Austin Residents Can’t Agree on How to Fix the Homelessness Crisis

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  • čas přidán 24. 04. 2021
  • In 2019 Austin experimented with a pretty progressive policy on homelessness by allowing camping in some of the city’s public spaces. Now Austin’s mayor, Steve Adler is faced with increasing pressure from some residents and from the state to reinstate it’s camping ban. Come May 1st the decision will be up to the voters.
    CORRECTION: At 3:12, a locator incorrectly identifies a location as Portland, OR. The location shown is actually Portland, ME. VICE News regrets the error.
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Komentáře • 9K

  • @toregister8615
    @toregister8615 Před 3 lety +3228

    It's not just an Austin problem by a long shot. This is happening in a lot of cities, including my own.

    • @royalanempire2965
      @royalanempire2965 Před 3 lety +170

      It's an American and global problem.

    • @ricardobarahona3939
      @ricardobarahona3939 Před 3 lety +204

      It’s only going to get worse unless we make long term solutions and try to address the root causes of long term and short term homelessness. The rise of housing costs all across the country outpacing salaries/wages is only going to make things worse.

    • @BeeHash
      @BeeHash Před 3 lety +150

      @@ricardobarahona3939 nonsense. Housing cost has almost nothing to do with it. Drug and alcohol addiction and mental illness - period. Don't believe me? Go volunteer at a homeless shelter.

    • @konradnsa
      @konradnsa Před 3 lety +77

      @@BeeHash - just try to buy home this days. Housing market is hot, it's in a bubble!

    • @Jeremyramone
      @Jeremyramone Před 3 lety +210

      @@BeeHash housing cost is absolutely an enormous factor. Addiction too. Mental illness as well. Wages have not kept pace with the cost of living. Not even close.

  • @REA.Design.Studio
    @REA.Design.Studio Před 3 lety +2600

    "as your safety declines so does your compassion" truth

    • @Ink_farm_art
      @Ink_farm_art Před 3 lety +51

      Seriously.

    • @niroshapriyadarsahani2877
      @niroshapriyadarsahani2877 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/SvQRPnQBJdQ2/video.html

    • @bmtziii640
      @bmtziii640 Před 3 lety +74

      Not gonna lie, I live right next to a camp... it’s a strange dilemma for all of us

    • @JD-jz5rr
      @JD-jz5rr Před 3 lety +39

      Nobody had any choice as to whether or not to come into this world, therefore we ALL should have the absolute and indisputable right to euthanasia if we want to leave. To withhold the means to leave in the most clean, fast, painless and safest way possible is hands-down the biggest egregious violation of personal liberty and bodily autonomy. ~
      ~
      It’s even worse than criminalizing @bortion imo

    • @SpaceRanger187
      @SpaceRanger187 Před 3 lety +21

      When Biden opens the border maybe all the new people that come will help these people

  • @nowammies9986
    @nowammies9986 Před 2 lety +93

    I've lived next to a tent city for 22 years. I've seen it waiver and grow throughout the years as politics change but no "solution". The longer you live near it the more you begin to see the different kinds of people that get in a homeless situation and the harder it is to thin of a uniform solution for all homelessness. I've seen families, veterans, the disabled, drug addicts, and more all on the street. They all need a different type of care.

  • @rexg2985
    @rexg2985 Před 3 lety +670

    "As your safety declines so does your compassion."
    Well said.

    • @parkerxgps
      @parkerxgps Před 3 lety +19

      Probably better said as perceived safety.
      People often feel they are at higher risk than they are. It's both instinctive and a bit paranoid.

    • @arribaficationwineho32
      @arribaficationwineho32 Před 3 lety +18

      @@parkerxgps tent camps have no sanitation so this is a public health crisis in the making. Raw sewage breeds diseases. Do not allow tent cities

    • @parkerxgps
      @parkerxgps Před 3 lety +7

      You seem to assume what I advocate.
      Sanitation is a lot easier for a government to achieve, than a few people in a homeless encampment.

    • @iridium5122
      @iridium5122 Před 2 lety +10

      I live in Austin. Riverside and Pleasant, literally there is a spot here called "tent city" most of these folks, honestly are drug addicts, you'll pass them and they are either arguing with imaginary people or hallucinations, themselves or each other. Someone was murdered there with a machete last year and another died in there tent from fire, whole tent went up in flames but I'm sure more stuff has happened since then but I don't keep up anymore. And most of these homeless are coming here from other cities they're not even from Austin. I had a talk with a female from "tent city" that admitted she was a prostitute and a crack addict to me and was from Queens NY, I was on the way back to my place and and she randomly started talking to me and I was interested in her story so I asked her questions. I'm only sharing this just to explain what happens in these areas so people know the truth.

    • @arribaficationwineho32
      @arribaficationwineho32 Před 2 lety +1

      @@parkerxgps you are correct abt sanitation being the bailiwick of govt and why tent cities should not be allowed. There is no way for them to deal with their own filth.

  • @Dickout_Golf
    @Dickout_Golf Před 3 lety +643

    As of this weekend, Austin passed a bill that no one can camp in Austin anymore.

    • @tytraulich4987
      @tytraulich4987 Před 3 lety +17

      That’s a CRIME
      contact United Nations

    • @Jimirulz1
      @Jimirulz1 Před 3 lety +125

      Good.

    • @ba1038
      @ba1038 Před 3 lety +43

      The Immortal 2r3333 (ADOS) it was voted by the people it can’t be overruled idiot. Adler needs to be overruled

    • @supersaiyangod5974
      @supersaiyangod5974 Před 3 lety +42

      @The Immortal 2r3333 (ADOS) Just accepted the fact that both parties voted on the bill. My liberal friends voted on it. Yes, they feel sad that homelessness is a thing but know if they didn't vote on it it would only get worse. Basically saying that allowing this people to remain in the streets and parks tell others it's OK to camp out and trash the city.

    • @supersaiyangod5974
      @supersaiyangod5974 Před 3 lety +2

      @The Immortal 2r3333 (ADOS) Yes they are. They hate Trump

  • @dondelchulia3189
    @dondelchulia3189 Před 3 lety +834

    The mayor is fine with it, just as long as it’s not outside on his front lawn

    • @clouddemosonline6174
      @clouddemosonline6174 Před 3 lety +18

      He lives at the w hotel

    • @thornspitfire3977
      @thornspitfire3977 Před 3 lety +44

      I really don't get how he has the gall to run a social experiment to see how long the resident's tolerance lasts. How are the needs of the homeless more important than the actual residents'? Even the homless don't like to camp in the city, why is it such a big issue to ban camping in the city? I really don't see the upside of allowing it.

    • @Gabebeendrankin
      @Gabebeendrankin Před 3 lety +16

      They should go camp right in front of the w hotel

    • @Gabebeendrankin
      @Gabebeendrankin Před 3 lety +8

      Man Fr we should go camp in front of the w hotel and see what happens

    • @clouddemosonline6174
      @clouddemosonline6174 Před 3 lety +7

      @@Gabebeendrankin the law would remove us so fast 😂

  • @cooshrocket
    @cooshrocket Před 2 lety +105

    Our Big Tech overlords could fund permanent housing for every one of them with their pocket change. Your presence in Austin is driving this problem.

    • @2life2fullest54
      @2life2fullest54 Před 2 lety +2

      Exactly. I was waiting for them to mention tech companies as a driver

    • @DK-nv9zu
      @DK-nv9zu Před 2 lety +3

      So everyone just gets a free house? For nothing? That’s not how reality works.

    • @h1mike2
      @h1mike2 Před 2 lety +3

      Or just the government?? How do you look at private companies to fix a public issue when the military budget is as huge as it is?

