Soon there will be multiple agencies that helps homeless individuals build the most marketable profile and increase "Donation conversions".
I don't know much about homelessness and I don't have a solution to the problem but this whole process of only being able to redeem donations at selected locations feels inhuman. We can't trust the homeless so we'll donate this amount but we say what you can use it for because we know better.
Again, I admit my naivety but I can't help feeling there's something fundamentally wrong with this approach.
that's just false. the same as people in privileged circumstances claiming to have gotten to where they are due to their 'hard work'
https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2019/jun/03/its-a-miracle...
Worth exploring.
Its well known in Los Angeles where we keep burning taxpayer money and the government officials keep making their friends rich by building more shelters that aren't used. So its just a waste until we make it a crime for them to sleep on the street and loiter and harass people if there are shelters available. They just cause trouble and commit crimes, that's what they do best.
While I can't speak to Los Angeles specifically, every shelter I've ever been to in the last ten years has been overwhelmed with more people than they can house.
Right...
It sounds like these apps aren't designed to help the homeless in the first place. They're designed to help people with spare change feel a little better about themselves.
This seems even worse than trying to make a difference to the housing situation and failing. Along with the idea of requiring homeless people to wear a beacon around their neck to pick up scraps from the wealthy, it sounds dehumanizing. Almost like the romans and their coliseum?
I'd love to hear the perspective of any people who've used these apps from the receiving end though. Maybe it's not as bad as it sounds.
https://www.npr.org/2017/03/20/520587241/the-scarcity-trap-w...
https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/magic-bureaucrat-rive...
The rest, I mostly disagree.
The primary reason for the limitations on after donation use is because that's how donations generally work. It isn't a homeless thing.
People will not give you money or other assets if you don't first tell them what will be done with it. If you don't give them some control, most people won't give you anything at all.
A lot of homeless people have complex issues. Yes, helping them really is more complicated than "just give them a house!"
Some just need a second chance and a hand to be able to climb out of the hole they’re in
Others won’t be able to ever help themselves
Saying they “need homes” because they’re “home less” sounds so naive
Edit:
Everyone needs shelter and I hope a comprehensive solution could be implemented where anyone in need could find the type of shelter that is most helpful
The article is right. But of course... I work hard so that I can pay for my home. The homeless should, too. His proposal is theft through tax.
I'm glad the author pointed this out. Our lame Puritanical values are far-reaching.