks and very irregular sleep with spotty hygiene opportunities and tell me they won't get 'loopy.' The simple fact is this, most Americans have not experienced hunger, physical insecurity, and lack of sleep for any protracted periods. Most Americans put into those circumstances would fold like a lawn chair. These people are tough, but more importantly, they are survivors of adverse circumstances and living conditions. I saw no more evidence of mental illness, alcoholism, or drug use in their community than I did at work, church, or the local filling station. The problem is we are looking for a reason to not help, to not get involved, to wash our hands of participating in a solution. The fact is, the problem with damaged people is that they know they can survive. And that frightens normal Americans. Now one can argue harshly about all of this and that is their right. When I first went into that ministry in 2001, I had the standard Republican attitude about the homeless. I was wrong and so are most people. But here is the final point, while many choose to argue, they choose to argue because they do not choose to help. To help their fellow man where his homelessness is not his problem but rather an effect of another underlying issue. A third of them we cannot help because they reject our lifestyle. But we can help 2/3's, but that would involve enabling ministries and many other charities to take the fight to the street. There are plenty of people willing to take this on, but there is institutional and civic resistance to it. The municipalities resist the help through onerous licensing and permitting for the charities, law enforcement preys upon people trying to get help by surveilling and arresting people in line for a meal, the list goes on. We've created the problem by creating a culture, a legal system, and a social order that is so harsh and unforgiving that perfectly capable and rational people choose to affiliate with society's refuse rather than continuing to participate in it. Cancel culture = Counter culture.
Amen brother. I too have worked with the homeless in Reno NV, The problem here is that rent has skyrocketed in tis area. We have a Christian organization who is lobbying the City, County and state. No surprise though they are often ignored.
Alvan Karpas yes! You put it way more eloquently than i could have. I'd like to add that no one should be forced to live within social constraints they choose not to. If people had their basic needs met, if one chose not to live indoors then they could feel free to roam without fear of freezing or starving. We can allow all types of people to thrive.
I was homeless enough that i could write a book about those days. I agree with the above that for at least 1/3 of them it is a way of life. When i first hit the streets there were some that had already been there for 15-20 years. On the streets i had my hustles and was known as being someone who was always looking for some kind of work and had things going. Guys like me were like the homeless elite. Whatever would help us get up and out is what we were looking to take advantage of. Even the Police would let us slide when we showed (Paystubs, business cards, etc) that we were doing what we could to rise above. The really hardcore "nutcases" that needed to be institutionalized weren't that many from my experiences, but they sure were there. If they were the harmless types, everyone kept an eye out on them. A few times, people would get them out of certain situations since they didn't know better and couldn't help themselves. As for survival as a whole? I was with good people at my last two camps and we had things down pat. We actually had it way better than the people in the shelters. Oh yeah, we were street survivors par excellence and i know for a fact that if i have to go back out there, it'll just be a matter of getting back into that old routine. Except this time i have better gear.
LA is single handedly the filthiest place on Earth. I live about an hour away...going to LA is like going into a 3rd world country. I'm not over exaggerating one bit.
LA is one of the filthiest places depending where you go. Downtown is a place I used to go before. Now, I can’t go there again without seeing homeless tents all over the place and drug addicts.
And it's going to get a lot worse thanks to our jobs going to foreign countries.. Not all homeless people are drug heads or alcoholics.. you have clean whole families out there now..
yes homeless people are coming to LA to be homeless every month. The legal tent cities , the crack, the meth , the weather. Breaking Bad LA Homeless CA . i live in Hollywood CA.
@@glorialovesChrist the weather is a lot better for some of these people..not all homeless people are drug heads either .thanks to the evictions going on we have whole families out there now.. not all of them drink alcohol. This problem is only going to get worse.. the cheapest rent I have seen was 450 in a nasty little trailer park that should be condemned..that is right here in Arkansas if you want drugs you go to the trailer park if you want alcohol you go there if you want sex you go there not to mention there's sex offenders that live in there and there's innocent children that live there what is wrong with you.. this guy is a slumlord if you want rats mice and roaches you go there.. all of our work is going to foreign countries the average rent is over $600..here in Arkansas you have to pay rent gas electric water and sewer..now that is stressing my area I'm not too sure about other places..your job at McDonald's Burger King Subway Walmart is not going to pay the bills.. My own daughter has three jobs she was looking at number four she probably has it by now..
I'm so thankful that my landlords are renting me a place to live in at a reasonable rate . Inflation is uncomfortable but i'm thankful that my job pays for my life.
You are lucky because rents are going up everywhere . Rent prices rose by 0.8% in june from a month earlier, according to the labor department it is the largest monthly gain since 1986.
How can the typical family with average income afford a higher rate+ more expensive home? in my area multi generational home is becoming the norm . Don’t forget to add the inflation which just this week was 9.1 on the CPI , producers index 11.3, it’s going to be a rough ride for sure.
@@PhilipMurray251 Time will tell how this period will treat people that never save, invest, lived beyond means, paycheck to paycheck, too many kids, too big of home, keeping up with the joneses with FOMO,YOLO, paying alimony, child support, etc
Speaking from the perspective of someone who has been there, I believe that there's very few homeless and way too many houseless! Because I slept better under a bridge, in a canyon, or otherwise without four walls and a roof than I did living inside! It was a matter of the people I surrounded myself with. I've since gotten off the street and now have my own apartment, held down a job for the past 6 years, and continue to move forward and upward every day!
@@NickJohnson "Some More News" and "Telltale Atheist" are the perfect Continue of this VIdeo here. Sorry if i sound like an ad-bot, buut oh well, what can one do.
Its totally Different the last few Years specially after the phoney housing boom we're having our rent went up $1000 instead of Raising us up slowly over the next few years they threatened us with Eviction we were at that address for 12 years never short or late on our Rent or bills even during the pandemic Greed kicked us to the Curb now they're just Charging a processing fee an putting us on a Rediculusly long waiting list an putting the money in their Greedy little pockets!
STAY ON POINT 🤔 AND THANKS FOR SHARING WITH US 🤔 LIVING BY FAITH EVERYDAY IN A LIFE THREATING SITUATION EVERYDAY 🙄 LIVING ON THE STREET 🤔 GIVE GOD HIS GLORY 🤔 FOR THE BREATH OF LIFE TODAY 🤔 GOD, IS A WAY MAKER 🤔 FROM NOTHING TO SOMETHING 🤔 IN JESUS NAME
This is crazy! I’ve never been to Cali always wanted to, always felt like it was the most popular state on the map but after seeing all this, I’m sick. No one should have to live that way according to the funds that this country has available smh
The most popular state is NY. California is probably 2nd. There is more history in NYC that L.A..And also has the same issues with homelessness, mental illness. etc
We were homeless kids in Florida a few years ago and lived in a tent city. Also lived in our van which was hard for a family of six with a dog. Alot of employers don't want to hire homeless people so our mom had such a hard time finding work so we just had our Dad's paycheck which he's a mechanic and it's hard to feed four kids on that salary. Our Mom made a friend who actually helped her find a job and now we're off the streets living with our grandparents with two more dogs. Parents both working, all four of us kids are in school and we're not getting the crap neat out of us every day and aren't going to bed hungry any more. Being homeless was terrifying especially for four young kids but we stuck together and our parents kept us safe and as a family we got through it.
All of you will have a rich and exciting life! You will appreciate everything much more than most..you will be able to cope with losses and setbacks in a way that pushes you ahead! I will be thinking of your family everyday and sending extra love and strength!
I've always said and I maintain it today, the breakdown of the family, as an institution, is at the core of the homelessness we see today. Drugs easily follows and compounds the problem. You're the lucky ones and thank you for sharing 🙏
@@GotoHere it wasn't always like that we were 10, 11, 13 and 15 when it happened our parents were teen parents and they couldn't control what happened. You could be rich and thriving one day then something happens and your poor and hungry the next. We weren't rich but our parents always paid their bills, we were fed, bathed, clothed and raised well. Our family fell on hard times something happened to us that our parents have a hard time talking about to this day and it's been a couple years now. Our family is strong our parents lived us they always put us first no matter what. We pulled through and kept our family strong. We can't control what happens in our lives the good and the bad we have to take it as we go. We don't blame our parents for anything because they were strong and we got through it. Would go through it all over again to avoid being taken away from them.
Been homeless manyatime, myself. Last six years, however has been quite uneventful. I must conclude, however - 'we are all a few paychecks, from being homeless' ! 😬 🇺🇸
@@ppenguinsjb1912 Everyone has made bad decisions that had the potential to bring them down. Most people have the good fortune to get away with those decisions, thereby dodging a bullet to their livelihoods. Some of us have been less fortunate and gotten back up after a terrible time of it. More than not desiring to and many destined to get back on their feet.
I was homless for 2 years while I rased money for rent. Homlessness was never the first choice. Its the end result of a lot of struggles. And with the streets comes new hard struggles where you really can loose faith in humanity. Im happy I had my faith in God and stayed strong and fighting the battle. Stay strong if you are watching this and still struggle to come out of it. I pray God blesses you and sends good people on your path to help you and that you will resive a helping hand with no shame ♡
I need ppl to help me insist on a small new government tax to wage war on poverty we could end homelessness in like two years with my plan building 200,000 plus tiny homes a year with running water in America
A friend of mine lived in San Francisco, worked as an engineer in a start up company. It went well for a couple of months but then the start up was starting to struggle and they were late paying him his salary. At a certain point they did not pay at all anymore. He lost his flat and everything he owns and moved into his van. Because of this he was not able to find another good job quickly again, cus he had no adress. But the unpayed bills were still there pressuring him to pay so hard, that he had to sell his van as well. He landed on the street - an engineer, educated and young (beginning of his 30s). Since he was an Australian citizen he had to leave the US because of his unpayed debts and was banned to enter the country for 2 years. It is a ruthless and barbaric system.
Niko, thanks for sharing & it's devastating for anyone to loose a job & I've been there; however, when he lost his job & apt. did he seek help at all from the various San Francisco agencies for the homeless?
@@rayolivarez3106 no I think at the point of homelessness he just went back to Australia, also because he felt frustrated and hopeless about his situation there. He accumulated debts because he still had to live on something but he did not got the chance to get a job again and pay debts back so the downwardspiral was so bad that he kind of just gave up to make it there. But his situation is also a bit different since he was just able to leave the country and start another life.
That is so offensive that Australians are told that, when our country has been fighting alongside America in every single war since and including the Civil war and we are the only country there's never missed one of your wars . Maybe our government should tell your government we're not getting involved we're not allowing Australians to die so fat Americans can put oil in they're car if they're going to treat their most loyal ally like this
It is complicated ...All I know is I don't have too far to fall into Homelessness at 53 years old that is a terrifying reality . I help people when I can afford to.
I'm 52 and it wouldn't take much to make me homeless. It's extremely disheartening. I also help where I can and as often as I can. I wish you all the best.
@@sharon22669 I'm 55, I'm living a pretty good life, although low key and out of sight for the most part. But I rely on my wife, she makes good money but we all know how quick that can change. We'd be 100% F#@$ed if that happens.
I understand what you mean. I'm 52, making 80K/year, with maybe 200K of assets. One accident, illness, lawsuit could flip my life from "middle class" to "poor" to nothing. I'm paying 500/month for Health insurance and a minor visit at the ER cost my insurance 17.5K and I had to put another 2.5K from my pocket. The veterinarian charged me $800 to keep my sick dog for a night to check him and the day after, wanted another 2.5K to opened him up because he couldn't find anything. I finally paid another $800 to put him down and incinerated. We are part of the UNPROTECTED of society!
I cant imagine, its harder to find a job at that age and your body has wear and tear. Ive been homeless before and i always help people whenever I can.
I was homeless for 2 years. I witnessed the churches of christ pit my name in their system for grants, while I received little to no help. I needed help with addiction and there was no help in a single church for this. I got tired and I did have death upon me. People even seen death sitting on my shoulders. At 4 am wondering scared exhausted but afraid to sleep, so high on meth I called out to the Most High! I did not know his name. I called to a false name with my lips but my heart was true, so he answered. I am delivered from addiction and the street because of Most High YaHuWaH. His people do not leave people stuck in spiritual bondage to live off them. Please seek truth in Most High by asking for his name with your whole heart mind and soul! He loves us and is waiting for us! Hallelujah is Praise Ye Yah. KumabahYAH. Come by here Yah, sang by his people who were enslaved in America and all 4 corners.
All these billionaires will not be allowed through the gates of heaven, all the suffering you just stood by not caring with billions at your disposal, go to your new master Satan you will burn forever
@@alexsegurasr3028 that's not factual at all. Christianity literally just says ask god for forgiveness and receive Jesus and you get into heaven. No need to give up billions.
I've been homeless for a couple of years It wasn't easy, most programs out there supposed to help you, looked down on you Like the monies coming out of their pockets, instead of state funding That was frustrating, made me feel like I was bothering them Paper work, questions were endless, repetitive Made my situation harder, I felt worthless
As a single homeless person the only resources you can rely on are food stamps and possibly a shelter. To think you will get more is incorrect, don’t bother. Working is the only way to get out of the shelter and once your working full time your food stamps will end. These are temporary solutions.