    • @TexanIndependence
      @TexanIndependence Před 2 lety +11

      No, the homelessness crisis was actually CREATED by the pro-apartment "affordable housing" propaganda, and by the media which portrayed manufactured homes as "trailer park trash" and led to many cities banning trailers/manufactured homes, etc. It used to be that manufactured homes/trailers were a LOW COST way to get housing and NOT have to pay endless rent, and you could build up savings to pay for a down payment for a home and it kept housing prices in check because people had an alternative if housing prices got too high. Now we don't.
      Bill Gates is actually buying up massive amounts of land to PREVENT people from buying them and building manufactured homes on them. Much of that land is $20,000 an acre, and you could put a manufactured home on it for $35,000, so only $55,000 for an acre of land and decent housing. But the billionaries are buying them all up to either A) prevent you from living on it ("polluting it with your presence") or farming it, and B) to build apartments on them and charge you endlessly rising rents in a sort of Neo-Feudalism.
      And the Big Tech overlords cannot afford it IF the solution is "Permanent (un)Affordable Housing" (aka Apartments). Biden is estimating it will cost $800 billion, which is more money than the top 20 Big Tech overlords combined. The problem is the LIE that is "affordable housing" which a fancy word for Neo-Feudalism, whereby rich landlords charge the poor 30% of their income in "rent" forever (often worse than serfdom which by law could not take more than 1/3rd of a serf's labor).
      The solution is either Georgism (a more socialist idea of land tax) OR even the capitalist version of a "Land Value Tax" the inventor of capitalism, Adam Smith, called for: a land value tax (which he said is the best kind of tax so long as it ONLY taxes the ground and NOT anything that gets built upon it, basically encouraging people to "use it or lose it").
      Adam Smith decried the "Rent Seekers" as a leech on capitalism, which they truly are. Georgism, we need to TAX land speculation. Millions of acres of land sits unused by speculators who pay LESS tax on it than those who USE the land. In Texas if you buy 10 acres you pay about $2,000 a year in property tax, but if you build 10 homes on it, you will pay $25,000 in property tax. You are punished for improving your land. Build a business on it? Tax goes up. Just sit on it and speculate for decades and pay next to nothing in taxes and you wait for the price to rise exponentially and sell it.
      Here is an excerpt from capitalism's creator Adam Smith's magnum opus, The Wealth of Nations, who calls landlords "monopolists" basically:
      "Ground-rents are a still more proper subject of taxation than the rent of houses. A tax upon ground-rents would not raise the rents of houses. It would fall altogether upon the owner of the ground-rent, who acts always as a monopolist, and exacts the greatest rent which can be got for the use of his ground. More or less can be got for it according as the competitors happen to be richer or poorer, or can afford to gratify their fancy for a particular spot of ground at a greater or smaller expense. In every country the greatest number of rich competitors is in the capital, and it is there accordingly that the highest ground-rents are always to be found. As the wealth of those competitors would in no respect be increased by a tax upon ground-rents, they would not probably be disposed to pay more for the use of the ground. Whether the tax was to be advanced by the inhabitant, or by the owner of the ground, would be of little importance. The more the inhabitant was obliged to pay for the tax, the less he would incline to pay for the ground; so that the final payment of the tax would fall altogether upon the owner of the ground-rent. Both ground-rents and the ordinary rent of land are a species of revenue which the owner, in many cases, enjoys without any care or attention of his own. Though a part of this revenue should be taken from him in order to defray the expenses of the state, no discouragement will thereby be given to any sort of industry. The annual produce of the land and labour of the society, the real wealth and revenue of the great body of the people, might be the same after such a tax as before. Ground-rents and the ordinary rent of land are, therefore, perhaps, the species of revenue which can best bear to have a peculiar tax imposed upon them. [...] Nothing can be more reasonable than that a fund which owes its existence to the good government of the state should be taxed peculiarly, or should contribute something more than the greater part of other funds, towards the support of that government."
      - Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, Book V, Chapter 2
      Ironically, the type of tax that Adam Smith would be the most efficient, best tax possible, a Land Value Tax ("ground tax") which would reduce rent-seeking behavior/leeching , is the ONE type of tax that we do not implement.
      It's partially because the landlords are immensely powerful politically and bribe the politicians with donations...

    • @marcvslicinivscrassvs7536
      @marcvslicinivscrassvs7536 Před 2 lety

      Bingo

  • @mootio1116
    @mootio1116 Před 2 lety +77

    As a student of Austin, Ive been homeless for the last month. Rent too high and pay isnt enough even though I work 40-50 hours a week. I feel for the homeless population - Im getting a new place soon but as much as I wanna continue my education here I cant if everything gets more expensive.

    • @Jack_Ragnarsson
      @Jack_Ragnarsson Před 2 lety +8

      I was homeless in Seattle twice while working full time. It's a shitty way to live. It really fueled a bad drinking problem because I couldnt sleep at night.

    • @SlyEvoIX
      @SlyEvoIX Před 2 lety +2

      I wish you the best. Hopefully you can get some scholarships to help offset your costs.

    • @SuperTruthful
      @SuperTruthful Před 2 lety

      why not try van living...it might work

    • @DJStash
      @DJStash Před 2 lety

      I’m by Austin bro I work around there I know it’s expensive there get out of there if you can afford it move a hr outside the city then you can afford a place

    • @alexanderson5140
      @alexanderson5140 Před 2 lety +1

      Been homeless twice and I have a criminal record, it's twice as hard for me to get a job and a place to stay. I'm currently living with my folks rent free and I'm struggling to pay off debt from a weekly paying job and it can get frustrating. It sucks not being able to afford the cost of living because of the pandemic and living around people you can barely tolerate but I'm keeping my head up as I always do. I hope that I'll squash my debt quicker and put myself in a better position financially and mentally so that I can get right back on track.

  • @XiangYu94
    @XiangYu94 Před 3 lety +336

    Dude at the end has a really simple but effective strategy for transitioning people out of homelessness, he has to be amplified

    • @coldestnapoleon
      @coldestnapoleon Před 3 lety +9

      Sounds like he just used a bunch of buzz words. No?

    • @XiangYu94
      @XiangYu94 Před 3 lety +74

      @@coldestnapoleon No - you should listen before assuming. He’s proposing a more flexible approach to give the homeless a transition zone that bridges the awkward gap between destitution and societal re-integration. You can tell he understands the drivers of homelessness because he’s clearly a hands-on volunteer, an attitude which is often lacking in city halls.
      If you look at the homeless, they often have a pattern of going back & forth between halfway homes and the streets. Many of them can’t shake off old habits, because often the halfway homes are too large of an adjustment for them.

    • @akuma862005
      @akuma862005 Před 3 lety +18

      @@XiangYu94 It's not just that it's a large adjustment, helping people move from a survival mentality to longer term strategic thinking is something that can take decades. This is why countries who have basically solved homelessness have moved to a model of housing first with no means tested bullshit or prohibitions along with robust social services to help those with specific needs. I doubt this will happen in America when we care way too much about money instead of people's lives.

    • @ericbrooks939
      @ericbrooks939 Před 3 lety +2

      I think he just was.

    • @PeterSedesse
      @PeterSedesse Před 3 lety +17

      @Icantthinkofachannelname ' when they are drug free'... ' releasing them back into society'... 1. you make it sound like becoming drug free is possible when you don't want to be drug free. 12 step programs have about a 10% success rate for people have desire to become clean. What do you think the success rate is for people who don't want to become clean. 2. Not sure if you know this, but we have a legal system in the USA. You can't imprison people for nothing and set some arbitrary release date based on your opinions. Your solution is to just go around and pick people up, lock them into some prison and don't let them out until.... you decide they are a useful part of society? that doesn't even work for mentally ill people, you can't just lock people up randomly because you are distressed at seeing a tent while going under and overpass.

  • @phacelesshero
    @phacelesshero Před 3 lety +1502

    Ridiculously high rents all over America need to stop. I work my ass off weekdays and weekends and always breaking even. Work WAY too hard to never get ahead in any way. Good news report Vice.

