Really ..wow ..but here it's not just women living in Vans and cars going to get away from everything it's people living on the streets here too because they've lost half their income from somebody passing away and the rents are so high I feel sorry for them I really do it's a sad situationyes we read about it a lot and see it on Youtbe about the USA . Elderly..mainly women living in Camper vans and cars.... something that doesn't happen here in the UK simply because it's not allowed , not that there isn't homeless seniors....but definitely not on the scale of the USA
Really ..wow ..but here it's not just women living in Vans and cars going to get away from everything it's people living on the streets here too because they've lost half their income from somebody passing away and the rents are so high I feel sorry for them I really do it's a sad situation
Oh yes we know that we've seen it on the news... hundreds of thousands of people in the USA and in Canada...Really ..wow ..but here it's not just women living in Vans and cars going to get away from everything it's people living on the streets here too because they've lost half their income from somebody passing away and the rents are so high I feel sorry for them I really do it's a sad situation
It makes me wonder what happened to the golden yearsI live in a senior community and rent increases have had many take PT jobs to make up the difference ...
how long that will work is completely up to their age and health.
I agree that instead of seeing millions sent to foreign countries we need to help our own citizens
I agreeOk, this is the deal! Everyone, including governments on all levels have only so much money.
Question is what is your priority? Do you spend your limited money on?
a) Feeding and housing the poor and the homeless in your own community?
b) Fighting another "stupid" foreign war (actually 2 of them) and wasting billions of dollars on the death of women, children, dogs and cats?
I believe "a" is more important but who am I to "blow against the wind?"
I can only speak for the one person I know in the position... my neighbor. She's ... I think 70 now and is not homeless only because of the generosity of a local church offering her a very reasonable rent in a house a member owns. She was talking about it this summer... how she never expected to be in this position, but she knew why she's there. She admitted that she thought there would always be someone (she actually said "a man" cringe) to "take care of her." She never prepared... never even thought of the future because she assumed there would always be someone there to "rescue" her.It makes me wonder what happened to the golden years![]()
Ok, this is the deal! Everyone, including governments on all levels have only so much money.
Question is what is your priority? Do you spend your limited money on?
a) Feeding and housing the poor and the homeless in your own community?
b) Fighting another "stupid" foreign war (actually 2 of them) and wasting billions of dollars on the death of women, children, dogs and cats?
I believe "a" is more important but who am I to "blow against the wind?"
Thank goodness she has a little help and growing independent I wish her only the best in these trying times.I can only speak for the one person I know in the position... my neighbor. She's ... I think 70 now and is not homeless only because of the generosity of a local church offering her a very reasonable rent in a house a member owns. She was talking about it this summer... how she never expected to be in this position, but she knew why she's there. She admitted that she thought there would always be someone (she actually said "a man" cringe) to "take care of her." She never prepared... never even thought of the future because she assumed there would always be someone there to "rescue" her.
Well anyhow, the story is going to end well, I do believe. She has secured a part-time job in a discount store and is feeling independent for the first time in her life and by all indications is loving it. She was talking about checking into volunteering at the hospital during her non-work hours, too... I think that will be very good for her.![]()
Thanks, Theresa.Thank goodness she has a little help and growing independent I wish her only the best in these trying times.
The U.S. would borrow the money to fight back. However, I struggle to see how we would fight the Chinese in their own backyard. Taiwan is approximately 120 miles off the Chinese coast. Moreover, the Chinese navy is now larger than the American navy, and the Chinese are building more ships at a faster rate than we can match. I just don't see a military solution to the Taiwan problem.Let's be honest here, if China attack Taiwan, the US will find the money to fight back.
We certainly have many very wealthy individuals in this country. Thus far, every single attempt to increase taxes on the rich has failed. Our politicians actually prefer their go to "trickle down economics" which has proven to transfer even more wealth to the rich and nothing ever trickles down.The US is the richest country in the world. It has individuals with enough money to solve the homeless problem. I sincerely believe, it's not for want of total dollars that leave the homeless stuck on the streets with unmanaged mental illness and addictions, it's a lack of a will to do it. This Christian nation doesn't stretch so far that the least among us become deserving enough.
Typically, the wars we get involved in seem to benefit military suppliers. The companies that build missiles, bombs, bullets, sell jet fuel, etc. all seem to do quite well in wartime. How does that help the average middle or lower-class citizen?It's not that the government want to give money to foreign wars. There are tactical and strategic reasons the US will be involved. On top of the that, the Industrial Military Complex is raking it in right now. Yes, the US are spending a lot of money in, say, Ukraine, but where is that money being spent? A few people are getting very rich off the back of these conflicts. In short, there's a financial reason to be in it.
Adding somewhere in the neighborhood of $1–$1.5 trillion to our current $32 trillion debt every year isn't sustainable. Years ago, we lost our AAA rating, and currently, there's a sizeable group of countries looking to move away from the dollar as the standard. This clearly seems to indicate a lack of faith in our ability to sustain the current economic trend.In other words, because of the way finance works, and the politics around it, the US isn't broke. It has a national debt of 33Tr, which is a mind-boggling number, but it's had a national debt since the American Revolutionary War (which apparently was 75m, which was a whole lot then!) If there is a will to do something, the US will do it. I think you can read some of the comments and know why that will isn't there. It can be difficult to get your head around helping the homeless, because what are you going to get out of it? Everything is measured in dollars and cents, and you're only going to get that investment back by way of saved funds that would have been spent on other things.