I was at a Salvation army food assistance centre not only were the young blonde women completely Clueless doing things like giving me pasta when I told them I'm living in my car , but while I was sitting there waiting for all the paperwork to go through to get my cans of creamed corn one of the ladies went into the petty cash went to the Indian restaurant next door . So wile I'm sitting there starving they're all stuffing their face with Indian takeaway in front of me no doubt paid for by people giving donations thinking it was going to the homeless
Homelessness has become a multi-million dollar business...if every homeless person in America disappeared today...within 3-6 months there would be a whole new homeless population...consisting of those who now make their living maintaining the homeless...
great video - could you do the opposite video perhaps - the least homeless? or will it mess up those states? I'm one of those rare people on teh channel liking the good with the bad.
Fortunately the city I live in Florida believes in helping those homeless that want help. I was homeless for 4 years and have first hand experience before finally getting my disability approved and a HUD apartment. I thank God and my homeless shelter case manager for helping.
I live in Sarasota County and recently (this year) saw a news segment on TV on how Sarasota has implemented plans for affordable housing to address the homeless population. Homelessness is everywhere and will some day be coming to a city near you. It's all about how your local and state government addresses the issue. The city of Sarasota county does not allow homeless people to pop up tents on the sidewalks like they do in all these other places. I feel like our government officials actually care about this problem and are proactive about it. I have lived here now close to 30 years and have never seen our city like these other places. I believe there is even a law that passed a few years back that panhandling on the streets and in traffic is illegal. I use to live in Colorado when I was in my 20's and Colorado has really become a pit hole. It use to be a beautiful place to live even Denver, but no more. I thank God I have always had a roof over my head and he has always supplied all of my needs.
@@user-hz7kv6js6l Sarasota made being homeless a crime. They just put them in jail. The are hundreds of homeless people in Sarasota, they just hide in the woods to avoid jail. I used to live by University Parkway. There were a bunch ther before they built up the area.
@@user-hz7kv6js6l I am glad that you are grateful to God, but God didn't put a roof over your head and food in your mouth........you did that. As long as people mistakenly believe that it is out of their hands, then the problem of homelessness will grow.
Veteran have many outlets to get the help they need. A homeless vet is either not a vet or not interested in following the rules involved in getting help from the VA.
@@nickouellette5404 the VA hires anti veteran sociopaths who hate veterans to work with veterans ..90 billion dollars a year is spent on the Va it should go to poor veterans and the homeless not for VA employees
The people who live in Las Vegas help the homeless by taking food, clothes, blankets and other things. This was back in 2018 right after my husband passed away. Thankfully I’m no longer homeless and haven’t been for 3 years. I move forward and don’t look back.
I’m from a very small town, and even we have a couple homeless people. I took a trip to Chicago in 2015 and was so saddened by how many homeless people I saw 😞. And it wasn’t just adults! I saw soooo many kids that were homeless as well. I can’t stand seeing anyone suffer, let alone a child. I gave a 15 year old boy that was sleeping in a box a warm meal, and gave enough money to a mother to get a hotel room for the weekend for her and her two toddlers who didn’t even have coats on in the middle of December 😞😞
I live in suburbs of Chicago and yes we had 30 yrs of homeless here hi TAXES RENT NO Mental health help or hospitals only JAIL Illinois Cook county and Chicago Sucks that they hurt those who they claim to help !!!!
@Ryan Alex That is a factor! Supply and demand: there are way more people that want to live in California then there is a capacity to support, even with the governments help.
drugs drugs drugs drugs drugs drugs drugs drugs, alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol, drug addicts don't work or pay any rent, housing cost is the least of their problems.
@Marion Hamer I live in CA and I get ask by homeless people if I have any drugs for them to buy or trade all the time when I go in to the dollar store or walking through public places, or constantly ask me for cigarettes which I hate cus I don't smoke.
@@jameslyons1624 not sating it was all milk and honey here, been on the streets myself and i know how it is.. But the scale of it in the USA is just mind blowing, just like the fact that YT is the only media you can find reports on this homelessness pandemic ... 🙁
@@Steven-rp8zo im still live where i was, never moved to USA, like I said it was a dream to live in USA..im glad I didnt move tho, watching this tragedy 🙏
@@WillmobilePlus Maybe. But there is none, like really not a one tent on the streets in my location. I live in ex soviet state in eastern Europe and we are poor as f%c% compared to average american. But no tents on the streets. Is this video fake or whats up with the tents on the streets of US cities?
The social ties thing is true, I have family who'd rather stay and struggle with $2,000+ rent in an apartment in CA than come to Utah and pay $1,500 mortgage for a 4 bedroom house. If given the choice I'd live in fun warm CA too but living comfortably in a boring state is better than struggling every month imo 💆♀️
I had a wonderful time in Salt Lake City when I was there in 2016. People were way nicer and more hospitable than in California where everyone has an attitude.
I realize that this is simplistic, but even in the last decade, more families have stopped supporting their ill and indigent children and siblings. My husband has been assisting his brother for decades. He’s been keeping him from having to live on the streets. It’s hard on everyone.
We need a huge ranch somewhere we can send these folks. Give em a few tasks so they have purpose, three squares and a roof. Get back to "no loitering" in the civilized spaces. And for God sake they shouldn't be voting. I say no one needing government assistance to make it is allowed to vote, their motivations are counterproductive.
I used to be homeless for about 5 years and honestly it's addiction as soon as I got the strength to get clean my life turned around I got my own place my own car full time job so ya keeping it 💯 it's all up to the individual wanting to change
Yeah those who aren’t mentally ill can’t easily pull themselves out. I’ve been off the streets for Twos years and wouldn’t you know….when you don’t do drugs and want to change you can. And there is plenty of church ran organizations that help homeless people
In Portland the city was given a grant of 10 million dollars to help end the homeless and as it turned out only 1.2 million actually made it to the streets the rest went to catered meetings where only the neighborhood associations were invited. I know because I went to one and asked if they invited any homeless folks and was asked to leave by the mayor Wheeler.
@8:17 for example my son and I were homeless for 2 years. We live in CA my son worked full time and I was on disability. I was on chemo and could not just leave to a more affordable state. At end of our apt lease our rent was raised by almost 200. We slept in the car a d got a room occasionally. We used to gym to workout and shower. Reasons for Homeless has many components. Yes, some just like the freedom. Many get priced out. And a good many have mental health issues and can’t be at shelters. The US needs to put Americans first. I do not remember seeing so many homeless when mental hospitals existed.
The homeless problems has many forms drug/alcohol addiction, job loss , economic hardship, mental illness, and just choosing to be homeless is root of homeless I myself was once homeless for 2 years but I managed to get past it but homeless is a serious problem that needs to dealt with properly
I bought a lot of whole chickens at Costco for homeless and butcher started crying when he asked me why so many chickens!He said he was never so hungry when he was homeless he was a young man
It doesnt matter the reason people are on the streets. Humanity needs to get them off and put them in mini houses or similar, proper sanitary, portable showers etc. Get the army to make them move into decent tents or a mini home. Clean up the rubbish on the roads etc. Make sure it is supervised. Just show humanity to people. Forget about giving money overseas whilst people die in the gutter in America. What are Politicians for.
Nick, I enjoy your channel so much. Thank you for the effort you put into it. I'm a social worker (not practicing at this time) and I completed grad school in Las Vegas, did my grad school practicums in community mental health in LV, and worked in some of the worst areas of the city with the mentally ill doing mental health work. Now I'm back in NC. I see some of the same problems here that I saw in LV : drugs, lack of affordable housing. No one will ever convince me that drugs are a good idea. Yes, people need homes and jobs but the thing that is lacking is also strong community connections between human beings where people can feel valuable, validated, and gain a sense of being productive towards something positive. So many people I worked with were just existing with no productive purpose to engage with and it leads to a lot of mental health issues compounded by poverty, trauma, etc and leads to drug use that just swallows people up. Very sad situation.
We need jobs, too. Good jobs with longevity and a livable wage so that people aren't so dependant on safety nets. People need a place to go every day to feel connected and earn a living.
I was homeless in Seattle for a year after my divorce, I had a job and a car. Every camp and shelter I visited was full of drug addicts 100%. I chose to avoid those places and I got a rental after a year and I had paid off the debts. Sad but true. Most homelessness is a choice to stay high or drunk or both.
@@ohioanempire it is true, 20 years ago , and now considered highly hateful to speak that truth. Thank you fellow Ohioan. I am 3 year here and love it.
I worked by LA Skid row for 3 years. I met the "homeless". For a lot of them they get their monthly disability check and spend it on alcohol and drugs. If you offered them a job they would decline.
@Therese A. Judith Izzo-Davis not prejudice just looking at stats. Most homeless people on street refuse help from large charities and local gov, prefer to not work and high number use drugs
@Raymond Babcock uh yes it is the governments problem...and churches getting taxed? Well clearly you're an Atheist because you dont have an idea of the concept of place of worship. Imagine a muslim going to a mosque and they say you must pay to get in to worship. You know the outrage that would cause? Churches would need to create revenue in order to pay for these, "taxes." Governments job is to provide to the public and that is the same with homelessness.
There are "non profits" out there collecting literally millions of dollars every year to help the homeless, yet they only spend $100-$200K/yr actually helping. The rest goes into the pockets of staff.
“Why don’t they just move.” When you’re already poor and exhausted, moving is really a big and expensive thing, especially if someone was moving across the country. Even harder for people with a child I would imagine. Theres a lot of preparations to make that take money and energy.
Well if you don't move, you are going to get run over by the bulldozer of life, so at some point, big boy decisions got to be made. You think the afghanis wanted to exfil THEIR country in chaos!??!? Common misconception is that all the afghanis want to leave Afghanistan and come to America, wrong they don't want to leave - however the environment is no longer tenable to support life.
@@marenhuwald1445 If you have family to help you get on your feet, it's good. I moved from Texas to Ohio with my daughter, years ago. I immediately got a job. Saved money for a months rent and to turn on utilities, then moved out. Two month tops. Glad I had my sister to help.
One major problem has to be unrealistic expectations. People always want more than what they can afford, it's just that some don't understand how to tamp those expectations.
Germany here! We have at least a room for everyone. And we still love to work like crazy. You gotta have to know what you think you owe to each other societal wise. Just decriminalizing stuff isnt doing it alone, you have to invest heavily into social services. We had similar problems with drug usage in the 1990s.
In America we prefer to spend all our tax dollars on military bases around the world and playing war games rather than wasting anything on homeless ppl at home. Its democracy at work.
There are a lot of countries that have government provided high-rise apartments. I wonder about this claim that the U.S. is "the richest country in the world." If it is, then maybe it's like Texas, having money to help disadvantaged people but choosing not to. (They don't even give a last meal to their condemned prisoners before they die. I'm for the death penalty but that seems penny pinching to the max. After all, they're going to be dead forever.)
You see, instead of doing what your country is doing, America is setting up retarded shit like "injection sites" where nurses inject the heroin for the homeless themselves, or Biden hands out crackpipes using taxdollars to everyone, and worsesns the situation exponentially.
@@inkbold8511 So here is the thing about the military they misspend like all government agencies, but they also create millions of jobs, good paying jobs for the most part. No one that benefits from that is going to vote against it, even if they want to help homeless people. And why would they, without those jobs so many more people would be homeless. Part of the homeless problem is the misspending of funds by those claiming to help the homeless and the people that think we should keep spending the money the way we are spending the money and have very little progress to show for it. The government will fork out money for housing that is sub par yet very expensive, even the tiny house idea that they came up with in California they were spending $30,000.00 for what essentially should have cost $10,000 at the most. Our government has turned everything into a for-profit venture and those that are essentially making money from it will continue to vote for what is in their best interest. So those making money from overpriced section 8 apartments will vote for more section 8 housing, those making a living from the military spending will vote to keep that spending, cops will vote for a bigger police budget, social workers will vote for a higher budget for social workers, teachers will vote for larger budgets for schools and so on and so forth. Essentially the money allotted to house people is being spent on offices for social workers, offices for so-called experts, offices for workers in shelters more offices for people to determine who should get the help, offices for mental health professionals, offices for case workers, offices for drug counselors and so on and so forth and not much of it is being spent on actually housing people.
I was technically homeless for a bit when my ex kicked me out and I lost my job. I worked my butt off and got a new job and place. And also I didn't use drugs.
CapAnson12345..You are blessed, God kept the drugs away from you, kept longterm homelessness from you, opened doors where it looked like they were closed. I am so happy to hear about your blessed life. May you be blessed all of your days. I have never been homeless but my heart breaks every time I see someone living on the streets or consumed by addiction..I do my best to give back. Please once you can give back wherever you can. Xoxo Nikki
@@nikkistahr7105 We make our own destinies, not some mythical Bronze Age sky god. However, this doesn't mean we shouldn't have some compassion for our fellow human beings who are having a hard time in life.
@Mr. Common sense I heard property taxes in California are low due to the proposition there but also Texas has one of the highest property taxes in the country
I spent 3 hours talking with a homeless woman in Biloxi, MS. She lived in a heavily wooded area, where they all lived, very close to the gates of a VA. She said most of the homeless people back there made thousands a month in disability and various welfare benefits. She said as soon as they got paid, they went to the casinos, and were broke and back in their tents the next day. She said everyone she knew was homeless by choice. She was a very nice woman, I think about her often.