    • @Simon_S22
      @Simon_S22 Před 3 lety +35

      Sir, buying up trading cards is not a real job

    • @juanpatino8784
      @juanpatino8784 Před 3 lety +53

      Texas homes are actually cheaper then most states.

    • @sarbantz
      @sarbantz Před 3 lety +18

      It is all fentanyl. 2 grams either kill you, or make you addicted to till your soon-to-be death. We are in very bad situation, and it will get only worse. Liberals, and conservatives, and noone has solution for fentanyl.

    • @kmeades346
      @kmeades346 Před 3 lety +22

      Start working smarter.

    • @osamabendolphin765
      @osamabendolphin765 Před 3 lety +18

      Maybe getting a better job?

  • @PriusRaj
    @PriusRaj Před 3 lety +18

    Oh look, it's where I live. Yeah, it was REALLY bad. They passed the homelessness "ban" and things are a lot better now, but it probably wasn't very great for the cops who had to tell the homeless to leave, and the homeless who have to constantly move.
    I have no idea where they went...
    I've heard the problem was that we started getting a lot of homeless people from out of Austin PLUS the pandemic created a homeless crisis basically. We barely had resources for them before all this.
    Austin is going downhill. I used to love this place, now buying a house is unaffordable, there's too many entitled rich people, and the homeless population has exploded.
    Austin had always been a liberal city and it's been fine. But recently it's become more corporate than anything else, and that's what's killing it. California isn't some liberal paradise, it's a corporate hellscape, and that's where Austin is headed.

    • @SexyTCAPdecoy4Hansen
      @SexyTCAPdecoy4Hansen Před 3 lety +1

      That’s why I’m moving after college. I love this city and grew up here, but damn this is too much.

    • @PriusRaj
      @PriusRaj Před 2 lety +1

      @@SexyTCAPdecoy4Hansen ha ha, I actually left the state altogether. Glad I did.

    • @erinsuzy613
      @erinsuzy613 Před rokem

      Travel around, find a place you love to visit. There are so many safer, better places to live. I moved from Austin to a smaller town in Ohio and I hate having to go back down there to visit my family. I dread it.

  • @neotheboxer6015
    @neotheboxer6015 Před 2 lety +16

    Wait, so Texas can pass anti-mask and anti-abortion laws yet they have this homeless problem booming? They couldn't see that this was a more important issue than what they prioritized?

    • @twofortydrifter
      @twofortydrifter Před 2 lety +2

      The state of Texas as a whole is conservative. The city of Austin as a whole is liberal. What were you saying?

    • @Lenniusce
      @Lenniusce Před 2 lety +1

      Just like california worries about plastic straws while having homelessness and needles all over SF->LA

    • @dae1925
      @dae1925 Před 2 lety

      Logical fallacy.
      Abortion laws and anti mask laws have nothing in common with homelessness
      People should vote more properly.
      Personally, I haven't seen any homeless people in Texas outside of Austin. Must tell you something.

  • @automatics1im
    @automatics1im Před 3 lety +663

    “Nobody wants to live here anymore.”
    Housing prices rise 40% in 5 years.

    • @niroshapriyadarsahani2877
      @niroshapriyadarsahani2877 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/SvQRPnQBJdQ/video.html

    • @syedmohsin18
      @syedmohsin18 Před 3 lety +93

      You check how new houses are not sold to individual buyers but corporation for renting thus creating shortage of homes and driving price up.
      Look it up

    • @Flatrocker512
      @Flatrocker512 Před 3 lety +19

      Pretty sure he's just referring to his neighborhood. Not the whole 512.

    • @demonkodode6836
      @demonkodode6836 Před 3 lety +20

      @@Flatrocker512 this. Imagine putting like 60k into home renovations and this happens in your neighborhood and significantly drops the worth of your house.

    • @kevinhuddleston6438
      @kevinhuddleston6438 Před 3 lety +11

      If anything gains 40%....it is a false narrative

  • @jgroenveld1268
    @jgroenveld1268 Před 3 lety +1040

    Unfortunately a lot of cities don't look at solving the actual homelessness but more in how well they can conceal the homelessness issue from view.

    • @jesuisrobert808
      @jesuisrobert808 Před 3 lety +61

      This isn't a municipal problem. It's a federal problem. You can't make enough if you're on minimum wage and then you get sick

    • @hambone4984
      @hambone4984 Před 3 lety +2

      Or how to get them to move along somewhere else

    • @luisgutierrez4521
      @luisgutierrez4521 Před 3 lety +25

      Can’t help someone who doesn’t wanna be helped

    • @davidz2808
      @davidz2808 Před 3 lety +59

      @@luisgutierrez4521 But most homeless people want to be helped.

    • @paddington1670
      @paddington1670 Před 3 lety +40

      Most people dont want a hand out, they need a hand up. A lot of them dont have all their mental faculties and just cant care for themselves and need help from the government and society as a whole to get them back on their feet - it's not impossible but it's going to cost some tax dollars. Better spent tax dollars than on tomahawks.

  • @mpiercy89
    @mpiercy89 Před 3 lety +20

    Put up Modular housing. We’ve done it in Vancouver and it’s helpful. It takes a fraction of the time to put together and can be taken apart when permanent housing is ready.

    • @sqike001ton
      @sqike001ton Před 2 lety

      The issue is the upkeep you can put someone in a house but like the guy said someone who hasn't lived in a house for 10 years is prepare to be able to take care of a house so then the government has to take care of the property which gets expensive and isn't fair for the tax payer who has to take care of their own place at their own expense you could put a person in a place and say here you go but what is going to happen In say 10 years when it looks like a flop house and burns down then the lawyers come out I guess you could give them little 1 room apartments and charge them money or if not make them work to keep the place the city picks you up takes you somewhere you work you turn in so many hours for your room anything else you get paid I could see this working but then you circle back to drugs of some sort being a issue any city program is going to require some type of sobriety whether it's to get the job or to keep the apartment in my experience a large percentage of homeless people are users or some sort wether is booze or hard drugs they do something in an amount that would invalidate them unless the city turned a blind eye but then someone ODs and the lawyers come out

  • @captainali7620
    @captainali7620 Před 3 lety +70

    That guy totally voted for it. He’s just only saying he’ll vote against it because he’s on tv

    • @MrBeachwaves
      @MrBeachwaves Před 2 lety +5

      You don't know that

    • @jojachow
      @jojachow Před měsícem +1

      He spent the entire interview complaining about the homeless, so yeah he voted for it

  • @MosJournal
    @MosJournal Před 3 lety +323

    40 years ago, I was homeless for a period of time. I was actually among the working homeless. I just needed to save enough money for the initial costs of a place. I set a camp in a wooded area unseen by everyone. It was in an unused, urban wild area. But I guess that someone saw me enter or exit the wooded area. Cops came, even complimented me on how organized and clean things were. They said that they would arrest me if they saw me there again. The city had a zero tolerance policy toward the homeless, regardless of where they were. I had to take a day off work to move my camp. I was fortunate to have a sympathetic manager. I see the issues of letting homeless be anywhere and unfettered. But going too far in the opposite direction is also problematic.

    • @Ms.Byrd68
      @Ms.Byrd68 Před 3 lety +15

      I agree, as long as your area was keep clean and free of 'fire causing' ANYTHING (not a danger to surrounding structures), you were OUT OF THE WAY (SIGHT) & not 'harassing' anyone in nearby 'residential or business' areas, then you should have been left alone. On top of that, you were 'gainfully employed'!

    • @djabroni_brochacho4644
      @djabroni_brochacho4644 Před 3 lety +7

      Glad to hear you overcame! Asking out of curiosity: Were you drinking/using drugs? I’m in Austin and I find that is the case with 100% of who I’ve talked to. We have shelters that will get you back on your feet, but the issue is most of them have no desire to be sober.

