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originally posted by: hangedman13
No one wants to touch on the real problem. The so-called nonprofits that eat up that government money. Any accountability for them? Nah, they tend to be run by friends and/or former politicians! Party loyalty and a few kickbacks is all it takes to be ignored.
Good gawd you have no idea how hard you make me laugh. That’s literally one of the most idiotic things I’ve read in awhile.
originally posted by: JadedGhost
originally posted by: xuenchen
originally posted by: JadedGhost
How much of those 180,000 were born and raised in California?
I bet quite a few are from different states originally and came to Cali for the warm winters and multiple other reasons.
WTF does that have to do with the money being squandered and looted? lol lol lol 🤣🤣🤣
I guess the point is that a lot of those 180,000 people have most likely originated from red states… California is literally carrying the failed policies of the right.
originally posted by: ElitePlebeian2
What the f. Thats $133000.- per homeless person. How the hell do you manage to piss that away...
originally posted by: BingoMcGoof
You still deflected away from the MONEY you ding bat
This poster has no call to be calling names here. NONE. Actually this poster has no call whatsoever to be calling names. It is a total breach of manners.
The headline stated a statistic and proceeded to ask readers to ''guess what''
OP then began to offer a personal opinion on that original question. This is evidenced by the word used to describe those expenditures as ''squandered''. Several replies have questioned that opinion and provided perspectives to counter the opinion of the original poster. All, on topic.
Yet it seems that the OP is under the impression that their opinion owns the thread. It does not. I think the OP here owes us all an apology
originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: JadedGhost
a reply to: Boomer1947
From personal experience of actually being homeless in Australia, I always used to drive up North in the winter than back home down south during the summer months.
Just thinking, if I lived in some random state in the US that got cold during winter, then I would have definitely headed straight to California. Doubt Im the only one who has the same mind set.
Personally, I would try to do that also, because it's the reasonable thing to do. But it sounds like you had a car. Almost none of the homeless around where I live (near Santa Cruz, California) own anything other than the dirty clothes they are wearing and whatever possessions they can scrounge and load into a stolen supermarket shopping cart. A lot of them also seem to be mentally disabled (probably contributed to them being homeless in the first place) and can't really hold a thought for more than an hour or two at a time.
originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: hangedman13
No one wants to touch on the real problem. The so-called nonprofits that eat up that government money. Any accountability for them? Nah, they tend to be run by friends and/or former politicians! Party loyalty and a few kickbacks is all it takes to be ignored.
That's not the real problem.
The real problem was mentioned by the Hoover Institution in the article that was cited in the OP:
"A ... key problem with California homelessness policy, one that is rarely, if ever, discussed, is that there are too many California households who simply do not earn enough to live sensibly in California, given the state’s very high cost of living. For example, nearly half of California households rent, and of this group, about 30 percent—about 1.9 million households—pay 50 percent or more of their pretax income as rent. This is far too high based on the standard recommendation that a household pay a maximum of 30 percent of pretax income as rent."
Those 24 Billion dollars were spent on maintenance programs--things like subsidizing rent, keeping homeless shelters open, needle exchanges, etc. All that does is to maintain the homeless population at a somewhat more humane level of dysfunction than if there was no government program. If you subsidize the rent of an agriculture worker who picks strawberries in the Salinas Valley for 20 dollars an hour, that subsidy might be the difference between living in a cheap apartment and living under a culvert somewhere. But as soon as the subsidy goes away, that man or woman would be out on the street again. There's nothing in the program that would make the people they help suddenly be able to earn a high enough salary to let them be self-sufficient. I don't think there was ever any expectation that a program like this would solve the root cause of homelessness.
originally posted by: Justoneman
your post bypasses the "nanny state" communims fails us again and again to lay the blame somewhere else.
This problem with wages is caused by letting our jobs go over seas because of the EPA who can't do # in China who do NOT put the tech on to stop pollution like the western world is forced to do. SO they do more damage than we could ever to the environment these idiots claim to want to save.
originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: hangedman13
No one wants to touch on the real problem. The so-called nonprofits that eat up that government money. Any accountability for them? Nah, they tend to be run by friends and/or former politicians! Party loyalty and a few kickbacks is all it takes to be ignored.
That's not the real problem.
The real problem was mentioned by the Hoover Institution in the article that was cited in the OP:
"A ... key problem with California homelessness policy, one that is rarely, if ever, discussed, is that there are too many California households who simply do not earn enough to live sensibly in California, given the state’s very high cost of living. For example, nearly half of California households rent, and of this group, about 30 percent—about 1.9 million households—pay 50 percent or more of their pretax income as rent. This is far too high based on the standard recommendation that a household pay a maximum of 30 percent of pretax income as rent."