I saw that in Nevada a casino was giving free buffet meals, drink and some gambling chips to homeless people till they got them addicted to gambling and blew all their chekhov money there.. such dispicable people in this world.
Right, however…in my city….disability tops out at $1000/mo. Food stamps top out at $180/mo. Housing requires 3.5x’s monthly income. They still wouldn’t qualify for any shelter. Just saying. Receiving government money isn’t the flex anyone thinks it is.
@@nikkivamosh3221 Most housing is about 3x not 3.5. Also they'd be eligible for housing vouchers and public housing. Not to mention they could also join up with 2 to 3 other people and share a place
Every city should donate a certain amount of land for the homeless and only there is ready homeless would be allowed to set up a tent or any shelter that they're feeling erecting on that property but no one should be allowed to set up a tent or no structure on the sidewalk on a public Street
Appearantly my similar comment is'nt placed,yes ! With programs ,agriculture and all the bells and whistles of social care(s) Put this inactivity to better use
Those homeless bums can learn a thing or two from a Mexican illegal. They will do your garden work, pick your fruits, clean your toilets, engage in free market enterprises “selling fruits on the street corner” but one thing they will never do is be homeless.👍
The worst thing is that a lot of people, like you, are so afraid of becoming homeless as well, they strample even harder an look down even more. Your country gets more and more divided. But that’s not the way to solve this crisis, it’s going to get worse. You’ll see in 5 years. Remember me
It can be addiction and mental illness but it's also because rents have quadrupled way past minimum wage. Also some people have medical bills or are physically too sick, disabled, or too old to work. I met a woman who used to be a nurse and then was in a horrific accident and had a terrible brain injury and did not remember anything, she was homeless and then committed suicide. I know a teacher who sleeps in her car because she can't afford to pay rent.
Even on disability you can't afford rent on your own. They say the program keeps people out of poverty 😆yeah right! I'm grateful for it but I don't have financial independence
Since the 80's homeless population use to be mentally ill and addicts, but over decades it's recently moved to working class who cannot afford housing, or have 1 emergency happen, ie job loss, starting over, a medical bill, loss of transportation, on and on... There's a lot of dynamics and situations involved.
@@IIII...... Your opinion is born out of absolute stupidity. Do you think you can live in an apartment anywhere in the USA when your only income is SOCIAL SECURITY of $882.00 per month because you are 70+ years old, worked all of your adult life when the minimum wage was $1.00 an hour? You were assaulted by a disturbed coworker which left you disabled and now you cannot work to increase your income? You never did drugs, never drank alcohol, never had any mental health issues, have a safe driver license, never been arrested..... all around upstanding citizen of the USA but the cost of renting a room is $1100.00 a month in the area where you live and NOWHERE IN THE USA IS ANY SUBSIDIZED HOUSING AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY ARE FULL. NO. YOU ARE A HOMELESS PERSON NOT BECAUSE OF ANY FAULT OF YOUR OWN, YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO RENT ANYWHERE TO LIVE.
@@contactjoy4140 so up your education and get a better job. I never understood how people born in the US, can reAd and write the English language and still do worst than immigrants who come here knowing nothing but they wake up early and work hard. Working jobs they don't like and somehow they are able to start and raise a family under a roof they call there's. How?
Im from Australia and my friend and his wife just returned from the States on a holiday. I asked him did he have a good time? His answer was no. I asked him why? He said the Homeless people and settlements they saw. He said they were stunned at the difference between our Country and the US.
Very true. Was in US early 2019 pre Covid and saw lots of homeless people in LA, New York, San Francisco and Las Vegas. We are lucky in Australia. US is just retail and not a good place to live.
Don’t fool yourself. Homeless problem in Australia is also increasing as it is in the US. The Australian Bureau of Statistics said 116,000 people were homeless on census night in 2016, representing 50 homeless people per 10,000.
I was homeless for 6 months when I was 15. Family split up and I lived in a tent in a local park. I was still going to high school, was able to make it by, showering in the school or at a friend's house. I got a job at a landscaping company, and was able to move into a seedy motel. I had three jobs, then was able to save for a room in an apartment. I never took a penny from the government. I went to college, then medical school, and am retiring now after over thirty years of practicing medicine. I had always felt I had the responsibility to get off the street. Why would my right to "check out" of society allow me to negatively impact other working people's right to clean and safe streets? The current homeless camp out on the streets in front of businesses, and homes of the working poor, adversely affecting them. There were laws of vagrancy that should still be in effect. Their rights end when the trample on the rights of others.
@@rhondaburke5700 I completely agree with you. The available funds were misappropriated. However, the thesis is still true. Some years ago the left abandoned those who were unlikely voters (the mentally ill) and redirected funding to more likely voters. Psych Hospitals were closed (Dammasch for example in Oregon), and money was directed to the horribly failed "Oregon Health Plan" by Governor Kitzhaber. I was a proponent of keeping the mental health facilities open as a good and needed use of funds.
@@courtnayj4990 Good on you Courtnay. And do navigate services when the need arises. That's what they are for. But for these people it's a life plan and a retirement plan.
I wish all of the homeless people start to migrate in the HOLLYWOOD hills and teach the Hollywood elites that our problems are their problems. Let's start a pilgrimage with all the homeless people on skid row, and let them set up their tents on their side walks, and I will garantee you the homeless situation will be solved in California... who's with me?
I'll be there first to admit I could have been homeless had it not been for my parents leaving me property. I let drugs control my life until I decided to take proper control of my life!! The addiction problem is within a person. It will not be conquered until people take responsibility for their own lives!!! Been there done that !!!
Tax the LDS church in utah...and fix the homeless problem,if this cult religion wants to influence the states laws then it should deal with its problems
I was homeless for 4 years and I'm going to say both there is the cost of living that causes a problem but there's also drug use that causes a problem I've seen it all being out there for 4 years I was finally put somewhere where I needed to be and I love it I've been here eight years now haven't been happier God bless you all
My husband and i became homeless after my open heart surgery and eye surgery our landlord wanted more money more than our income,So rents here in maine are around 1200 for 1 bedroom and you pay utilities average ss is 900 a month this started in july of last year now with a loss of vehicle ,just a note before the pandemic average 700 a month.We are dying and the government doesnt care as long as the poor working people keep working for the rich man and we really (meaning government) needs to help the americans ,i see 80 yo vets on the streets and i am now one well not the streets yet but i fear soon .thank you for your videos but i am afraid we have a country that does not care and dont want to waste the dollar on the poor.God help us!
Regardless of reason for homelessness, the US govt should stop its hegemony in the world and solve its domestic problem. Trillions lost in war created by the US govt.
I don't get upset if my taxes go to trying to solve homelessness, drug addiction, and mental illness... I get mad when taxes fill politicians' pockets.
The problem is, no matter how much money you put into it; it would still doesn't solve the problem. If you give a homeless drug addict a $1M; he would spend that $1M on drug before sheltering.
And THAT is why homelessness will not be solved. There is big money involved which makes it to where they claim is going to go. LOTS of hands getting a slice the money pie. Follow the money. Homeless Industrial Complex.
or bombing innocent people on the middle east
@@HeatherHanderson : sad but true. Homeless people who are addicted to drugs make scoring their drug of choice their highest priority - that’s what addiction does to you. I have given people holding up signs asking for money $5, hoping that they would use the money for food or maybe towards a motel room for the night. But I’m not naive and probably some of the money I have given homeless people is used to buy drugs or alcohol.
I feel badly for people who are homeless and/or addicted to drugs/alcohol but it seems like it is very difficult to get them the help they need to get off the streets and to get sober. People have got to want to help themselves - you can’t force it on them and as long as that’s the case, there will always be homeless people and many of those homeless will have addiction problems.
I’m from Australia , a single mother x 2, no support from ex, if l didn’t have my parents to give me a roof over our heads then l would be homeless
When I was diagnosed with cancer in 2017 I decided to move away from the city into a 20 year old single wide mobile home and I purchased a 20 year old suv with cash. The joy I felt after relieving myself of the big city interest based bills and the apartment I couldn't afford was immediate and immense. Living small helped turn my health around for the better. However, our society places so much value on shiny new and expensive things that I felt ashamed to tell my friends and family the source of my happiness. I was ashamed that I have a master's degree and I live so small... I work everyday but I prefer living this way. My point is that we have to stop shaming living small and living cheaply because everyone trying to live beyond their means is what got America into the situation. Living beneath your means needs to be celebrated and it needs to become trendy. Before we can fix poverty in this country we have to change our poverty mindset.
Completely agree. Living in the countryside is high quality living. Being surrounded everyday by Gods beautiful nature.
Thank God for you and your learning to live below your means. You should really write a "how to" book on living below your means a loving it and loving life. There's so much superficiality in this country with worldly possessions and brand new this, that and the other that people are no longer human but shallow, empty, superficial androids of a commercial. "You" my friend are what "real" America should be!
People aren't designed to live in big cities.
I hope you're in recovery, I like your mindset and I would like to live a life without the modern pressures of society. Hussle, grind, job promotions, flash cars, it's not what makes people thrive...take care 🙏
How are you now dear?
I use to teach High School in North Alabama . I discovered that two of our best students were orphaned and homeless.
It turned out that the Principal knew that they were homeless.
He would not report them to the authority.
The last time , he reported a student for being homeless , she was sent to a home ,where she was raped.
Yes the home was that bad.
So the teachers all help them out.
We brought them food, and Clothes. Both got scholarships to the Local College .
Thank you for helping those students. You and your fellow teachers are heros.
Woahh this is amazing.!!!
Takes a village to raise a child. Bravo for Teachers!
But they still didn't get a home
Y'all helped a lot but maybe they could also go to foster care ?
@@johndoe6260 We ask them a number of times if they wanted to go to foster Care.
They did not want to go.
They did stay with one of the teachers for about a year.
As someone who used to be homeless and was around a lot of people who were also homeless I can honestly say that it's not that they all WANT to be homeless. After you've been homeless for a while, it really starts changing your thought process. Most of the time people do not start off wanting homelessness, but you start acclimating to it. It becomes normal to you. For myself and most of the people I personally knew in the bay area that I have had the conversation with, the first thing that starts the downward spiral into chronic homelessness is hopelessness.
If you can't get out of it with in a certain amount of time (time varies per person) you start believing that there's no way out. You start giving up. You tell start telling yourself that your refer it because you don't see an out. You begin to accept it as your reality. After a while the prospect of going back feels just as bad and scary as the prospect of becoming homeless fo r those who are housed.
Now, if they're on drugs and/ or become alcoholics, that just puts the last nail in the coffin. Some already have addictions prior, but a lot of them start using to escape from their reality and become addicted, at that point it's not just that they've given up, but now the addiction has taken over their mind.
Rehabilitation is necessary for chronically homeless people. Drug and alcohol rehabilitation if they fell into that or if it's what put them there and rehabilitation to reenter society. Homelessness affects your mind that deeply.
Very well said but knowing a number of friends who decided to do drugs or drink all the time you can’t force them to stop drugs or drinking, it has to be up to them.
@@philipnestor5034 Either way they cant just lay in the streets.
@@truth4004 Hi Truth,
That’s true but you can’t go and move them. There’s “ free will” even if they’re slowly killing themselves.
Yes I agree😢😮😮
Very well said!
When I was a kid applying for work was easy. You just walked in & filled out a job application then waited for a call. Now you need a professional CV, 30 second me, letters of recommendation, etc. Then you get to interview with dozens of people. Looking for work is too crazy these days.
for a minimum wage job 😲
Those days ended when I graduated high school.
In canada a person need to be interviewed by a potential Dr to see if he or she will take you as a patient .
My same thoughts and i was actually talking about this with my parents a few days ago. So much bs for a retail job. The world is falling apart and you can’t even get a simple retail job real quick. Blows my mind.
Absolutely, now a days you have a primary skill and several backup skills to fall back on
I lived in my car for about a year just to save on rent. Its amazing how quick your money stacks up when youre not tossing half of it down the rent hole.
Yup.... sometimes ya just have too, just to get back on your feet...
Amen.
They are in WV TOO
Wa,SPOKANE,SEATTLE....KIDNAPPERS
Landlords are slumlords
l was homeless for 5 years. Just got back on my feet. Everything you said in this video is correct. The way the government is printing money now like a printing machine and low interest rate . The long-term outlook looks bleak for most people because the cost of housing will continue to increase all round America. Atlanta Georgia will be the next California. High cost of living and low paying jobs. it causes crime to increase.
And did you notice that they never increased the minimum wage incredible!
@Viva la Vida trump started the printing as did bush in 07, no?
@Viva la Vida they steal all elections .
Ilegals people with not soc. Security, language, no legal papers, no family make it here there is not excuse
You finally decided you wanted to earn your money instead of the government paying you?
I remember a guy in Jacksonville telling me he hasn't eaten in three days..... but was morbidly obese and three blocks from a community outreach that gives breakfast every morning at 8 and one that gives dinner and hands out day old bakery goods at 4:30 each day. All I could do is shake my head. Then outside the grocery store I was asked for "a few bucks" so a homeless guy could supposedly get something to eat. I looked at my phone, told him in about 30 minutes lunch would be served at the soup kitchen about ten minutes walk away and he got mad at me. Ive met formerly homeless that clawed their way out with hard work and I've also seen the same junkies homeless in the park for literally years. My advice is don't help those that won't help themselves.