    • @ABoredTroll
      @ABoredTroll Před 3 lety

      save up for a non hybrid toyota and live in it until you can pick yourself up

    • @dr.doppeldecker3832
      @dr.doppeldecker3832 Před 3 lety +11

      My girlfriend is a streetworker, and unfortunately storys like yours are very rare. Most of people ending up homeless have to deal with mental health issues and/or drug abuse. And i think you dont help these people by allowing them to do whatever they want, the opposite happens. Most of them need strict guidance to escape their situation.

    • @ladydragon7777
      @ladydragon7777 Před 3 lety +1

      Yep the state sanctioned domestic Terrorist slavers with badges always have to harass and terrorize and rob people because they are homeless,all about profiteering, keeping every American citizen being a paying slave just to live/survive. Slavery never ended, America is not a free country it is a country of brainwashed slaves. They didn't end slavery they just expanded it to include every human being.

  • @MA-rq3qu
    @MA-rq3qu Před 3 lety +832

    Let them camp on government property and the streets where our politicians live.

    • @patchesdriftwood34
      @patchesdriftwood34 Před 3 lety +39

      This in my opinion, is the best resolution.

    • @kushal4956
      @kushal4956 Před 3 lety +32

      or inside their houses, got no problem with that either

    • @EnthrallingBass140
      @EnthrallingBass140 Před 3 lety +2

      And then what? Their still homeless

    • @Lv16543
      @Lv16543 Před 3 lety +1

      Lmaooo

    • @NewOne-ey1wm
      @NewOne-ey1wm Před 3 lety +8

      @@EnthrallingBass140 so they haven't been accumulating money in order to get a place to live...while they're homeless? How can you support someone when they don't wanna support themself?

  • @mariahadams972
    @mariahadams972 Před 3 lety +54

    Austin is so depressing! Driving through there makes me feel like there is no hope for anyone.

    • @uradragon7823
      @uradragon7823 Před 2 lety +1

      Take a look at Portland. So many other cities. The new normal (again)

    • @gustavon.1444
      @gustavon.1444 Před 2 lety +2

      So weird, I visited Austin for the only time in my life in 2011, and Austin was clean as hell. Haven't been there since, wow

    • @2898kwanwh
      @2898kwanwh Před 2 lety +2

      I was student in UT and lived there for 8 yrs 30 years ago. I missed Austin, and it is a beautiful and friendly campus city.

    • @justinpetterson2659
      @justinpetterson2659 Před 2 lety

      Boston is the same way

    • @-Bloomingtales
      @-Bloomingtales Před 2 lety

      I felt the same way.

  • @gabeb242
    @gabeb242 Před 2 lety +46

    I let one homeless person live in my extra room. It’s been three years and he pays rent has a job and is now part of my family. I will let him live with us till the end. That’s how it’s done.

    • @dylanjkiernan3432
      @dylanjkiernan3432 Před 2 lety +1

      Probably shouldn't call him "it" 🤣🤣

    • @g.h.7661
      @g.h.7661 Před 2 lety +8

      @@dylanjkiernan3432 they didn’t

  • @hekter2364
    @hekter2364 Před 3 lety +298

    "I'm voting against it but I hope a lot more people vote for it" oh so you can wipe your hands clean and shift blame if it goes south. Gotcha.

    • @megamrsoftee
      @megamrsoftee Před 3 lety +41

      this is the outlook of everyone who just wants to keep these global issues out of their sight, yet speak like they care - "I feel bad, but can you please just kick them out of the city for me?"

    • @kathycaldwell7126
      @kathycaldwell7126 Před 3 lety

      Good Lord. 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @jayscott9670
      @jayscott9670 Před 3 lety +13

      Dude is so woke

    • @didiermontagnier6114
      @didiermontagnier6114 Před 3 lety +21

      He’s just a coward.

    • @tonymaldonado5059
      @tonymaldonado5059 Před 3 lety +3

      Exactly

  • @honeybeelove63
    @honeybeelove63 Před 3 lety +460

    This is a double edged sword for me...you feel sorry for homeless and yet, i still get the point of the residents...it's not their fault that they want a safe place for their children.

    • @vee7470
      @vee7470 Před 3 lety +16

      It's true another prob of over-population

    • @1Geeked
      @1Geeked Před 3 lety +149

      @@vee7470 nothing to do with overpopulation and everything to do with poor allocation of resources

    • @JulianSloman
      @JulianSloman Před 3 lety +7

      @@1Geeked very much this

    • @theheeze
      @theheeze Před 3 lety +17

      @@smokedbeefandcheese4144 Good point. I think the association between 'poor people' and 'danger' creates this feedback loop. If we can't agree that homeless people are worthy of trust then...we can't do anything

    • @bboss7874
      @bboss7874 Před 3 lety +14

      It's over population. People are continuing to have kids with no plan on how to take care of them. Those kids then grow to be adults and an adult with no plan ends up on the streets.🤔

  • @patriciaoffer9585
    @patriciaoffer9585 Před 3 lety +16

    .....because they're more concerned with who's boss than solving the problem.
    Edit: The same thing happened at the FLA condo😰

  • @Svveet69
    @Svveet69 Před 3 lety +13

    any city where you can work a full time job and not afford housing has this issue. The same people buying up property in Austin and driving prices up are causing a lot of this. I'm from the Bay area and there's no way I could move back and afford to live in a home. I could spend 2200 for a 1 bedroom but why would I.

  • @supervegeta101
    @supervegeta101 Před 3 lety +1234

    "As your safety declines, so does your compassion." Well put lady.

    • @heyaisdabomb
      @heyaisdabomb Před 3 lety +86

      It's true. I'm a lot less compassionate after 10 years in San Francisco of this issue, in part cause you realize a good portion of the homeless we have here would rather live on the streets than in any shelter or living situation, because they don't like the strings attached i.e. that they get drug tested in order to get a roof over their heads. I'm convinced your never going to solve this problem at a local level. If rural America wasn't so harsh on the homeless, we wouldn't have so many homeless people in major cities. People go where he resources are, which is why it's a double edge sword to provide more aid. When SF decided to give every homeless person a $1000 check every month for being homeless, it creates a no win situation for the city, as any homeless with half a brain would cross the bay and flood the city. Which is what happens, we can't decrease the population because as soon as we house people, more homeless show up for their house. Thus, this needs to be dealt with federally, because other wise, you have cities offering various services, and who ever finds the best solution, will be flooded by more homeless moving from other cities with less services. It's the same reason so many people in tech flock to the bay area. People go where ever they have the most opportunities, and homeless people are no different.

    • @TheQuinto2010
      @TheQuinto2010 Před 3 lety +42

      What's she's really saying is as the value of my home declines so does my compassion.

    • @nelmoon1981
      @nelmoon1981 Před 3 lety +39

      @@heyaisdabomb I don’t think the issue is that simple. Many homeless people chose not to go to shelters because they could possibly be surrounded by drugs etc. Many times shelters are crowded, unsafe, and unsanitary. Also the majority of homeless people are not addicts.

    • @ManatedMan
      @ManatedMan Před 3 lety +13

      @@TheQuinto2010 nothing wrong with that. Recycle these bums into tires.

    • @4jqxc
      @4jqxc Před 3 lety +7

      @@nelmoon1981 The problem isn't the push factor from smaller towns but rather the pull factor into these larger cities that give benefits to the homeless. Why live in reno when you can live good on the streets in SF? The benefits the provide seem good on paper. Treat those who are unfortuante with greater passion etc etc. Problem is its bringing more of them in. Like rats to a big hunk of government cheese. Cities obviously have to walk a fine line between providing too many benefits that they literally become the homeless preferred destination. Or providing nothing and letting some good people out to rot. So far there doesn't seem to be a good solution. However we can definitely see what's not working.

