I replied to you also, and you chose not to answer.
> That people are more susceptible to drug addiction than before.
Maybe somewhat; but a bigger part of it is that what was a problem spread throughout the US was successfully exported by the rest of the country to a few west coast cities.
> And that if we punish people more forcefully the problem will be resolved.
No, I don't think anyone is saying that. But adding housing isn't enough.
Homeless shelters successfully use inability to stop using drugs during length of stay as a predictor of violent, antisocial, and destructive behavior. You can't just place these people in housing units without a lot more scaffolding, support, and treatment.
"Housing first" works very well for 85%+ of homeless people, but treating this like it's one homogenous problem isn't going to be successful. If you try to just cram the rest into housing, they're going to still end up disrupting streets and causing property damage.
> protect our public spaces more vigerously.
Chasing the chronically homeless and ill from place to place isn't what I want. That game of musical chairs is what we do now.
> That people are more susceptible to drug addiction than before.
Maybe somewhat; but a bigger part of it is that what was a problem spread throughout the US was successfully exported by the rest of the country to a few west coast cities.
> And that if we punish people more forcefully the problem will be resolved.
No, I don't think anyone is saying that. But adding housing isn't enough.
Homeless shelters successfully use inability to stop using drugs during length of stay as a predictor of violent, antisocial, and destructive behavior. You can't just place these people in housing units without a lot more scaffolding, support, and treatment.
"Housing first" works very well for 85%+ of homeless people, but treating this like it's one homogenous problem isn't going to be successful. If you try to just cram the rest into housing, they're going to still end up disrupting streets and causing property damage.
> protect our public spaces more vigerously.
Chasing the chronically homeless and ill from place to place isn't what I want. That game of musical chairs is what we do now.