My told me god only helps people that help themselves
A recent visit to Jacksonville & Gainesville was disgusting & dismaying in the no. of people on the streets, the abandoned shopping carts far from stores, the panhandlers at every intersection. So much so that local news started including stories of just how many were actually NOT homeless & hungry- THIS WAS THEIR DAILY JOB & they collected so much $$$ from Do Gooders they could pay their housing bills just fine. Obviously not all are stealing like this, but it made it even more imperative to pocket your bills or donate your cash (&/or time, sellables) to charities that do WORK!
Recent visits to Jacksonville & Gainesville, FL were disgusting & dismaying in the no. of people on the streets, the trash left all over, abandoned shopping carts far from stores, & panhandlers at every intersection. Intriguing were local news stories of just how many were actually NOT homeless & hungry- THIS WAS THEIR DAILY JOB & they collected so much $$$ from Do Gooders that they paid their housing & food bills just fine. Obviously not all do this, but it made it even more imperative to pocket your cash or donate it (&/or time, sellables) to charities that do WORK!
As a retired nurse I realized we are all a closed head injury away from homelessness.
Thats ok. You go ahead and keep that.
@@ceilidhachaos1 what
BS!!!!!! There's disability and housing for the disabled! Don't speak lies. Some people will believe you when its garbage!
Not sure where you live but in Massachusetts if you get in a bad car accident they don’t throw you in a tent city. Lots of steps in between
🤦♂️
Mental illness is not addressed in this country. I was homeless for 15 years until I addressed mental health. For some politicians that's too much work
Nearly everybody will have some degree of mental 8llness but though it may be hard to cope with living with it, it need not prevent one from working and having all all the good things the rest all selfishly grab for themselves. The problem is that some mental conditions are stigmatised. Take Narcissistic disorder, not even a serious one, just a personality disorder. Feminists are fixated on stigmatising Narcissists. Why? The hidden reason is political. Most narcissists will be very successful people and often males 8m positions of power. Though some glamourous eg artistic women feminists envy will also be labelled as narcissists, out of jealous feminist hatred and spite. This term is stigmatised as a way to bring down powerful, successful males and some women feminists hate and envy. It is really such a dirty low down tactic to discredit successful men and women who earned their stripes by honest means and much hard work. Why do they do this? Because feminists are what they are. 6jey play low and dirty, unfair. And they want such high status roles for themselves and "women", though they are useless and lazy and Gail 5o deliver anything of any value or worthless. Our political systems need cleaning out because they are replete with such women and weak men who support them. In Australia, when these feminists fail, they are very bad sports, bad losers. And if all see lost, they play their desperate "rape" card. And all our weak chivalrous men fall all over the to protect them. These are the very types feminists condemn as "patriarchal" pigs. If I were male I'd have more masculine self respect than to rescue and protect trash who deliberately get into work and social situations where they know there is danger for women. And if they are too young, gullible, naive and "feminine" to spot the danger from men in certain occupations, situations etc and handle it alone, my next question is: What are such women even doing in such jobs, places, situations etc? Like in politics, in big business roles etc. They are not fit for such roles because they can't handle them. They are too feminine and weak. Femininity is fine. But not for certain roles. Stick to sex, babies, nice homes, looking pretty etc. That is where you can excell as a feminine female. Stop boring everybody in boardroom meetings with your pathetic fabricated feminist tales of work about how you were subjected to imaginary rapes and sexual harrassment on the job you wish, but who'd bother?). Because nobody really gives a shot about your tragic rape tale of sexual abuse and all your feminist bullshit stories. And you'll be shocked to know that, among those who don't give a shot about you areany older women who have been genuine rape and abuse victims but dealt with it and didn't make a public show of it. And learner to readjust their own demeanour as women and self protect, to ensure it could never happen again. Take a leaf from the book of those women who really do know and can advise those 3ho don't. Why won't young female sexual harassment and rape and other female abuse so called "victims"???? take advice from older real ones' wisdom on how to be safe as a woman? Because they would be exposing themselves as the frauds and liars most of these younger ones are. Because a genuine abuse victims can instantly and instinctively pick another person who is also a true victim, especially if it is another woman or child.
people dont want low income housing in ther neighborhood. :(
@@glorialovesChrist yes sir I agree.i was homeless for 15 years now I work with the homeless it's so sad how there's so much hatred for the homeless. But I have to admit there's a lot of love also but most rich society has no compassion for homeless people
@@brianingram6214 yes sir. i do my volunteer homeless ministry here in LA CA. ive helped over 190 people leave homeless for good most are vets.
@@glorialovesChrist ok cali I'm a new Yorker so u know we seen the same issues
So depressing that our governments (I'm from UK) think that 'foreign aid' is more important than looking after their own citizens.
They launder the money that they alocante for government aide , back into their political party and personal greasing their pockets along with the officials who receive the money in the foreign countries . Example is what was being sent to the Ukraine for HIV side. It was sent by our dear Deborah Birx to the ambassador that testified against trump . The email that went with the money said , here go have fun .First stimulus bill had lots of pork and one requested allocation was for HIV side.
Amen
bullshit.....you voted for BREXIT. So "your" country is the most importnat issue. Bu if you are still voting for spoiled Etonians and there elite clique , you are done like the US.
They’re buying influence with that money. The foreign aid is not given freely; your government will definitively get something in return.
What I find is more depressing (I'm from the UK too) is that billionaires get government handouts and then pay no taxes. None. They don't give a damn.
I grew up in California. I've never seen as many homeless people in one place as Denver, Colorado though. I once visited 20+ years ago, and the city was absolutely flooded with homeless people on almost every block. I was so shocked. I have to also say that, when I first entered the city, I was so overwhelmed by the stench that I vomited a couple hours later. The whole city smelled like an open latrine and I was so relieved to be on my way a couple days later.
It's way worse now I tell ya
I don't know where in Denver you visited 20 years ago but Denver's homeless were not everywhere but was confined to one area surrounding the homeless shelter, now that we legalized marijuana, there are tent cities everywhere. And now we look like California.
Are you sure it was Denver? Twenty years ago? Colfax street was rough but even then there were just a few people experiencing being homeless and no tents.
@@CORED5150 Don't you dare blame weed.
@@CORED5150 More like now that meth has taken over half the country...
When in reality ‘our government’ give millions to other countries. While neglecting our own people. These politicians are so out of touch. Sad..really
Not to mention the military spending and the trillions penta-gone 💀
Stop all foreign aid. Australia should do the same. Our own people must come first them help others if we can. Foreign charity recipients live very well but our own people do it hard.
Remember what MJ say "they don't care bout' us."
Cut the military spending would help too.
3,8 billion Israel support per year itself!!!
Speaking as a taxpayer, I would be less upset if my tax dollars were used to help the homeless instead of shipping US funds to foreign countries. How about solving our own problems first? Not to mention the government fritters away tax money like a drunken sailor on shore leave.
Aaaaaaaaamen friendo
You and MILLIONS AND MILLIONS of people in this Country feel exactly like you! Please help the people of this Country FIRST!
The DoD needs to be scaled way, way, WAAAAY back. They haven't earned their keep since 1945.
I do agree that we need to fix our own problems first but we can't just throw money at the problem and expect it to fix itself. You could give every homeless person a home and in 6 months most of them would be back on the streets again because they are too irresponsible to take care of themselves. There are "now hiring" signs everywhere. Yet they choose to just walk around with signs begging for money instead. Many of them just decide being a mooch is better than putting in any effort. They actively decide to live as a homeless person.
@norm simpson Those people are simpletons who feel warm and fuzzy when they see a flag waving. I can't believe people who came up during Vietnam continue to the Dept of Defense deserves a blank check year after year.
I lived in the Seattle, Kirkland, Lake Hills area for ten tears in the late 60s. A top floor of a duplex on Queen Anne hill was $75 per month. A garage apartment on Lake Washington in Kirkland $70 per month. A cabin with incredible scenery on Phantom Lake in Lake Hills was $85 per month. For five of those years I was in college with no job. The other five years I made about $4 per hour and drove a VW, had a motorcycle, raised two children as a single parent father. Money was never a concern. Life was so easy. What happened?
Capitalism happened. Capitalist imperative is private profit, it as a system has no concern for the individual. America is on a long slide downwards.
Concentration of wealth. A simple look at graphs comparing wealth distribution in both decades will show you what happened.
They sold all your jobs and opportunities off
Greed is what happend and is whats destroying America
They gave all our jobs to china and made them a mega power America is the country that made china super rich
The track that starts at 18:13 is amazing. Thank you for leaving the watermark in the corner so I could track the artist. Needless to say I like your video but that touch made the everything perfect.
He's great
One of my friends is technically homeless right now. She’s working 80 hour weeks to save up for a place of her own while she’s currently living out of her Jeep. She refuses any help or assistance. It breaks my heart to see her refuse any help but am also so proud of her for working so hard.
That’s sad to hear
Thats because accepting help ALWAYS comes with strings attached, and she probably knows that.
Everyone will a full-time job should have housing.
I did this before for 6 months and I agree with the commenter that said accepting help comes with strings. I was offered help by 3 people but I don't like obligations. I was able to save up $9k in those 6 months. No regrets.
@@chrism8180 Not true. I give ten or twenty dollars to homeless folks several times a week, enough for them to buy themselves some comfort. I don't care what they spend it on. Absolutely no strings attached. I just want to reduce their suffering a little bit. I figure with ten dollars, they can buy a pack of smokes, a couple of beers, and still get a hamburger.
I think there are a scary amount of people that are one paycheque away from being homeless all over the world.
I think you Are right !
I think it might be more of an American problem
We’ve got it In Europe too …
It's worldwide I think.
That's why u shouldn't work for anyone
Thank you Nick! I’m in Seattle, and just through life circumstance, I gutted out homelessness through all of 2020. Lived in my car and Motel6 most of the time. I kept at it and got a place of my own.
Now I get Food Bank donations for people that just won’t do it. Every week I try to feed at least four people. Eating can make some start to think better.
I know I do.
Goodonya
That's good
" I get Food Bank donations for people that just won’t do it. " Me to. It's so easy, but my 'friends' are just to lazy to get up at 6 am or wait in line for 30 minutes. Oh well, makes me look like I got it together.
May God continue to bless you to keep blessing others.
@@prestonphelps1649 smh man...
If you're homeless, how the hell to you just move with no cash!
You sound like one of those people who say pull yourself up by the boot straps and keep taking your boots.
Thank you for sharing all your efforts to document this situation.
It is sad to see the inceased homelessness. Also, the money spent in foreign aid, when it could really go to this domestic dire need for help.
"The world has enough for everyone's needs, but not everyone's greed"
Well said 💯.
@big pompano renewable energy. But as the quote suggest, people are too greedy to switch to it
quoting Gandhi. It's a very true quote.
@@luke_222 Renewable but unreliable
@Ryan Alex tax the non-renewable companies then, I don't care. If rather spend some extra money than have the earth literally uninhabitable by 2100
Housing cost in California are out of sight. Senior apartments are rediculous. Then gas ,electricity , water, trash. It all adds up.
yes. many senior men are moving to Mexico for sleeping room for $150.00 a month. Mexico loves our poor seniors on social security ❤
@@glorialovesChrist and your free to do so meanwhile were called immigrants in a land that used to belong to us.
@@lilgreen12 yes and hopefully in the future maybe one currency and open boarders?
and all the hollywood elites travel the globe trying to save the world with money instead of helping in their own back yard
I don’t pay water or trash here in California
2019, over a billion dollars was allocated towards the homeless situation in California alone, but mysteriously ended up in politicians pockets. We should have a receipt where all of our tax money goes to. I’d be fine If we had to pay a little more in taxes if we seen exactly where our money went to. things would be better if we could keep track and hold these politicians accountable like they do us.
That's just absolutely f****** despicable what a f***** up world and country these days
I got a housing voucher in SUPER WEALTHY PLACER COUNTY, CA. I am disabled. I was given 30 days to find suitable housing. It was MANDATORY to attend a "Housing Choice" SECTION 8 meeting for 3 hours. There were 4 VOUCHER ATTENDEES present. There were 12 (TWELVE) government paid employees in attendance some with government issued cars. Average salaries $35,000. Another disabled lady had to walk and was late. I have been homeless 18 years, I am considered MENTALLY ILL and I am not a drug addict or alcoholic. I am also educated. This supposedly great nation/government chooses whom it victimizes. I did not choose homelessness and I have HATED EVERY SINGLE MINUTE OF 18 YEARS OF HOMELESSNESS. I REMAIN HOMELESS AND HATEFUL.
PATHETIC IS THE UNDERSTATEMENT.
🤑🤮
@@sherileorna8450 I'm sorry to hear about your situation and you're absolutely right the government picks and chooses who they want to help who they don't want to help etc etc and somehow someway finds an excuse for every little thing that happens and or justifies it some way or another . God bless and be safe out there ❤️💯
Many of these politicians live in gated communities. What do they care?
With cameras on them as well!