  • @Doak_85
    @Doak_85 Před 3 lety +203

    Part of the issue is anytime there’s talk or building a new shelter in Austin, every neighborhood/district says “not here”.

    • @lukefromtexas
      @lukefromtexas Před 3 lety +31

      Rightly so. Look at the Arc. Bunch of drugged out people all around red river and 6th area. It’s ruined downtown.

    • @jrjr2699
      @jrjr2699 Před 3 lety +3

      Well you will literally be putting whatever distract at risk.

    • @christopherharrisintexas
      @christopherharrisintexas Před 3 lety +1

      WilCo doing exactly that

    • @jamesmorrison7989
      @jamesmorrison7989 Před 3 lety +1

      You can't blame them. Look at the area around the current shelter in austin.

    • @jamesmorrison7989
      @jamesmorrison7989 Před 3 lety +1

      @@christopherharrisintexas Hell yea. I'm in wilco and we don't have much of a homeless population here. Gonna keep it that way!

  • @garethmcguinness377
    @garethmcguinness377 Před 2 lety +12

    0:38: "Austin tried a more humane and progressive approach." Yeah as if. I disagree with Abbot with all my heart, but we can't act like saying "here sleep in the streets for all we care" is a humane action. If nothing is done to address the causes the crisis won't end

  • @bernardwanjohi7201
    @bernardwanjohi7201 Před 3 lety +30

    Im baffled how the US has money and lots of it for it's military but no money for it's homeless

    • @daizybugs219
      @daizybugs219 Před 2 lety

      We can blame Government and covid. Why? Covid caused the loss of jobs. People now don’t want to work anymore because they milked unemployment from Biden. Housing prices have gone up gas prices have gone up. Yet government wants to impose more lockdowns with the “delta variant” making small businesses go bankrupt
      You stay safe, I’ll stay free.
      Have fun wearing your mask, loser

    • @biteme6551
      @biteme6551 Před 2 lety +1

      You are baffled because you don't understand that JOB NUMBER ONE of government is national defense. Homelessness is like #33.

  • @obsession_gaming
    @obsession_gaming Před 3 lety +214

    *Cost of living is way to high
    "I don't know how to stop this crisis"
    What a joke

    • @jaelynn7575
      @jaelynn7575 Před 3 lety +6

      Cost of living IS way too high.

    • @axelfoley1812
      @axelfoley1812 Před 3 lety +1

      Supply and Demand right

    • @axelfoley1812
      @axelfoley1812 Před 3 lety +1

      Supply and Demand right

    • @christopherscheiber1439
      @christopherscheiber1439 Před 2 lety +3

      Rents are only five grand a month!

    • @timdonnelly3792
      @timdonnelly3792 Před 2 lety +5

      Anyone that claims that the widespread tent problem (in LA, SD, Austin etc.) is a housing/cost of living issue is either a dum dum, blissfully ignorant, or politically motivated. I've been in and around various tent towns across the nation. It's mainly drugs and mental health, with a tinge of actual "I lost my job and now I'm on the streets (and likely now on drugs too)." They don't want food and they don't want shelter. I've tried, it doesn't fucking work. They need housing with intense treatment. Now, how we get them there in a humane way is the real question/issue to be addressed. This "cost of living" debate is inert, and quite frankly, slowing down the progress towards a real solution.

  • @Kelzerkids
    @Kelzerkids Před 3 lety +830

    “Every time I have to pickup human sh*t, my liberal-ness lowers one notch”

    • @josechavezdelreal5831
      @josechavezdelreal5831 Před 3 lety +134

      Liberals are closeted republicans.

    • @genevievewalsh2007
      @genevievewalsh2007 Před 3 lety +30

      How Nice to be able to life a life with accessible bathrooms

    • @gabaldon14
      @gabaldon14 Před 3 lety +6

      I couldn’t agree more with Zamarripa.

    • @xxverdeskxx741
      @xxverdeskxx741 Před 3 lety +17

      Best statement for 2021

    • @ft9kop
      @ft9kop Před 3 lety +12

      It's because their homeless neighbor's are inconsiderate

  • @jackiiecano27
    @jackiiecano27 Před 3 lety +41

    Mental health, housing, and job counseling are all possible solutions. Is perhaps oversimplified, but is better than just moving one whole camp site to another location where the problem starts again

    • @richardmorris7063
      @richardmorris7063 Před 3 lety +3

      Can you force these people to get mental health if available? Each case is different, many want this life .Do their drugs ,no bills,no work & destroy others property values.

    • @stevenbui8043
      @stevenbui8043 Před 2 lety +4

      That's the thing. Most places do have stuff like that. In my area of Texas (SETX Golden Triangle area to be specific) we have many organizations and local city and county leaders trying to help the homeless. Problem is as said by many former homeless people, especially one I got to know well while working as a news photog is Eric Ardouin. He's a very compassionate person, but he also is a person with perspective. He himself had to change and it was a loooong process of realizing he can't keep doing this. Mental health and drug counseling cannot be forced and most times he says, you can't coddle folks like this unbanning camping in city limits. Defeating homelessness requires a loong process of dealing with each individual which isn't something that a lot of folks like these people interviewed will be willing to put into it. They want a magic wand to wave it away, but it doesn't come that way. It may take good 20 years for some kind of change if we're lucky.

    • @andys6385
      @andys6385 Před 2 lety

      Naive ass

    • @nenmaster5218
      @nenmaster5218 Před 2 lety

      @@stevenbui8043
      "Starvation CAN be ended.
      Private Corp's have deemed that Milk that's out of Date OR is NOT even that, tomatoes that arent shiny enough and bananas that arent crooked-enough, are to be thrown ito Dumpsters AND BLEACH SHALL BE POURED ON TOP, so the Homeless wont eat it. Yes, you heard that right. Want me to repeat that last Fact?"
      -Second Thought, a CZcamsr with much to say, but who also is not a Doomer.

  • @abefrohammer3105
    @abefrohammer3105 Před 3 lety +131

    That dude just realized on camera that he's a coward.

    • @Leondon73
      @Leondon73 Před 3 lety +6

      Typical as$hole republican

    • @abefrohammer3105
      @abefrohammer3105 Před 3 lety +34

      @@Leondon73 who do you think I was referencing? It's doubtful the guy who identifies as a progressive is a Republican. Do you believe inserting a party into a discussion on cowardly behavior isolates that characteristic? Judging by this man's own admission of fearing for his daughter yet not being willing to vote for something he wants to see happen but wants to appear virtuous by not voting for it, is the epitome of a coward. Irregardless of political affiliation.

    • @SouthernSilverExchange
      @SouthernSilverExchange Před 3 lety +16

      @@abefrohammer3105 agreed Abe. Thats called "spineless" as far as im concerned. He wants his conscience clear, but ultimately wants other people to do the bidding for him. What a jackass. Thanks for posting

    • @KyleFN
      @KyleFN Před 2 lety +5

      @@SouthernSilverExchange I guess that's one hot take.
      What you're ACTUALLY seeing is the internal conflict that comes when dealing with the dichotomy of both wanting to honestly help the less fortunate but also improve your own quality of life ... and there's nothing wrong with that. It's a natural human response to the situation.
      You're tossing out a really pathetic "False Dichotomy" in order to reframe the actual issue through the lens of your own personal political bullshit and it makes you look like a bigger dumbass than you already seem.

    • @elonsmusk6658
      @elonsmusk6658 Před 2 lety +1

      You just ain't lived in texas bud, and you wont get it till yah do

  • @Ihateyofacesonnn
    @Ihateyofacesonnn Před 3 lety +393

    A large portion of the homelessness problem is mental health, I worked with a psychiatric ward about 14 years ago and most of the patient that were abandoned by family would be sent to skid row in downtown Los Angeles most would run away as soon as they pulled up to the shelter

    • @who2u333
      @who2u333 Před 3 lety +43

      We need to ID why each person is homeless. Mental issue, short/long term under/unemployment, simply the lifestyle they prefer, whatever. Then figure out how to deal with that.