Those 24 Billion dollars were spent on maintenance programs--things like subsidizing rent, keeping homeless shelters open, needle exchanges, etc. All that does is to maintain the homeless population at a somewhat more humane level of dysfunction than if there was no government program. If you subsidize the rent of an agriculture worker who picks strawberries in the Salinas Valley for 20 dollars an hour, that subsidy might be the difference between living in a cheap apartment and living under a culvert somewhere. But as soon as the subsidy goes away, that man or woman would be out on the street again. There's nothing in the program that would make the people they help suddenly be able to earn a high enough salary to let them be self-sufficient. I don't think there was ever any expectation that a program like this would solve the root cause of homelessness.
originally posted by: network dude
originally posted by: Justoneman
your post bypasses the "nanny state" communims fails us again and again to lay the blame somewhere else.
This problem with wages is caused by letting our jobs go over seas because of the EPA who can't do # in China who do NOT put the tech on to stop pollution like the western world is forced to do. SO they do more damage than we could ever to the environment these idiots claim to want to save.
originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: hangedman13
No one wants to touch on the real problem. The so-called nonprofits that eat up that government money. Any accountability for them? Nah, they tend to be run by friends and/or former politicians! Party loyalty and a few kickbacks is all it takes to be ignored.
That's not the real problem.
The real problem was mentioned by the Hoover Institution in the article that was cited in the OP:
"A ... key problem with California homelessness policy, one that is rarely, if ever, discussed, is that there are too many California households who simply do not earn enough to live sensibly in California, given the state’s very high cost of living. For example, nearly half of California households rent, and of this group, about 30 percent—about 1.9 million households—pay 50 percent or more of their pretax income as rent. This is far too high based on the standard recommendation that a household pay a maximum of 30 percent of pretax income as rent."
Those 24 Billion dollars were spent on maintenance programs--things like subsidizing rent, keeping homeless shelters open, needle exchanges, etc. All that does is to maintain the homeless population at a somewhat more humane level of dysfunction than if there was no government program. If you subsidize the rent of an agriculture worker who picks strawberries in the Salinas Valley for 20 dollars an hour, that subsidy might be the difference between living in a cheap apartment and living under a culvert somewhere. But as soon as the subsidy goes away, that man or woman would be out on the street again. There's nothing in the program that would make the people they help suddenly be able to earn a high enough salary to let them be self-sufficient. I don't think there was ever any expectation that a program like this would solve the root cause of homelessness.
Yea, but the damage is over there, not on our globe. Our globe has great progress in fighting "global warming". China's globe, not so much.
originally posted by: Justoneman
originally posted by: network dude
originally posted by: Justoneman
your post bypasses the "nanny state" communims fails us again and again to lay the blame somewhere else.
This problem with wages is caused by letting our jobs go over seas because of the EPA who can't do # in China who do NOT put the tech on to stop pollution like the western world is forced to do. SO they do more damage than we could ever to the environment these idiots claim to want to save.
originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: hangedman13
No one wants to touch on the real problem. The so-called nonprofits that eat up that government money. Any accountability for them? Nah, they tend to be run by friends and/or former politicians! Party loyalty and a few kickbacks is all it takes to be ignored.
That's not the real problem.
The real problem was mentioned by the Hoover Institution in the article that was cited in the OP:
"A ... key problem with California homelessness policy, one that is rarely, if ever, discussed, is that there are too many California households who simply do not earn enough to live sensibly in California, given the state’s very high cost of living. For example, nearly half of California households rent, and of this group, about 30 percent—about 1.9 million households—pay 50 percent or more of their pretax income as rent. This is far too high based on the standard recommendation that a household pay a maximum of 30 percent of pretax income as rent."
Those 24 Billion dollars were spent on maintenance programs--things like subsidizing rent, keeping homeless shelters open, needle exchanges, etc. All that does is to maintain the homeless population at a somewhat more humane level of dysfunction than if there was no government program. If you subsidize the rent of an agriculture worker who picks strawberries in the Salinas Valley for 20 dollars an hour, that subsidy might be the difference between living in a cheap apartment and living under a culvert somewhere. But as soon as the subsidy goes away, that man or woman would be out on the street again. There's nothing in the program that would make the people they help suddenly be able to earn a high enough salary to let them be self-sufficient. I don't think there was ever any expectation that a program like this would solve the root cause of homelessness.
Yea, but the damage is over there, not on our globe. Our globe has great progress in fighting "global warming". China's globe, not so much.
So, far it is minimal here.
That damage is coming to us all if we don't get some divine intervention.
originally posted by: BingoMcGoof
a reply to: Justoneman
Hi Just. I would like to ask you who are the ''we'' in ''we let you stay''? I'm pretty sure you were being gracious here, thinking maybe you could help assuage some of that angst I might be feeling that you thought might be oozing out of that post and for that I thank you though it really was gone by the time I hit the reply button.