Helping the homeless is the right thing to do, but it's also treating the symptom, not the cause of the problem. Perhaps if people could earn a living wage while working a job, they would be willing to do so. Perhaps they wouldn't end up addicted to drugs as a means of escaping their plight.Which leaves us with empathy, sympathy, and caring. I say, you do it because you can. You do it because it's the right thing to do. You do it because seeing these people breaks your heart. And there will be those who call you a SJW, a bleeding heart liberal, or worse - but what they're really saying is that they're less of a person than they could be. IMO.
For everything we see, do, spend and save, we end up in the same place - laying down in a bed somewhere while the life drifts out of us. through inaction, helping to aid the hastening of that moment in someone because they're strung out seems about the least Christian thing you can do.
You know when the homeless get mentioned? When political propaganda is being produced, and when it inconveniences people who aren't homeless. Other than that, they're invisible.
The U.S. would borrow the money to fight back. However, I struggle to see how we would fight the Chinese in their own backyard. Taiwan is approximately 120 miles off the Chinese coast. Moreover, the Chinese navy is now larger than the American navy, and the Chinese are building more ships at a faster rate than we can match. I just don't see a military solution to the Taiwan problem.
We certainly have many very wealthy individuals in this country. Thus far, every single attempt to increase taxes on the rich has failed. Our politicians actually prefer their go to "trickle down economics" which has proven to transfer even more wealth to the rich and nothing ever trickles down.
When you say that the U.S. is the richest country in the world, are you accounting for the $32 trillion in debt we now carry? Moreover, keep in mind that trillion-dollar deficits are the norm. $32 trillion amounts to $100,000 of debt for every citizen (32T/320M). If you split that debt among just the taxpayers in the country (leaving out the retired, the children, and the homeless), that's 128,489,000 taxpayers, or $249,000 per taxpayer. How does this make us rich?
The U.S. would borrow the money to fight back. However, I struggle to see how we would fight the Chinese in their own backyard. Taiwan is approximately 120 miles off the Chinese coast. Moreover, the Chinese navy is now larger than the American navy, and the Chinese are building more ships at a faster rate than we can match. I just don't see a military solution to the Taiwan problem.
We certainly have many very wealthy individuals in this country. Thus far, every single attempt to increase taxes on the rich has failed. Our politicians actually prefer their go to "trickle down economics" which has proven to transfer even more wealth to the rich and nothing ever trickles down.
When you say that the U.S. is the richest country in the world, are you accounting for the $32 trillion in debt we now carry? Moreover, keep in mind that trillion-dollar deficits are the norm. $32 trillion amounts to $100,000 of debt for every citizen (32T/320M). If you split that debt among just the taxpayers in the country (leaving out the retired, the children, and the homeless), that's 128,489,000 taxpayers, or $249,000 per taxpayer. How does this make us rich?
Typically, the wars we get involved in seem to benefit military suppliers. The companies that build missiles, bombs, bullets, sell jet fuel, etc. all seem to do quite well in wartime. How does that help the average middle or lower-class citizen?
dd
“Cringe” is spot on! Hopefully, ours is the last generation of women with this mindset. And to think we started the women’s liberation movement!I can only speak for the one person I know in the position... my neighbor. She's ... I think 70 now and is not homeless only because of the generosity of a local church offering her a very reasonable rent in a house a member owns. She was talking about it this summer... how she never expected to be in this position, but she knew why she's there. She admitted that she thought there would always be someone (she actually said "a man" cringe) to "take care of her." She never prepared... never even thought of the future because she assumed there would always be someone there to "rescue" her.
Well anyhow, the story is going to end well, I do believe. She has secured a part-time job in a discount store and is feeling independent for the first time in her life and by all indications is loving it. She was talking about checking into volunteering at the hospital during her non-work hours, too... I think that will be very good for her.![]()
Adding somewhere in the neighborhood of $1–$1.5 trillion to our current $32 trillion debt every year isn't sustainable. Years ago, we lost our AAA rating, and currently, there's a sizeable group of countries looking to move away from the dollar as the standard. This clearly seems to indicate a lack of faith in our ability to sustain the current economic trend.
Helping the homeless is the right thing to do, but it's also treating the symptom, not the cause of the problem. Perhaps if people could earn a living wage while working a job, they would be willing to do so. Perhaps they wouldn't end up addicted to drugs as a means of escaping their plight.
Our country is the way it is today as a result of late-stage capitalism. The rich are getting much, much richer, and the shrinking middle class is struggling with increased rent, interest rates, inflation, and a lack of jobs that pay a living wage.
And once rents go up, they never go back down.
I'm not really one for conspiracy theories but here goes... It's my opinion that much of this takes place in an effort to create a large, low income work force. It's the only way that so called civilized societies can compete with the growing third world economies. Honestly, if an American or British corporation has to pay a living wage and benefits to each worker how can they compete with third world countries that operate in the "Dickens" times? Low pay, no sick time, no benefits, and if you don't like it you can be replaced. I'm not able to think of another reason why a college education is so expensive in the U.S. It's a way to reserve university level education for the upper class.
I just read a really good book that addressed this point: After the Ivory Tower Falls: How College Broke the American Dream and Blew Up Our Politics--and How to Fix It by Will Bunch.I'm not able to think of another reason why a college education is so expensive in the U.S. It's a way to reserve university level education for the upper class.