    • @akashicklovebpd1264
      @akashicklovebpd1264 Před 3 lety +29

      Yep. I lived like this in California 20 years ago. No one listened no one cared it was our fault for being homeless. I had to stay in some of those disgusting shelters. I was raised in shelters my first shelter was 4 years. these newly homeless people voted to cut a lot of programs without doing the math. They just wanted a celebrity to run their state. So that middle class is now sleeping outside. The middle class never invested in these programs now they need them.

    • @plookngo67
      @plookngo67 Před 3 lety +15

      end the drug war . supply the hopeless addicts . this might keep people from falling into homelessness . then reinvest the money spent fighting ther drug war on mental health treatment and addiction .

    • @sarbantz
      @sarbantz Před 3 lety +11

      @@who2u333 fentanyl, and our liberalism toward drugs. All street drugs are now days laced with fentanyl. It is destroying humans beyond the point of repair.

    • @sor3999
      @sor3999 Před 3 lety +12

      A minority of homeless have a mental illness issue. Stop spreading this baseless bullshit.

  • @lu881
    @lu881 Před 3 lety +71

    _"I left California because LA has so many homeless people"_

    • @tuntematonsotilas3533
      @tuntematonsotilas3533 Před 3 lety +6

      US spends nearly 1 trillion a year in the military,
      US has nearly 800 military bases around the world,
      US is getting out of Afghanistan but is picking a fight with Russia, China, Iran and so on...

    • @davidheredia56
      @davidheredia56 Před 3 lety +2

      As a friend said, “attempting to be the city of LA in the body of a town”. SF works in place too

    • @tonys92178
      @tonys92178 Před 3 lety +3

      it's almost like every major city in USA is full of homeless people because the USA has no social net, and because most residents of rich areas would rather sweep homeless people under the rug and ignore their existence then lobby to support them.

    • @low_vibration
      @low_vibration Před 3 lety

      @@tuntematonsotilas3533 no they're picking fights with us. it's only a matter of time until china moves on taiwan. the constant cyberattacks fucking our infrastructure from russia and of course iran is the world's number one state sponser of terrorism

    • @zachburskey8868
      @zachburskey8868 Před 3 lety +3

      @marc Lmao. China has forced work camps, and forced sterilization of China's native muslim population.
      Funny how a liberals empathy only works when it's convenient for their politics.

  • @javierbustaa
    @javierbustaa Před 3 lety +11

    I visited Austin this past weekend and was amazed by this issue, truly heartbreaking

    • @IzzyBizzyBooBoo
      @IzzyBizzyBooBoo Před 2 lety

      It's actually not half as bad as it was when they made this doc (it's still pretty bad though). We passed Prop B and they are still clogging up the sidewalks with their tents and bullshit plus harassing people for spare change at every stop light.

  • @ryry562000
    @ryry562000 Před 3 lety +7

    Take some of these abandoned Walmarts and turn them into rooms for homeless. Give them a time limit to get a job and get back on there feet.

  • @pvtpain66k
    @pvtpain66k Před 3 lety +402

    I think this guys attitude does a perfect job of illustrating how I think most people realistically feel about the homeless. "I feel bad for them, they have nowhere else to be and _deserve_ better. But I also don't feel safe with the camp here, and they need to be somewhere else."
    It's really a set of housing, job & health care issues, not homelessness.

    • @adamd416
      @adamd416 Před 3 lety +14

      It’s so funny the mayor says by allowing them to do it it didn’t make it any worse. Liberals at work my man. There’s a reason Austin is dealing with this in Dallas isn’t.

    • @Agentscrange333
      @Agentscrange333 Před 3 lety +5

      And drug addiction

    • @johntore6108
      @johntore6108 Před 3 lety +24

      Unless you are a Billionaire, for the most part, everyone working is 1 Paycheck away from losing everything they own. COVID Killed Jobs, and the Economy is Shut Down over 1 Year Later...

    • @adamd416
      @adamd416 Před 3 lety +6

      @@johntore6108 that’s the government’s fault not covids

    • @staywoke2198
      @staywoke2198 Před 3 lety +7

      @@adamd416 2 years ago you would see some homeless people time to time but now it’s camps and tents in every park, every trail. Needles everywhere. Our mayor is a fucktard

  • @DebsFan101
    @DebsFan101 Před 3 lety +884

    “As your safety declines, so does your compassion.” Powerful words.

    • @brandonromney2881
      @brandonromney2881 Před 3 lety +42

      also your liberalism haha

    • @zackzues4830
      @zackzues4830 Před 3 lety +4

      @@brandonromney2881 💯

    • @ryanrivard1455
      @ryanrivard1455 Před 3 lety +36

      You're not a victim of your choice to be less compassionate? Safety is an illusion (you only feel as safe as you believe you are). You're using the issue of Safety to justify bad choices.
      The people who are homeless are human beings and also have a right to safety, and hope.

    • @zackzues4830
      @zackzues4830 Před 3 lety +5

      @@ryanrivard1455 Boom..Mic drop💯

    • @titomala-madre
      @titomala-madre Před 3 lety +7

      @Belinda SS The good Christian value of NIMBY.

  • @n.manasseh8615
    @n.manasseh8615 Před 2 lety +8

    Yeah just make a camp ground. A clean safe sanitary camp ground/Army style tent city. Organize it into plots. Put in facilities. And then bring in the assistance and counseling so they can begin to transitions back into society. It’s going to take at least a year to build some type of housing and people need a place to stay right now.

    • @jessiejames2544
      @jessiejames2544 Před 2 lety

      Reads of actual solutions and results and that's refreshingly novel!

    • @elviaknoll4705
      @elviaknoll4705 Před 11 měsíci

      At Camp Abbott? This thread is wildly outdated and inaccurate related to right now.

  • @Becky_Cal
    @Becky_Cal Před 3 lety +6

    This is not a California or Austin or NYC problem…it’s an AMERICAN AND GLOBAL problem. I lived in London UK from 2016-2017 and there was a growing homelessness situation there. They didn’t have tents yet, but lots of people sleeping on the street who would then collect in certain areas throughout the day… I’d see groups of them on my way to work.

    • @longestvideoever
      @longestvideoever Před rokem

      When wages dont increase but rent does thats how you get homelessness.

  • @macdom24
    @macdom24 Před 3 lety +82

    "I'm going to vote against it but I hope it passes" talk about cowardly passing the buck

    • @afromolukker
      @afromolukker Před 3 lety +1

      I took it as he wants his streets clean, but doesn't want them to disappear to different areas where they are not seen and have their issues not adressed. How's passing it going to help the people?

    • @ryanknight6360
      @ryanknight6360 Před 3 lety +9

      100% fake af lmao just vote Yes bro.. you don’t have to please your liberal friends.

    • @jacemasood3019
      @jacemasood3019 Před 3 lety

      Honestly infinitely better than the reverse. He feels a certain way but doesn't find it an action he can stand behind advocating

    • @robertkoerber3309
      @robertkoerber3309 Před 3 lety

      @@jacemasood3019 he wanted to vote no so he could maintain his fake sense of moral superiority, but irl deep down he feels the same as everyone else. Dude needs a spine

  • @gotDIBS
    @gotDIBS Před 3 lety +385

    Cities don't want to make decisions when it hits their capital pockets. Denver/Portland/Seattle/Los Angeles/ Oakland/ San Fran/Las Vegas/Austin +some all the same problems with no direction on rehabilitation/transition programs. Rich get richer and the middle class lands on their ass while the wealth drives past. This issue is bigger than us. Homeless and hopeless is the story rewrote time again, faith in your journey you can over come the recession. Started at the bottom now I'm here! Stay blessed people.

