What is the entitlement of the poor to relief for rent and food and other basics? — tim wood
I think the "solution" if there is one could be forcibly institutionalizing some of these people — BitconnectCarlos
Citizens should not be "institutionalized" in an attempt to corral them with a stereotype if that's what you mean, institutions should be designed to empower them to overcome their addiction, mental illness or whatever it might be, giving them legitimized social standing so they can maximize involvement in the community. Supporting those who are vulnerable but with good enough motives is not a detriment to social welfare, but should be accompanied by opportunity. — Enrique
In any case I just believe any serious discussion about homeless in America needs to involve mental health. — BitconnectCarlos
Could you go a little more into detail in terms of what you mean by authorities being irrational? Which authorities? Who are these exploiters and how do they exploit? — BitconnectCarlos
Seems to me that the problem is not putting money in the hands of the individual, for it just gets cycled back into the system with spending, so relief makes sense, but we have to make sure that when the money does finally trickle up to the higher tiers of the economy, probably via bank, it is invested constructively. I'm not sure capitalism as it has thus far existed even possesses any machinery or ideology to make sure investment serves the long-term public welfare, and when you're talking about national governments you're just referring to what in the modern era is essentially a big bank, so the same dilemma applies. — Enrique
This to my understanding of current and impending problems a tangential consideration and peripheral problem. Not the less of a problem, just not the big one that's arriving as we write.Any discussion about homelessness must take into account mental illness and drug addiction and the role it plays in facilitating it. — BitconnectCarlos
This to my understanding of current and impending problems a tangential consideration and peripheral problem. Not the less of a problem, just not the big one that's arriving as we write. — tim wood
Yeah Tim, you're right. Obviously mental illness and trauma have essentially no relation to the homeless problem faced in America today — BitconnectCarlos
Deprive a man or woman through your exploitation of the ability to reasonably provide for their own tomorrows and you have taken on that burden yourself. — tim wood
My point here is that I suspect you find homelessness unacceptable period, regardless of whether the economy is capitalistic, which means your real argument is that no society should force the poor to go without shelter, regardless of whether their homelessness is caused by their own freely made poor decisions. — Hanover
But I doubt you'll concede that if the homelessness doesn't result from exploitation, then society has no burden to cure it....
Maybe there is such a duty of providing societal charity, but I fail to see how that duty arises only under certain economic systems, which means the objection isn't properly directed at capitalism, but at those who refuse to fulfill their moral obligations. — Hanover
the de-institutionalization that America went through in the 1960s — BitconnectCarlos
What do you mean by deinstitutionalization? — Enrique
What is the entitlement of the poor to relief for rent and food and other basics? — tim wood
What is the entitlement of the poor to relief for rent and food and other basics? — tim wood
What is the entitlement of the poor to relief for rent and food and other basics?
— tim wood
A better question, given the nature of the 2008 and 2020 bailouts, is what is the entitlement of the rich to a claim on the public trough?...
What passes for capitalism today is a far cry from the invisible hand of Adam Smith. It's one hand greasing the palms of politicians and the other hand strangling the little people. No wonder the kids are into socialism. — fishfry
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