Heya Nick! I just learned something. I know a guy, who owned at 3-4 hundred dollar home, on a giant lot, and he lost his job in COVID. He took out a 2nd mortgage etc etc but lost his house. Educated, worked his whole life, raised kids, and now, he is homeless. So, now my city has our first homeless person! The other day, I saw him coming back across my bridge, wearing sweat pants, and tennis shoes, and carrying a long bamboo poll, like a tightrope walker. He yelled that he wasn't on my property, he was in the creek! Then I saw him in town standing by a store ranting loud! In the same no shirt outfit. So, I've solved the theory. Homelessness comes before mental health issues or drugs in most modern cases. Sadly, he won't be homeless in my small city for long, and we will be back to zero. I'm in what is still called the bay area, but I'm not saying. " Mappy! Hush!!!" Or I'll tell the Mrs you got a stimulus check, and she will turn it into a coach bag! Ok, bye Nick. Just thought you would be interested.
That might be the best comment ever
@@NickJohnson All of the homeless people are not Catholics or Ecumenical Catholic or Non denominational Catholics. That is why they are homeless.😢
When most people spend 60 to 75% or more on rent or mortgage, what do you expect?!
There are many other states where the cost of living is much cheaper than Calif.
@@rampar77 unfortunately my arthritis can't cope outside of hot dry climates, winter here is even brutal with just rain and upper 30's...sucks!
Truth
Thank you! Here in Atlanta, the money addicted gentrifiers cannot ever get enough, with rents skyrocketing to two to eight grand a month, and this is still not enough for the money addicts.( I myself am formerly homeless person)!
to vote for BERNIE !
This is no longer "the richest country in the world."
Yeah it is
Only a very small few see the riches
@@aheazzy28 73% of Americans end up in the top 20% of income earners for at least a year.
This is the richest country in the world. The U.S. has huge reserves of gold and oil. This country is ritch, now its people not so much
@@SabrinaDacosta We are on the top 10 for every major source in terms of ppp per person.
Me and my husband where homeless for years he had always worked and took care of our family then he lost his job and I'm glad our kids where grown and out on their own before it happened but even though we live in a hotel and pay out of our paycheck every 2 weeks total rent is about 600$ a month and it's just me and him now but we don't have to ever worry about our lights or water being cut off cause it's all included with the room but so glad we are back on our feet once again this is the 4th time we have gotten back on our feet and I hope we don't have to do it anymore and because of the stimulus we where able to get us a dependable car good luck to those of you that are still out there hope you find your way soon to get out of the situation if you want to
I am glad you are doing better x
,oh really ky friend
In California hotel are 300 one night ......least amount to pay is 200 dollars.....and California makes bank on people that are homeless....so they don't give the resources.....if they give the resources for stability it's a paycut to them....this why more recently more crime has been happening.....all of these people work together it's a propaganda.....here going on....just like the house fires....I think that's a set up.....
@Wilande Frederici I understand.....it does takes time to master this place .....from last post to now...... currently all resources are opening up for me...I'm glad I kelpt trying...and I also found out.....maybe I was in the wrong neighborhood.....I found a neighborhood that accepted blacks......things are changing now......it's alot more mixed culture ....I keep trying ...I do wanna master my life ......
I am glad you made it out of homeless. Let me ask you something. Where were your grown children when both of you became homeless? You mention they are all grown and on their foot. Should they step in and help their parent? That’s what is family is all about. No offense but America have no family values. No wander why young people don’t have have children.
Hope you don’t have to be homeless again.
It’s amazing to you see how much you have grown in followers. I have been following you since the beginning and you sir deserve this! kuddos! Can’t wait till you hit that 1 million mark !
❤️❤️❤️
Homeless shelters are usually more dangerous than sleeping on the streets. I had serious plumbing issues years ago and had to leave my home with no warning. Because the cost of moving into a new place was thousands of dollars and I had just had to use my savings on something else, I was homeless for a while. In the shelters I was harassed by pimps, kicked out for having autism and one time even kicked out for getting a severe case of bronchitis in the dead of winter with snow on the ground. The hospital had given me a note and said that I need to rest untill the antibiotics worked because I was close to pneumonia.
Tent living is not only safer, but sometimes you get more sleep. At many shelters you are lucky if they let you sleep four hours. On top of that, homeless discrimination in apartment rentals and jobs is legal and common, so many can't find a place before the shelters kick them out. It's not the rules that is a problem for most, it's the safety and the discrimination.
Pimps and kidnappers hang around shelters because they know if they kidnap shelter people odds are they will be forgotten, and no one will look for them. Shelter discrimination is also a huge issue. Many are turned away for their sexuality, gender identity, religion, disability, race or even just getting a cold.
Omg Merissa please email me I'd love to hear more?? You have a good story to tell - NickJohnsonNC18@gmail
@@NickJohnson I will definitely email you. 👍
Re previously mentioned homeless shelter staff persons referring to the homeless as "flotsam and jetsam": staff persons do verbally abuse their homeless clients. Two staff persons in particular whom I overheard when volunteering proudly announced that "they just loved hearing about what the homeless have been subjected to." My reporting this to the shelter director resulted in being told "Well, we're not perfect. We're not paid that much for working here!" I was told the same when I had asked why donated food and clothing items were taken home by staff persons. Likewise when volunteering at food banks where the best food items are taken home by staff persons.
The combination is a bit of everything. Yes drug addiction, Yes high cost of living, Yes mental illness, Yes a failed government, Yes crime, Yes just bad circumstances. There is no one answer to the reason why this exists in America.
@john lee Being the richest country in the world is an illusion. We are 20+ trillion in debt and rapidly growing with no balanced budget. The is not the definition of rich. And not to get political, but both the right and the left isn't doing a thing about American homelessness. Give me a real solution and i'll gladly participate as part of my share.
Exactly. This isn't a black-or-white problem.
Our government.
Okay boss, you hit home on this one. As usual, your content and research is solid however there are a few items I would like to bring to your attention. Background-wise, I spent six years, feeding, clothing, and housing the homeless in Chattanooga, TN. I did it for another four years in Wichita, KS and four more years in Sioux Falls, SD. My experience was first hand, as a ministry, face to face, dealing with the homeless and the municipalities in addressing the issue.
In my experience, the population of homeless breaks down like this: 1/3 are totally committed to the lifestyle. They've checked out of our culture, they don't care to make a deposit to get the power cut on, they don't care to live the lifestyle the vast majority of Americans still choose to live. These people are sane, intelligent, healthy, some very well educated, many very talented, and refuse to remain a part of this culture we have crafted. And they do well in that world. Their numbers continue to grow at a higher rate than the other 2/3rds and at some point they may become a force we will have to deal with, like it or not. These folks look at life and their values system is a vast departure from the American norm.
The second third are folks who are just totally incapable of helping themselves and there is no social net to help them. When I was feeding in Chattanooga, there was a man with some form of epilepsy who could not keep food on his fork from plate to mouth. Twice a week I fed him in the same fashion I fed my one year old child. I was told innumerable times by other homeless that those were the only two solid meals he got in a week. I believe that several other members of his community started helping him. But for him, there are twenty others I can bring up as bad or worse with no one to help them. I could help that one and I did, but he was but the tip of the iceberg. Social services has nothing for this segment, hospitals won't take them in, no sanitariums, nothing, just whatever charities and ministries that step forward to help is it. Point is, about a 1/3 of them cannot help themselves, they truly are society's refuse.
The last third is a bit more complicated. These are what I called the "one-handers." One helping hand and they'd gladly rejoin society. Some are dodging ages old arrest warrants or lawsuits, many are families trying to stay together while ADC agents are actively trying to take the children, many have accrued onerous indebtedness that once they have a paycheck (turn up on the radar), the court will garnish so much they have nothing left to live on. So what's the point of working? Point is this segment, this 1/3 of all homeless are pushed there because they fell afoul of a very unforgiving system, judicial and societal. With a good attorney and a compassionate judge, most of these people would be back to work in no time. And they would return to normal society again. But without that one helping hand to help keep the family together, to arrange rational garnishment to recoup debts, to reconcile an old warrant for disorderly conduct or fleeing the scene of whatever, they will get locked up and will have to appear undefended before a judge who in all likelihood will remand them without regard that they've lived the last eight years without offense.
I do take exception to your repeated use of mental illness in the community. Take ANY American, deprive him of regular meals for two weeks and very irregular sleep with spotty hygiene opportunities and tell me they won't get 'loopy.' The simple fact is this, most Americans have not experienced hunger, physical insecurity, and lack of sleep for any protracted periods. Most Americans put into those circumstances would fold like a lawn chair. These people are tough, but more importantly, they are survivors of adverse circumstances and living conditions. I saw no more evidence of mental illness, alcoholism, or drug use in their community than I did at work, church, or the local filling station. The problem is we are looking for a reason to not help, to not get involved, to wash our hands of participating in a solution. The fact is, the problem with damaged people is that they know they can survive. And that frightens normal Americans.
Now one can argue harshly about all of this and that is their right. When I first went into that ministry in 2001, I had the standard Republican attitude about the homeless. I was wrong and so are most people. But here is the final point, while many choose to argue, they choose to argue because they do not choose to help. To help their fellow man where his homelessness is not his problem but rather an effect of another underlying issue. A third of them we cannot help because they reject our lifestyle. But we can help 2/3's, but that would involve enabling ministries and many other charities to take the fight to the street. There are plenty of people willing to take this on, but there is institutional and civic resistance to it. The municipalities resist the help through onerous licensing and permitting for the charities, law enforcement preys upon people trying to get help by surveilling and arresting people in line for a meal, the list goes on.
We've created the problem by creating a culture, a legal system, and a social order that is so harsh and unforgiving that perfectly capable and rational people choose to affiliate with society's refuse rather than continuing to participate in it. Cancel culture = Counter culture.
Amen brother. I too have worked with the homeless in Reno NV, The problem here is that rent has skyrocketed in tis area. We have a Christian organization who is lobbying the City, County and state. No surprise though they are often ignored.
Thank you for your ministry.
Alvan Karpas yes! You put it way more eloquently than i could have. I'd like to add that no one should be forced to live within social constraints they choose not to. If people had their basic needs met, if one chose not to live indoors then they could feel free to roam without fear of freezing or starving. We can allow all types of people to thrive.
💜
I was homeless enough that i could write a book about those days. I agree with the above that for at least 1/3 of them it is a way of life. When i first hit the streets there were some that had already been there for 15-20 years. On the streets i had my hustles and was known as being someone who was always looking for some kind of work and had things going. Guys like me were like the homeless elite. Whatever would help us get up and out is what we were looking to take advantage of. Even the Police would let us slide when we showed (Paystubs, business cards, etc) that we were doing what we could to rise above. The really hardcore "nutcases" that needed to be institutionalized weren't that many from my experiences, but they sure were there. If they were the harmless types, everyone kept an eye out on them. A few times, people would get them out of certain situations since they didn't know better and couldn't help themselves. As for survival as a whole? I was with good people at my last two camps and we had things down pat. We actually had it way better than the people in the shelters. Oh yeah, we were street survivors par excellence and i know for a fact that if i have to go back out there, it'll just be a matter of getting back into that old routine. Except this time i have better gear.
San Francisco was so beautiful 11 years ago. When I moved my youngest out of the city I can now sleep at night. So sad.
LA is single handedly the filthiest place on Earth. I live about an hour away...going to LA is like going into a 3rd world country. I'm not over exaggerating one bit.
LA is one of the filthiest places depending where you go. Downtown is a place I used to go before. Now, I can’t go there again without seeing homeless tents all over the place and drug addicts.
And it's going to get a lot worse thanks to our jobs going to foreign countries.. Not all homeless people are drug heads or alcoholics.. you have clean whole families out there now..
yes
homeless people are coming to LA to be homeless every month. The legal tent cities , the crack, the meth , the weather. Breaking Bad LA Homeless CA . i live in Hollywood CA.
@@glorialovesChrist the weather is a lot better for some of these people..not all homeless people are drug heads either .thanks to the evictions going on we have whole families out there now.. not all of them drink alcohol. This problem is only going to get worse.. the cheapest rent I have seen was 450 in a nasty little trailer park that should be condemned..that is right here in Arkansas if you want drugs you go to the trailer park if you want alcohol you go there if you want sex you go there not to mention there's sex offenders that live in there and there's innocent children that live there what is wrong with you.. this guy is a slumlord if you want rats mice and roaches you go there.. all of our work is going to foreign countries the average rent is over $600..here in Arkansas you have to pay rent gas electric water and sewer..now that is stressing my area I'm not too sure about other places..your job at McDonald's Burger King Subway Walmart is not going to pay the bills.. My own daughter has three jobs she was looking at number four she probably has it by now..
@@karenlee3372 true
I'm so thankful that my landlords are renting me a place to live in at a reasonable rate . Inflation is uncomfortable but i'm thankful that my job pays for my life.
You are lucky because rents are going up everywhere . Rent prices rose by 0.8% in june from a month earlier, according to the labor department it is the largest monthly gain since 1986.
How can the typical family with average income afford a higher rate+ more expensive home? in my area multi generational home is becoming the norm . Don’t forget to add the inflation which just this week was 9.1 on the CPI , producers index 11.3, it’s going to be a rough ride for sure.
@@PhilipMurray251 Time will tell how this period will treat people that never save, invest, lived beyond means, paycheck to paycheck, too many kids, too big of home, keeping up with the joneses with FOMO,YOLO, paying alimony, child support, etc
I raised all my rents at least 30% in the past year. You better hope your landlord doesn't catch on to reality.