    • @vee7470
      @vee7470 Před 3 lety +10

      It's a hard situation for both working and homeless people, it hasn't been actually dealt with and is becoming a bigger problem. Society and political administrations need to make more housing available, but the prioritization of wealthy-middle class construction stops this. Lumber is at a historic high and becoming a commodity as well as other resources. A lot of Universities and vocational schools still use out-dated teaching practices for constructing homes. If we can't move towards substainability how can it be fixed? I wonder if politicians truly think or just daydream.

    • @Student0Toucher
      @Student0Toucher Před 3 lety +5

      All Democrat cities

    • @tams9019
      @tams9019 Před 3 lety +9

      The only way to deal with the mental health issues is to force people to get help, which many Americans would find unethical. I say this because I’ve talked to a few homeless people who don’t want to live in housing. They preferred living on the streets. I think the mental health issues feed those thoughts. So, do we force someone to get treatment and live in group homes?

    • @imhuemankeepURcolorsforcrayons
      @imhuemankeepURcolorsforcrayons Před 3 lety +9

      @@Student0Toucher Nah Atlanta has always been republic till now, so it have nothing to do with democratic or republicans. It has to do with our government not giving a ish about us! This is why I live in a rural area and not a big city anymore.

    • @thawhiteazn
      @thawhiteazn Před 3 lety +2

      Cities don’t have the money to solve these issues. State and federal government does.

  • @lifesignjohnson
    @lifesignjohnson Před 3 lety +20

    Until you've been there don't judge. I've been there before. It's always "not in my backyard"

  • @riskyron1416
    @riskyron1416 Před 2 lety +12

    Years past, Phoenix used to send their homeless to LA on Greyhound. LA didn't like that much so started sending their homeless to Phoenix along with homeless from San Diego and San Francisco. Sure the same is happening now. In fact sure if anyone asked they will gladly provide a Greyhound ticket to send you somewhere else. Usually Traveler's Aid providing it. Nott hatt you will be welcome at your destination.

  • @klusps
    @klusps Před 3 lety +239

    Noticed this happening to all major metropolitan areas, especially in cities that are big tech hubs.

    • @graydendonner3793
      @graydendonner3793 Před 3 lety +74

      it's a symptom of late-stage capitalism

    • @Jamcad01
      @Jamcad01 Před 3 lety +38

      @@graydendonner3793 It's a symptom of government land use restrictions that prevent an adequate supply of new housing from being built

    • @matimi0sbackflip455
      @matimi0sbackflip455 Před 3 lety +14

      @@graydendonner3793 yup. Capitalism and liberal policy. Just like here in LA

    • @just_a_turtle_chad
      @just_a_turtle_chad Před 3 lety +18

      Capitalism is evil we need to adopt communism 🌹✊😎🤟

    • @hectorramirez5413
      @hectorramirez5413 Před 3 lety +5

      More like in blue run cities.

  • @TheXL2013
    @TheXL2013 Před 3 lety +182

    Steve Adler's voice is so breathy, I thought he was gonna tell me about the hottest nightclubs.

  • @Meerkat17
    @Meerkat17 Před 3 lety +6

    Hmm maybe we need to bring back the institutions and make sure they're run properly and humanely?

  • @dylanjohnson8541
    @dylanjohnson8541 Před 3 lety +9

    People from LA moving to Austin thinking they can escape the homeless...

    • @SexyTCAPdecoy4Hansen
      @SexyTCAPdecoy4Hansen Před 3 lety +2

      They’re the problem! They all came here at once! My city wasn’t ready for this move!

    • @TL-ms6lp
      @TL-ms6lp Před 3 lety +1

      @@SexyTCAPdecoy4Hansen Ironically, there are a lot of homeless people because everyone and their mom moves there, both rich people who drive up housing prices and people who can't afford it and end up homeless.

  • @sputnikalgrim
    @sputnikalgrim Před 3 lety +349

    I lived in my car for 2 years. I never thought that would happen, but things go wrong and come in 2s or 3s and the next thing you know you’re upside down and asking yourself what the hell just happened. The situation compounds itself as well. No sanitary, no cleanliness, no job or ability to get a job, no income... around and round you go. Desperation cause people to act in a way they never knew they could. All the passers by have negativity towards the situation, I know I did before I found myself on the other side. Lucky for me I was able to find a job so I could afford a $10 gym membership to shower etc. I didn’t make enough to get back on my feet though. Rather than looking at the homeless as a problem, look at them as a symptom. There’s a problem creating homelessness. Credit, cost of living vs wages paid for what jobs are available to them. Drugs, mental health. I live in Wisconsin and there are community outreach programs and not for profits that saved me. I have BPD2, PTSD and disorganized attachment disorder. They put me in contact with organizations that could help me, and they do everything they can for everyone. Try to help rather than scoff

    • @kingjim713
      @kingjim713 Před 3 lety +43

      I, like you, had my truck. We were the lucky ones. We could still move around easier and we were safer in our vehicles...for the most part. I still remember going into interviews without having had a shower or being able to wash and iron my clothes. It still hurts, years later, remembering the looks I got just waiting for the interview.
      Thank God for my loved ones. Thank God for my resiliency. Thank God.

    • @stephr9223
      @stephr9223 Před 3 lety +24

      Thank you for sharing your story. Yes, people being unsheltered is an outcome or like you said a symptom. Your story illuminates how becoming homeless doesn't just happen overnight, it is compounded by all of the oppressive obstacles. And once you have reached a certain bottom is it is so incredibly hard to overcome it, by no fault of your own. The system does not support us and value our work. There is no financial safety net in this country. So many people who lost their jobs or had to find a different job that paid less during COVID are going to feel that hit for the long-term.

    • @dishman1966
      @dishman1966 Před 3 lety +11

      A high percentage of homeless are mentally Ill or drug addicts. If you can be helped, aren’t a drug addict or insane, then I don’t think it’s going to be impossible to help you. The rest need to be moved far away from the city, build something in the desert and get treatment or lock away those who are a danger to society but letting this get like this is insane.
      It’s not their property to sleep on. Whatever the solution is, this isn’t it.

    • @soul2soul399
      @soul2soul399 Před 3 lety +22

      I always think about the foster kids. The ones that grew up without a stable home, being abused, nobody to love them… then they are put out on their own at 18. No family to help them. Those of us who grew up middle class with loving parents… we haven’t a clue how easy it is for kids who grew up in the system to become homeless adults.

    • @CormacHolland
      @CormacHolland Před 3 lety +18

      Thank you for your compassionate story and view. Too many bigots in this comment section.

  • @GovernmentAcid
    @GovernmentAcid Před 3 lety +329

    Recent Austinite here, it's almost astonishing how bad the issue has gotten in such a short amount of time. This isn't an issue with the homeless themselves, this is a socioeconomic issue which we simply refuse to address.

    • @johnsnow5955
      @johnsnow5955 Před 3 lety +15

      If it doesn't actively effect the American then they won't care.
      We our the nation of pretending our problems don't exist.

    • @charlieortiz5399
      @charlieortiz5399 Před 3 lety +1

      Before Covid I went to visit a friend in Austin and I was not aware of how many homeless people there were. I assume it has gotten worse since then. As all cities are struggling with this crises.