Speaking from the perspective of someone who has been there, I believe that there's very few homeless and way too many houseless! Because I slept better under a bridge, in a canyon, or otherwise without four walls and a roof than I did living inside! It was a matter of the people I surrounded myself with. I've since gotten off the street and now have my own apartment, held down a job for the past 6 years, and continue to move forward and upward every day!
Good Melvin! Let people know how!
@@NickJohnson "Some More News" and "Telltale Atheist"
are the perfect Continue of this VIdeo here.
Sorry if i sound like an ad-bot, buut oh well, what can one do.
Its totally Different the last few Years specially after the phoney housing boom we're having our rent went up $1000 instead of Raising us up slowly over the next few years they threatened us with Eviction we were at that address for 12 years never short or late on our Rent or bills even during the pandemic Greed kicked us to the Curb now they're just Charging a processing fee an putting us on a Rediculusly long waiting list an putting the money in their Greedy little pockets!
"a matter of the people I surrounded myself with" Wise words sir.
STAY ON POINT 🤔 AND THANKS FOR SHARING WITH US 🤔 LIVING BY FAITH EVERYDAY IN A LIFE THREATING SITUATION EVERYDAY 🙄 LIVING ON THE STREET 🤔 GIVE GOD HIS GLORY 🤔 FOR THE BREATH OF LIFE TODAY 🤔 GOD, IS A WAY MAKER 🤔 FROM NOTHING TO SOMETHING 🤔 IN JESUS NAME
This is crazy! I’ve never been to Cali always wanted to, always felt like it was the most popular state on the map but after seeing all this, I’m sick. No one should have to live that way according to the funds that this country has available smh
I don't want my money going to some druggie
so that he can buy more drugs.
The most popular state is NY. California is probably 2nd. There is more history in NYC that L.A..And also has the same issues with homelessness, mental illness. etc
We were homeless kids in Florida a few years ago and lived in a tent city. Also lived in our van which was hard for a family of six with a dog. Alot of employers don't want to hire homeless people so our mom had such a hard time finding work so we just had our Dad's paycheck which he's a mechanic and it's hard to feed four kids on that salary. Our Mom made a friend who actually helped her find a job and now we're off the streets living with our grandparents with two more dogs. Parents both working, all four of us kids are in school and we're not getting the crap neat out of us every day and aren't going to bed hungry any more. Being homeless was terrifying especially for four young kids but we stuck together and our parents kept us safe and as a family we got through it.
All of you will have a rich and exciting life! You will appreciate everything much more than most..you will be able to cope with losses and setbacks in a way that pushes you ahead! I will be thinking of your family everyday and sending extra love and strength!
I've always said and I maintain it today, the breakdown of the family, as an institution, is at the core of the homelessness we see today. Drugs easily follows and compounds the problem. You're the lucky ones and thank you for sharing 🙏
@@fernfreeman1729 I totally agree with you !
Bless your hearts.....do your best to go to college & get an education so you will always have job skills & experience to stay off the streets....💜
@@GotoHere it wasn't always like that we were 10, 11, 13 and 15 when it happened our parents were teen parents and they couldn't control what happened. You could be rich and thriving one day then something happens and your poor and hungry the next. We weren't rich but our parents always paid their bills, we were fed, bathed, clothed and raised well. Our family fell on hard times something happened to us that our parents have a hard time talking about to this day and it's been a couple years now. Our family is strong our parents lived us they always put us first no matter what. We pulled through and kept our family strong. We can't control what happens in our lives the good and the bad we have to take it as we go. We don't blame our parents for anything because they were strong and we got through it. Would go through it all over again to avoid being taken away from them.
Been homeless manyatime, myself. Last six years, however has been quite uneventful. I must conclude, however - 'we are all a few paychecks, from being homeless' ! 😬 🇺🇸
Quit spending all of your money.
Maybe make better decisions
@@ppenguinsjb1912 Everyone has made bad decisions that had the potential to bring them down. Most people have the good fortune to get away with those decisions, thereby dodging a bullet to their livelihoods. Some of us have been less fortunate and gotten back up after a terrible time of it. More than not desiring to and many destined to get back on their feet.
@@bobpeters61 I'm not saying you're wrong you're not saying I'm wrong perhaps a little cold hearted in my statement
I agree.
California”s new state flag should be the blue tarp, for all the homeless shelters.
i would sign that petition lol
Theres a good flag version of the bear being replaced by a homeless guy pushing a shopping cart.
🤣🤣🤣👍👍
a sickle and a turd crossed
Yeah and the ones coming to Colorado are causing the same landscape! It’s GREED!!!! Jerks have everything but cause suffering wherever they go!
If you give everyone homes with requirements like Houston, then NO it will not create a “no one will work” issue.
I was homless for 2 years while I rased money for rent. Homlessness was never the first choice. Its the end result of a lot of struggles. And with the streets comes new hard struggles where you really can loose faith in humanity.
Im happy I had my faith in God and stayed strong and fighting the battle.
Stay strong if you are watching this and still struggle to come out of it.
I pray God blesses you and sends good people on your path to help you and that you will resive a helping hand with no shame ♡
I need ppl to help me insist on a small new government tax to wage war on poverty we could end homelessness in like two years with my plan building 200,000 plus tiny homes a year with running water in America
A friend of mine lived in San Francisco, worked as an engineer in a start up company. It went well for a couple of months but then the start up was starting to struggle and they were late paying him his salary. At a certain point they did not pay at all anymore. He lost his flat and everything he owns and moved into his van. Because of this he was not able to find another good job quickly again, cus he had no adress. But the unpayed bills were still there pressuring him to pay so hard, that he had to sell his van as well. He landed on the street - an engineer, educated and young (beginning of his 30s). Since he was an Australian citizen he had to leave the US because of his unpayed debts and was banned to enter the country for 2 years. It is a ruthless and barbaric system.
Das ist nunmal das System.
Es entledigt sich aller, die zu spät schalten.
Niko, thanks for sharing & it's devastating for anyone to loose a job & I've been there; however, when he lost his job & apt. did he seek help at all from the various San Francisco agencies for the homeless?
@@rayolivarez3106 no I think at the point of homelessness he just went back to Australia, also because he felt frustrated and hopeless about his situation there. He accumulated debts because he still had to live on something but he did not got the chance to get a job again and pay debts back so the downwardspiral was so bad that he kind of just gave up to make it there. But his situation is also a bit different since he was just able to leave the country and start another life.
@@nikoe300 glad your friend was able to pick up the pieces again & start anew in life bec he's too young to be homeless at 30yo. God Bless him.
That is so offensive that Australians are told that, when our country has been fighting alongside America in every single war since and including the Civil war and we are the only country there's never missed one of your wars . Maybe our government should tell your government we're not getting involved we're not allowing Australians to die so fat Americans can put oil in they're car if they're going to treat their most loyal ally like this
It is complicated ...All I know is I don't have too far to fall into Homelessness at 53 years old that is a terrifying reality . I help people when I can afford to.
I'm 52 and it wouldn't take much to make me homeless. It's extremely disheartening. I also help where I can and as often as I can. I wish you all the best.
@@sharon22669 I'm 55, I'm living a pretty good life, although low key and out of sight for the most part. But I rely on my wife, she makes good money but we all know how quick that can change. We'd be 100% F#@$ed if that happens.
I understand what you mean. I'm 52, making 80K/year, with maybe 200K of assets.
One accident, illness, lawsuit could flip my life from "middle class" to "poor" to nothing.
I'm paying 500/month for Health insurance and a minor visit at the ER cost my insurance 17.5K and I had to put another 2.5K from my pocket.
The veterinarian charged me $800 to keep my sick dog for a night to check him and the day after, wanted another 2.5K to opened him up because he couldn't find anything. I finally paid another $800 to put him down and incinerated. We are part of the UNPROTECTED of society!
I cant imagine, its harder to find a job at that age and your body has wear and tear. Ive been homeless before and i always help people whenever I can.
I was homeless for 2 years. I witnessed the churches of christ pit my name in their system for grants, while I received little to no help. I needed help with addiction and there was no help in a single church for this. I got tired and I did have death upon me. People even seen death sitting on my shoulders. At 4 am wondering scared exhausted but afraid to sleep, so high on meth I called out to the Most High! I did not know his name. I called to a false name with my lips but my heart was true, so he answered. I am delivered from addiction and the street because of Most High YaHuWaH. His people do not leave people stuck in spiritual bondage to live off them. Please seek truth in Most High by asking for his name with your whole heart mind and soul! He loves us and is waiting for us! Hallelujah is Praise Ye Yah. KumabahYAH. Come by here Yah, sang by his people who were enslaved in America and all 4 corners.
Here in Canada they want $1700 a month for a 1 bedroom
Apartment -crazy
I really enjoy your videos!
When you think of ALL the billionaires we have in our country...this is so sad. Such an imbalance in the world.
Yes, well said...
All these billionaires will not be allowed through the gates of heaven, all the suffering you just stood by not caring with billions at your disposal, go to your new master Satan you will burn forever
China has the most.they have over 10.000.
@@alexsegurasr3028 that's not factual at all. Christianity literally just says ask god for forgiveness and receive Jesus and you get into heaven. No need to give up billions.
Song they play over the radio before combat, we don't need no water let the mf burn burn mf burn
I've been homeless for a couple of years
It wasn't easy, most programs out there supposed to help you, looked down on you
Like the monies coming out of their pockets, instead of state funding
That was frustrating, made me feel like I was bothering them
Paper work, questions were endless, repetitive
Made my situation harder, I felt worthless
The monies are coming out of our pockets, where do u think the government gets it money?
Just a question for real...did you have substance issues?
As a single homeless person the only resources you can rely on are food stamps and possibly a shelter. To think you will get more is incorrect, don’t bother. Working is the only way to get out of the shelter and once your working full time your food stamps will end. These are temporary solutions.
I was at a Salvation army food assistance centre not only were the young blonde women completely Clueless doing things like giving me pasta when I told them I'm living in my car , but while I was sitting there waiting for all the paperwork to go through to get my cans of creamed corn one of the ladies went into the petty cash went to the Indian restaurant next door . So wile I'm sitting there starving they're all stuffing their face with Indian takeaway in front of me no doubt paid for by people giving donations thinking it was going to the homeless
Often times sad, yetvery true 🙏💔
Politicians love homelessness as they profit from it.
There never has been, nor ever will be a politician worth a pint of cold piss.
Homelessness has become a multi-million dollar business...if every homeless person in America disappeared today...within 3-6 months there would be a whole new homeless population...consisting of those who now make their living maintaining the homeless...
Trump loves himself and is not, and never will be a politician. Just a phoney.
@@beescottwilliams1518 You have your head where the sun don’t shine. That’s all politicians.
How?!
great video - could you do the opposite video perhaps - the least homeless? or will it mess up those states? I'm one of those rare people on teh channel liking the good with the bad.
Fortunately the city I live in Florida believes in helping those homeless that want help. I was homeless for 4 years and have first hand experience before finally getting my disability approved and a HUD apartment. I thank God and my homeless shelter case manager for helping.
How long did it take for you to get your HUD in FL because I'm currently homeless I need help
I live in Sarasota County and recently (this year) saw a news segment on TV on how Sarasota has implemented plans for affordable housing to address the homeless population. Homelessness is everywhere and will some day be coming to a city near you. It's all about how your local and state government addresses the issue. The city of Sarasota county does not allow homeless people to pop up tents on the sidewalks like they do in all these other places. I feel like our government officials actually care about this problem and are proactive about it. I have lived here now close to 30 years and have never seen our city like these other places. I believe there is even a law that passed a few years back that panhandling on the streets and in traffic is illegal. I use to live in Colorado when I was in my 20's and Colorado has really become a pit hole. It use to be a beautiful place to live even Denver, but no more. I thank God I have always had a roof over my head and he has always supplied all of my needs.
@@user-hz7kv6js6l Sarasota made being homeless a crime. They just put them in jail. The are hundreds of homeless people in Sarasota, they just hide in the woods to avoid jail. I used to live by University Parkway. There were a bunch ther before they built up the area.
Come on guys... this is the time for pay back..
@@user-hz7kv6js6l I am glad that you are grateful to God, but God didn't put a roof over your head and food in your mouth........you did that. As long as people mistakenly believe that it is out of their hands, then the problem of homelessness will grow.
Saddest thing is when you see a veteran who is homeless.
Veteran have many outlets to get the help they need. A homeless vet is either not a vet or not interested in following the rules involved in getting help from the VA.
Yea there's alot of programs
@@nickouellette5404 the VA is cheap and has its limits, they can do better
The VA is a joke and until you have had to deal with them you have no idea and need to get some more info before showing your ignorance.
@@nickouellette5404 the VA hires anti veteran sociopaths who hate veterans to work with veterans ..90 billion dollars a year is spent on the Va it should go to poor veterans and the homeless not for VA employees
The homeless have now overtaken Venice Beach in Cali..
And LA, and Beverly Hills and ...
@@amramjose sad. The exadus is underway. Who would want to live in that kind of place
Thats what you get for voting Democrat
@@rickdiculous5655
democrats prefer their loyal subjects to be cold, hungry, scared, broke, and dependent on government to survive
Take care of maras and chavistas
The people who live in Las Vegas help the homeless by taking food, clothes, blankets and other things. This was back in 2018 right after my husband passed away. Thankfully I’m no longer homeless and haven’t been for 3 years. I move forward and don’t look back.
I’m from a very small town, and even we have a couple homeless people. I took a trip to Chicago in 2015 and was so saddened by how many homeless people I saw 😞. And it wasn’t just adults! I saw soooo many kids that were homeless as well. I can’t stand seeing anyone suffer, let alone a child. I gave a 15 year old boy that was sleeping in a box a warm meal, and gave enough money to a mother to get a hotel room for the weekend for her and her two toddlers who didn’t even have coats on in the middle of December 😞😞
I live in suburbs of Chicago and yes we had 30 yrs of homeless here hi TAXES RENT NO Mental health help or hospitals only JAIL Illinois Cook county and Chicago Sucks that they hurt those who they claim to help !!!!
Brittany Reeder ..Aaaah...bless that was very sweet of u ☺.. it is so so sad..
A lot of the homeless and big cities actually came from smaller towns
Big cities have more resources for them to exploit so they relocated there
You're beautiful 😍
God bless u
We''re the "richest country in the world" with 28 Trillion in debt...
With China
China is. number 1 now
We could be out of debt by allowing the Chinese to move here tho. They don’t tell you that tho
@@303Thatoneguy china2 why
We are not the richest anymore, we are a debtor nation.
In my city (Los Angeles) the main reason for homelessness “in my city” is housing cost.
Nope! Drugs Drugs Drugs.
@Ryan Alex That is a factor! Supply and demand: there are way more people that want to live in California then there is a capacity to support, even with the governments help.
That doesn't explain why most new homeless people are out of state
drugs drugs drugs drugs drugs drugs drugs drugs, alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol alcohol, drug addicts don't work or pay any rent, housing cost is the least of their problems.
@Marion Hamer I live in CA and I get ask by homeless people if I have any drugs for them to buy or trade all the time when I go in to the dollar store or walking through public places, or constantly ask me for cigarettes which I hate cus I don't smoke.
Thanks Nick!!!
I committed petty crimes at the age of 16 just to get thrown in jail so I wouldn't freeze to death on the streets of Pittsburgh.
Aww I'm sorry email me maybe I can tell your story. NickJohnsonNC18@gmail
A lot of people have to do that
I'm sorry you had that fate.
I hope things are better now.
West Allegheny
😥
Growing up in Balkan I always dreamed of living in USA but now then Im all grown up, that dream turned into a nightmare 🙏🙏
Welcome To My Nightmare
@@jameslyons1624 not sating it was all milk and honey here, been on the streets myself and i know how it is.. But the scale of it in the USA is just mind blowing, just like the fact that YT is the only media you can find reports on this homelessness pandemic ... 🙁
usa=china 2.0 2021 lol
@@Steven-rp8zo im still live where i was, never moved to USA, like I said it was a dream to live in USA..im glad I didnt move tho, watching this tragedy 🙏
@@WillmobilePlus Maybe. But there is none, like really not a one tent on the streets in my location. I live in ex soviet state in eastern Europe and we are poor as f%c% compared to average american. But no tents on the streets. Is this video fake or whats up with the tents on the streets of US cities?
The social ties thing is true, I have family who'd rather stay and struggle with $2,000+ rent in an apartment in CA than come to Utah and pay $1,500 mortgage for a 4 bedroom house. If given the choice I'd live in fun warm CA too but living comfortably in a boring state is better than struggling every month imo 💆♀️
You are absolutely right about that
Utah's not boring. Stop putting down the middle states. They're not that bad.
I had a wonderful time in Salt Lake City when I was there in 2016. People were way nicer and more hospitable than in California where everyone has an attitude.
I'd rather live in the midwest or wherever it is liveable if I had a skill that could merit moving and earning a wage that could afford it
Great video! thanks for sharing
I think that monthly house rent might be a bit inflated
I realize that this is simplistic, but even in the last decade, more families have stopped supporting their ill and indigent children and siblings. My husband has been assisting his brother for decades. He’s been keeping him from having to live on the streets. It’s hard on everyone.
Back in the day the government forced families to support their kids
a lot of boomers are passing away and their mentally ill and adult children end up on the streets.
Everything cost more now and loving in smaller spaces
We need a huge ranch somewhere we can send these folks. Give em a few tasks so they have purpose, three squares and a roof. Get back to "no loitering" in the civilized spaces. And for God sake they shouldn't be voting. I say no one needing government assistance to make it is allowed to vote, their motivations are counterproductive.
@@elgringoec motivations of love, health, family, exercise, good diet, is counterproductive how?
I used to be homeless for about 5 years and honestly it's addiction as soon as I got the strength to get clean my life turned around I got my own place my own car full time job so ya keeping it 💯 it's all up to the individual wanting to change
Way to go, Brian
Greetings. Good for you Sir. And it's not that cut and dry for everyone.
Bless you Brian. So glad you had the strength and commitment to change.
How do you think decriminalization will affect the cities where that legislation is passing?
Yeah those who aren’t mentally ill can’t easily pull themselves out. I’ve been off the streets for Twos years and wouldn’t you know….when you don’t do drugs and want to change you can. And there is plenty of church ran organizations that help homeless people
The richest country on earth? We are the most indebted nation on earth and with no ability to clear that debt.
indept to whom, the privatly owned banks whoes money is actually just zeros on a computer...
We have the ability, just not the political will.
We could clear the debt by not sending billions of dollars to fund other countries just a thought....
@@herdarkwingsWell... We should have thought of that before destroying their entire country. We sow what we reap.
That's what the military is for. Eventually the economic system will completely collapse and then it will be about only war.
Excellent observation and commentary at 6:34
There is also money to be made “helping the homeless.”
That's what I found out when I was homeless. That's why you have to help yourself get out of being homeless
California went from Prison Industrial Complex to Homeless Industrial Complex.
Exactly. Fraud everywhere
possibly the reason why so much money spent and more and more living in the street!
you can not fix tweaker lazy people..
I came close due to a chain of unfortunate circumstances and it’s scary AF. This is heart breaking and I know some chose this but a lot do not.
Of those that make the effort to get out homelessness many do get out, but the ones that don't will just stay homeless.
yep me too, big imigrant family, i came to realize that i have to prioritize money over everything, because money can buy security like a home
@@noname-dy3fh Not if you don't have any.
In Portland the city was given a grant of 10 million dollars to help end the homeless and as it turned out only 1.2 million actually made it to the streets the rest went to catered meetings where only the neighborhood associations were invited. I know because I went to one and asked if they invited any homeless folks and was asked to leave by the mayor Wheeler.
When one thinks of government, the first things that enter the mind are corruption and waste.
Portland and San Francisco.
The Garbage Twins.
I don’t know if I should laugh or cry. Cry 🤦🏾♀️.
That's horrible. They want to talk the problem to death, and then do nothing about it in the end.
It's shameful.
Don't forget Seattle! We have our own socialist city council money grabbing bastards as well.
Thank you so much for doing this. You're good at your delivery.
@8:17 for example my son and I were homeless for 2 years. We live in CA my son worked full time and I was on disability. I was on chemo and could not just leave to a more affordable state. At end of our apt lease our rent was raised by almost 200. We slept in the car a d got a room occasionally. We used to gym to workout and shower. Reasons for Homeless has many components. Yes, some just like the freedom. Many get priced out. And a good many have mental health issues and can’t be at shelters. The US needs to put Americans first. I do not remember seeing so many homeless when mental hospitals existed.
Years ago, the homeless
were housed in County
Farms. They learned a
trade and were in their
own community.
Not that long ago, there were no homeless in America. We had affordable housing.
Blame it to China, you'll sleep better... LMAO
The homeless problems has many forms drug/alcohol addiction, job loss , economic hardship, mental illness, and just choosing to be homeless is root of homeless I myself was once homeless for 2 years but I managed to get past it but homeless is a serious problem that needs to dealt with properly
I bought a lot of whole chickens at Costco for homeless and butcher started crying when he asked me why so many chickens!He said he was never so hungry when he was homeless he was a young man
You forgot domestic violence!
@David Rodgers I don't disagree neccesarily but it would still be a losing fight.
It doesnt matter the reason people are on the streets. Humanity needs to get them off and put them in mini houses or similar, proper sanitary, portable showers etc. Get the army to make them move into decent tents or a mini home. Clean up the rubbish on the roads etc. Make sure it is supervised. Just show humanity to people. Forget about giving money overseas whilst people die in the gutter in America. What are Politicians for.
it has to be case by case. if a homeless person could get a room for 100 to 300 a month most homelessness would end.
You are So Right, about, your assessment, pleasure watching and seeing your travels.
Nick, I enjoy your channel so much. Thank you for the effort you put into it.
I'm a social worker (not practicing at this time) and I completed grad school in Las Vegas, did my grad school practicums in community mental health in LV, and worked in some of the worst areas of the city with the mentally ill doing mental health work. Now I'm back in NC. I see some of the same problems here that I saw in LV : drugs, lack of affordable housing. No one will ever convince me that drugs are a good idea.
Yes, people need homes and jobs but the thing that is lacking is also strong community connections between human beings where people can feel valuable, validated, and gain a sense of being productive towards something positive. So many people I worked with were just existing with no productive purpose to engage with and it leads to a lot of mental health issues compounded by poverty, trauma, etc and leads to drug use that just swallows people up. Very sad situation.
i agree! Thanks for the work you did to help people!
We need jobs, too. Good jobs with longevity and a livable wage so that people aren't so dependant on safety nets. People need a place to go every day to feel connected and earn a living.
@@johnsinger4244 free drugs for all.
@@mlynn2161 how about me,I'm form Tennessee and I have a million dollars to give away,which country shall I give?
@@NickJohnson hey nick do videos on most corrupt states , states with most drug abuse !!
I was homeless in Seattle for a year after my divorce, I had a job and a car. Every camp and shelter I visited was full of drug addicts 100%. I chose to avoid those places and I got a rental after a year and I had paid off the debts. Sad but true. Most homelessness is a choice to stay high or drunk or both.
You are one of the few homeless that were not there by choice to leech off decent people and the government.
@@ohioanempire it is true, 20 years ago , and now considered highly hateful to speak that truth. Thank you fellow Ohioan. I am 3 year here and love it.
@@marcouellette4671 I don't care what college students and stuck up politicians say.
I couldn't help but notice how that fucker bag Marc didn't have any youtube videls
Your ex wife let you without a home to sleep? How is possible to be so cruel?
The barbarism start at home...
I worked by LA Skid row for 3 years. I met the "homeless". For a lot of them they get their monthly disability check and spend it on alcohol and drugs. If you offered them a job they would decline.
Well duh anybody on the street usually don’t want any help and of course they don’t want to work
Don't call it a job, it's slavery and exploitation.And you give most of what you earn back to the corporations.
@Therese A. Judith Izzo-Davis not prejudice just looking at stats. Most homeless people on street refuse help from large charities and local gov, prefer to not work and high number use drugs
some of them may want a job but they probably cant get anywhere with it due to their current state
@@packisbetter90 not hard getting a job at your local mcdonalds
I love the awareness you are working to create.
American has really gone down.
ALWAYS has for MANY, but MOST folks IGNORED IT !
always has been
By demonrats standard its all bidens fault can't blame Trump anymore.
And will continue. I wonder how far we would drop if trump had gotten another 4 years of his economic and environmental bungling?
Amen.
The one part of the problem is that most of the money collected to help the homeless is eatin up in operating costs.
By design.
@Raymond Babcock what’s everyone’s problem with the rich? Homelessness is a government issue not some dude who became successful in life….
@Raymond Babcock uh yes it is the governments problem...and churches getting taxed? Well clearly you're an Atheist because you dont have an idea of the concept of place of worship. Imagine a muslim going to a mosque and they say you must pay to get in to worship. You know the outrage that would cause? Churches would need to create revenue in order to pay for these, "taxes." Governments job is to provide to the public and that is the same with homelessness.
There are "non profits" out there collecting literally millions of dollars every year to help the homeless, yet they only spend $100-$200K/yr actually helping. The rest goes into the pockets of staff.
“Why don’t they just move.”
When you’re already poor and exhausted, moving is really a big and expensive thing, especially if someone was moving across the country. Even harder for people with a child I would imagine.
Theres a lot of preparations to make that take money and energy.
Hey life ain't always easy
Must be even worse for women.
Well if you don't move, you are going to get run over by the bulldozer of life, so at some point, big boy decisions got to be made. You think the afghanis wanted to exfil THEIR country in chaos!??!? Common misconception is that all the afghanis want to leave Afghanistan and come to America, wrong they don't want to leave - however the environment is no longer tenable to support life.
Yet they somehow find a way to migrate to California 🤔
@@marenhuwald1445 If you have family to help you get on your feet, it's good. I moved from Texas to Ohio with my daughter, years ago. I immediately got a job. Saved money for a months rent and to turn on utilities, then moved out. Two month tops. Glad I had my sister to help.
One major problem has to be unrealistic expectations. People always want more than what they can afford, it's just that some don't understand how to tamp those expectations.
Germany here! We have at least a room for everyone. And we still love to work like crazy. You gotta have to know what you think you owe to each other societal wise. Just decriminalizing stuff isnt doing it alone, you have to invest heavily into social services. We had similar problems with drug usage in the 1990s.
In America we prefer to spend all our tax dollars on military bases around the world and playing war games rather than wasting anything on homeless ppl at home. Its democracy at work.
There are a lot of countries that have government provided high-rise apartments. I wonder about this claim that the U.S. is "the richest country in the world." If it is, then maybe it's like Texas, having money to help disadvantaged people but choosing not to. (They don't even give a last meal to their condemned prisoners before they die. I'm for the death penalty but that seems penny pinching to the max. After all, they're going to be dead forever.)
You see, instead of doing what your country is doing, America is setting up retarded shit like "injection sites" where nurses inject the heroin for the homeless themselves, or Biden hands out crackpipes using taxdollars to everyone, and worsesns the situation exponentially.
@@inkbold8511 So here is the thing about the military they misspend like all government agencies, but they also create millions of jobs, good paying jobs for the most part. No one that benefits from that is going to vote against it, even if they want to help homeless people. And why would they, without those jobs so many more people would be homeless. Part of the homeless problem is the misspending of funds by those claiming to help the homeless and the people that think we should keep spending the money the way we are spending the money and have very little progress to show for it. The government will fork out money for housing that is sub par yet very expensive, even the tiny house idea that they came up with in California they were spending $30,000.00 for what essentially should have cost $10,000 at the most. Our government has turned everything into a for-profit venture and those that are essentially making money from it will continue to vote for what is in their best interest. So those making money from overpriced section 8 apartments will vote for more section 8 housing, those making a living from the military spending will vote to keep that spending, cops will vote for a bigger police budget, social workers will vote for a higher budget for social workers, teachers will vote for larger budgets for schools and so on and so forth. Essentially the money allotted to house people is being spent on offices for social workers, offices for so-called experts, offices for workers in shelters more offices for people to determine who should get the help, offices for mental health professionals, offices for case workers, offices for drug counselors and so on and so forth and not much of it is being spent on actually housing people.
@@inkbold8511 fucking true man
Not many homeless in Mississippi, we just say, " Come on and stay at my house."
Yer a saint.
And also Mississippi's more affordable. I still don't understand how it gets ranked as the worst state every year.
@@seanbrummfield448 low paying jobs, paltry health care & very little leisure are a few reasons.
@@whooelse9444 Lol. I know. I was just making the person who first commented to realize Mississippi's not all sunshine and rainbows itself.
GOD Bless "Y'all"!!!
I was technically homeless for a bit when my ex kicked me out and I lost my job. I worked my butt off and got a new job and place. And also I didn't use drugs.
Yessir you are definitely doing it right while most of these people he's talking about are not.
Good for you !! People who start drugs just can’t snap back to reality sometimes and this will be their life till they die .
CapAnson12345..You are blessed, God kept the drugs away from you, kept longterm homelessness from you, opened doors where it looked like they were closed. I am so happy to hear about your blessed life. May you be blessed all of your days.
I have never been homeless but my heart breaks every time I see someone living on the streets or consumed by addiction..I do my best to give back.
Please once you can give back wherever you can.
Xoxo
Nikki
You will always be homeless if you don’t stop the drugs and booze..
@@nikkistahr7105 We make our own destinies, not some mythical Bronze Age sky god. However, this doesn't mean we shouldn't have some compassion for our fellow human beings who are having a hard time in life.
Many people would rather live homeless than work all day then when payday comes it all goes for RENT .. what kind of life is that?? Sad but true...
Yeah this is what happens when rent and utilities, groceries cost an arm and and leg.
@Mr. Common sense I wouldn’t just blame a new president coming in it’s just landlords are to greedy
@Mr. Common sense I heard property taxes in California are low due to the proposition there but also Texas has one of the highest property taxes in the country
@@luhh_salo property taxes in california are the lowest in the country due to prop 13
@Mr. Common sense no not property tax but sales tax and corporate tax
@@bruvlord1133 yes that’s the prop I heard about
Every time someone goes homeless a hedgefund owner gets his wings!
@Richard you must not have ever taken an economics class
Or a gentrifier gets another " shot" of money!
I spent 3 hours talking with a homeless woman in Biloxi, MS. She lived in a heavily wooded area, where they all lived, very close to the gates of a VA. She said most of the homeless people back there made thousands a month in disability and various welfare benefits. She said as soon as they got paid, they went to the casinos, and were broke and back in their tents the next day. She said everyone she knew was homeless by choice. She was a very nice woman, I think about her often.
Good secrets revealed by you. Must be tough with them to solve this matter.must make them social work for the welfare giving to them.
I saw that in Nevada a casino was giving free buffet meals, drink and some gambling chips to homeless people till they got them addicted to gambling and blew all their chekhov money there.. such dispicable people in this world.
Right, however…in my city….disability tops out at $1000/mo. Food stamps top out at $180/mo. Housing requires 3.5x’s monthly income. They still wouldn’t qualify for any shelter. Just saying. Receiving government money isn’t the flex anyone thinks it is.
Cost of living in caLifornia is expensive..
@@nikkivamosh3221 Most housing is about 3x not 3.5. Also they'd be eligible for housing vouchers and public housing. Not to mention they could also join up with 2 to 3 other people and share a place
Every city should donate a certain amount of land for the homeless and only there is ready homeless would be allowed to set up a tent or any shelter that they're feeling erecting on that property but no one should be allowed to set up a tent or no structure on the sidewalk on a public Street
Appearantly my similar comment is'nt placed,yes ! With programs ,agriculture and all the bells and whistles of social care(s)
Put this inactivity to better use
We need help for our own HOMELESS. THAN ADDING MORE PEOPLE TO OUR MIX.
Those homeless bums can learn a thing or two from a Mexican illegal. They will do your garden work, pick your fruits, clean your toilets, engage in free market enterprises “selling fruits on the street corner” but one thing they will never do is be homeless.👍
@Ralph Tamez The foundations of this country are European.
The worst thing is that a lot of people, like you, are so afraid of becoming homeless as well, they strample even harder an look down even more. Your country gets more and more divided. But that’s not the way to solve this crisis, it’s going to get worse. You’ll see in 5 years. Remember me
We can easily and properly do both, if our system had any heart.
Exactly. Close the borders!!
It can be addiction and mental illness but it's also because rents have quadrupled way past minimum wage. Also some people have medical bills or are physically too sick, disabled, or too old to work. I met a woman who used to be a nurse and then was in a horrific accident and had a terrible brain injury and did not remember anything, she was homeless and then committed suicide. I know a teacher who sleeps in her car because she can't afford to pay rent.
That's just sad
Even on disability you can't afford rent on your own. They say the program keeps people out of poverty 😆yeah right! I'm grateful for it but I don't have financial independence
Since the 80's homeless population use to be mentally ill and addicts, but over decades it's recently moved to working class who cannot afford housing, or have 1 emergency happen, ie job loss, starting over, a medical bill, loss of transportation, on and on... There's a lot of dynamics and situations involved.
And the rents quadrupling is also an addiction. Money addiction!
I believe the housing cost has driven people to a life of homelessness.
@@IIII...... Your opinion is born out of absolute stupidity.
Do you think you can live in an apartment anywhere in the USA when your only income is SOCIAL SECURITY of $882.00 per month because you are 70+ years old, worked all of your adult life when the minimum wage was $1.00 an hour?
You were assaulted by a disturbed coworker which left you disabled and now you cannot work to increase your income?
You never did drugs, never drank alcohol, never had any mental health issues, have a safe driver license, never been arrested..... all around upstanding citizen of the USA but the cost of renting a room is $1100.00 a month in the area where you live and NOWHERE IN THE USA IS ANY SUBSIDIZED HOUSING AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY ARE FULL.
NO. YOU ARE A HOMELESS PERSON NOT BECAUSE OF ANY FAULT OF YOUR OWN, YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO RENT ANYWHERE TO LIVE.
I think you are right. Not as much a few years back but much more of a reason now.
do you think JESUS WAS BORN HERE IN USA
THE DOLLAR AND THE ENGLISH MONARCHY ARE THE REAL CULPRITS. That's the real reason Kenedy was killed
@@contactjoy4140 so up your education and get a better job. I never understood how people born in the US, can reAd and write the English language and still do worst than immigrants who come here knowing nothing but they wake up early and work hard. Working jobs they don't like and somehow they are able to start and raise a family under a roof they call there's. How?
Im from Australia and my friend and his wife just returned from the States on a holiday.
I asked him did he have a good time? His answer was no. I asked him why? He said the Homeless people and settlements they saw. He said they were stunned at the difference between our Country and the US.
Very true. Was in US early 2019 pre Covid and saw lots of homeless people in LA, New York, San Francisco and Las Vegas. We are lucky in Australia. US is just retail and not a good place to live.
WORSE ......the state politician
They sit & relax ......wait the salay .😩😟😭😭👀 no longer
Ashsmed it self........hard face
😒😟😩😭👀🇵🇭🤑🤑😭😭🤑
@@sweetla4750 How are guns helping the homeless people here in the USA.🤔
@@kathiemathias212 Pre-pandemic, homeless people in Australia had climbed by 14% to around 290,000 people.
Don’t fool yourself. Homeless problem in Australia is also increasing as it is in the US. The Australian Bureau of Statistics said 116,000 people were homeless on census night in 2016, representing 50 homeless people per 10,000.
I was homeless for 6 months when I was 15. Family split up and I lived in a tent in a local park. I was still going to high school, was able to make it by, showering in the school or at a friend's house. I got a job at a landscaping company, and was able to move into a seedy motel. I had three jobs, then was able to save for a room in an apartment. I never took a penny from the government. I went to college, then medical school, and am retiring now after over thirty years of practicing medicine. I had always felt I had the responsibility to get off the street. Why would my right to "check out" of society allow me to negatively impact other working people's right to clean and safe streets? The current homeless camp out on the streets in front of businesses, and homes of the working poor, adversely affecting them. There were laws of vagrancy that should still be in effect. Their rights end when the trample on the rights of others.
Frank - can we talk? I'd love to hear your story! Email me! NickJohnsonNC18@gmail
@@NickJohnson Will do.
Obviously, you were of sound mind. Mental facilities were closed and people turned out on the street. That's where it all started.
@@rhondaburke5700 I completely agree with you. The available funds were misappropriated. However, the thesis is still true. Some years ago the left abandoned those who were unlikely voters (the mentally ill) and redirected funding to more likely voters. Psych Hospitals were closed (Dammasch for example in Oregon), and money was directed to the horribly failed "Oregon Health Plan" by Governor Kitzhaber. I was a proponent of keeping the mental health facilities open as a good and needed use of funds.
@@courtnayj4990 Good on you Courtnay. And do navigate services when the need arises. That's what they are for. But for these people it's a life plan and a retirement plan.
I wish all of the homeless people start to migrate in the HOLLYWOOD hills and teach the Hollywood elites that our problems are their problems. Let's start a pilgrimage with all the homeless people on skid row, and let them set up their tents on their side walks, and I will garantee you the homeless situation will be solved in California... who's with me?
No, I like my movies . Encourage them to Martha’s Vineyard
Yeah I'm fine with this.
You are right
You must be a socialist liberal!!
Rich people are everywhere not just California.
Can you imagine a world where people don’t have family members to depend on in times of crisis? That number would be more like 5500-10,000 a day
I'll be there first to admit I could have been homeless had it not been for my parents leaving me property. I let drugs control my life until I decided to take proper control of my life!! The addiction problem is within a person. It will not be conquered until people take responsibility for their own lives!!! Been there done that !!!
I’ve lived in Salt Lake 30 years and I’ve never seen the homeless problem as bad as it is right now straight tent cities all over downtown
I go to Slc 3 to 4 times a month and your right.
Portland too
Austin is a mess too downtown
Какого хрена этот чувак спамит мне в комментариях?!?!?! Канал с купленными просмотрами! Фу...
Tax the LDS church in utah...and fix the homeless problem,if this cult religion wants to influence the states laws then it should deal with its problems
I was homeless for 4 years and I'm going to say both there is the cost of living that causes a problem but there's also drug use that causes a problem I've seen it all being out there for 4 years I was finally put somewhere where I needed to be and I love it I've been here eight years now haven't been happier God bless you all
And now you play on you tube all day on your iPhone...still no job probably 😕
Right, so from being there would you say the drug or alcohol use goes hand in hand with homelessness?
What do you think about what he says in the video about some people just want to live like that? Is it true?
My husband and i became homeless after my open heart surgery and eye surgery our landlord wanted more money more than our income,So rents here in maine are around 1200 for 1 bedroom and you pay utilities average ss is 900 a month this started in july of last year now with a loss of vehicle ,just a note before the pandemic average 700 a month.We are dying and the government doesnt care as long as the poor working people keep working for the rich man and we really (meaning government) needs to help the americans ,i see 80 yo vets on the streets and i am now one well not the streets yet but i fear soon .thank you for your videos but i am afraid we have a country that does not care and dont want to waste the dollar on the poor.God help us!
Regardless of reason for homelessness, the US govt should stop its hegemony in the world and solve its domestic problem. Trillions lost in war created by the US govt.
In case you hadn't figured it out yet.........the US govt does not care. The only one that a Politician cares about is him/herself.
Bingo! 50%+ of our tax dollars go to military complexes. Imagine if this was spend on our social services and infrastructure.
@@inkbold8511 it is sad. America was a great country and is regressing because it is ruled by the top 1% Elite at the expense of the other 99%.