    • @GovernmentAcid
      @GovernmentAcid Před 3 lety +9

      @@charlieortiz5399 I haven't been able to return post-pandemic, but I will say that when I was there some years ago, circa 2015, homelessness became dramatically and noticeably worse every few months. I was homeless myself for a while there bc the economic circumstances were so unavoidable, and I was an engineering student attending UT, who was otherwise doing well (I had a straight-across 4.0 up until the end, and even after failing out I still had a 3.4 bc of how many credit hours I'd had up to that point), but there just wasn't any help available, period. Living conditions in Austin, even for the housed, are just unbelievably miserable and precarious. Minimum wage is still $7.25/hr, both in Texas and locally in Austin, which is absolutely something that they have the ability to change but just refuse to (San Marcos, which is just south of Austin, has had a $15/hr minimum since like 2014 or thereabouts). I genuinely think on some level that the broader collapse across the economy (both nationally and in Austin, hence the homelessness issue getting so much exponentially worse), is going to trigger a crisis that requires the government to intervene, and here's hoping that that translates to a new social housing system or something very similar. I can't imagine any other outcome at this point

    • @randal_gibbons
      @randal_gibbons Před 3 lety +1

      UBI

    • @GovernmentAcid
      @GovernmentAcid Před 3 lety

      @@randal_gibbons hell, they may try and do a UBI in the stead of social housing, but I really don't know if people would accept that or not

  • @jackbates7467
    @jackbates7467 Před 3 lety +5

    We didn't have a debate over how to solve the crisis, we had a debate over whether we should try to fix it or sweep it under the rug.

  • @Lv16543
    @Lv16543 Před 3 lety +6

    Fort Worth is booming with homeless people now🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @johndanielson3777
    @johndanielson3777 Před 3 lety +166

    It’s not just Austin. The lack of affordable housing in many major American cities has been a problem for a long time.

    • @SoundScientist1
      @SoundScientist1 Před 3 lety +11

      •Insufficient affordable housing.
      •Service sector wages NOT keeping pace with increasing cost of living
      •AMERICAN service sector jobs increasingly being given to ILLEGAL central/south americans (ie. CHEAP LABOR)

    • @tacobell4968
      @tacobell4968 Před 3 lety +5

      Don't 4get the drug problems

    • @SoundScientist1
      @SoundScientist1 Před 3 lety

      @@tacobell4968. Lack of shelter is an ECONOMIC/FINANCIAL condition. When you can show a credible study that shows a direct causal link (or correlation) between substance abuse & homelessness, then we can examine it further...

    • @tacobell4968
      @tacobell4968 Před 3 lety +3

      @@SoundScientist1 ok 👌 😐 from my experience all the homeless people be smoking crack sleeping under bridges

    • @davidc2838
      @davidc2838 Před 3 lety

      @@tacobell4968 Causation and Correlation are TWO very different things. Many people simply lost their jobs...or their houses...or their family...or had tremendous health issues or healthcare bills. Once you're homeless and on the streets it's not a far slide to being addicted. Either way, that's something that needs treatment...not ridicule.

  • @lexremillard2549
    @lexremillard2549 Před 3 lety +215

    "as your safety declines so does your compassion." Well stated.

    • @genevievewalsh2007
      @genevievewalsh2007 Před 3 lety +9

      That only takes into account the safety of the speaker.

    • @ling636
      @ling636 Před 3 lety +6

      @@genevievewalsh2007 ok liberal

    • @Jaqen-HGhar
      @Jaqen-HGhar Před 3 lety +4

      Maybe they shouldn't have gentrified the low income part of town in East Austin so they could have cheap housing and jack the prices up, thus putting tons of people out on the streets. They thought they could make East Austin safe by moving a bunch of rich white people there and pushing everyone else out onto the streets. It's real rich of them to then complain about the people they pushed out onto the streets. UT Austin did a study that showed there is active gentrification in East Austin, "Jake Wegmann, a professor in UT’s School of Architecture who co-authored the study said in a statement that the report shows “striking levels of change, including an alarming loss of low-income persons of color from several areas in Austin’s eastern crescent.”

    • @lancelmccune
      @lancelmccune Před 3 lety +2

      Same the other way. When people become so affluent that they think they can cure all social ills by redistributing wealth, they find in the end it doesn’t work. This is liberalism at work. You can’t lift people up that will not help themselves and you certainly can’t do it by tearing people at the top, down.

    • @Emmie89
      @Emmie89 Před 3 lety +2

      Predators, thieves, murders, lunatics, and dangerous people live everywhere not just the streets. Dangerous people will get to you one way or another. Not being able to afford housing doesn’t make someone more dangerous than another person.

  • @johndoe6773
    @johndoe6773 Před 2 lety +4

    I moved from Austin 5 years ago and it breaks my heart to see this. Austin proper is not very big and the explosion of growth over the last 20 years (though the steady growth for longer) has been squeezing housing availability. There are many many small towns around Austin that could incorporate and build affordable housing. But another issue is transportation. Back to the rapid growth, Austin was not built in a way to accommodate all the traffic. Really only 2-3 ways of getting through the city and 1 of those is a major interstate. Lots of problems that many cities are facing, I hope we band together as a country and try and address them.

    • @nenmaster5218
      @nenmaster5218 Před 2 lety

      "Starvation CAN be ended.
      Private Corp's have deemed that Milk that's out of Date OR is NOT even that, tomatoes that arent shiny enough and bananas that arent crooked-enough, are to be thrown ito Dumpsters AND BLEACH SHALL BE POURED ON TOP, so the Homeless wont eat it. Yes, you heard that right. Want me to repeat that last Fact?"
      -Second Thought, a CZcamsr with much to say, but who also is not a Doomer.

  • @RiverPlateCT
    @RiverPlateCT Před 3 lety +42

    "The Community" is another word for "AS LONG IT ISN'T IN MY RICH NEIGHBORHOOD"

  • @c87kim
    @c87kim Před 3 lety +139

    I deal with homeless guys that hang out around the building where my store is located. A lot of them are harmless, but there are a few who ruin it for everyone else by verbally assaulting everyone that walks by.

    • @PeterSedesse
      @PeterSedesse Před 3 lety +22

      that is my experience in Austin also. A lot of homeless people are just people who like to do drugs (and probably addicted). There isn't a solution for them because they are choosing to live there. If you give them the option of a sidewalk and drugs, verses a free apartment and drug testing, they will stay on the streets. Another big percentage are mentally ill who cannot live on their own.

    • @edwardlomeli5657
      @edwardlomeli5657 Před 3 lety +11

      It’s been stated that most homeless people have jobs. A vast majority also have phones as it’s almost essential to have a job these days.
      So yeah, a handful or smaller percentage does ruin the image for the rest

    • @ameyas7726
      @ameyas7726 Před 3 lety +13

      Unfortunately politicians just play dirty politics..
      Democrats: Don't really have a solution for homelessness...but hey at least the problem is out in the open now!
      Republicans: Look what the libretards are doing to our beautiful posh cities...let's just sweep the problem back under the rug and make America great again!

    • @tacobell4968
      @tacobell4968 Před 3 lety

      Those are the ones who are high af

    • @kushking949
      @kushking949 Před 3 lety +1

      that's your fault for buying a store in the hood and don't tell me it was a beautiful place before you bought that store

  • @Lupinthe3rd88
    @Lupinthe3rd88 Před 3 lety +168

    But weren't they all leaving California to go to Texas because of homelessness?

    • @niroshapriyadarsahani2877
      @niroshapriyadarsahani2877 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/SvQRPnQBJdQ/video.html

    • @twinbee13monsterhunter
      @twinbee13monsterhunter Před 3 lety +36

      They brought their homeless problems with them lol

    • @Jamcad01
      @Jamcad01 Před 3 lety +11

      @@gordonmccracken1209 It's a lot worse in California than everywhere else though. Also Austin is a lot bluer than Houston and Dallas and there's less homelessness in those two cities (especially Houston considering it's fairly easy to build enough supply of new housing to keep up with new demand)

    • @dbarnett
      @dbarnett Před 3 lety +2

      in short, no

    • @DHEspana
      @DHEspana Před 3 lety +3

      In short, yes

  • @greenpickle9606
    @greenpickle9606 Před 3 lety +6

    I used to live in Austin. This is crazy.

  • @juliancrooks3031
    @juliancrooks3031 Před 2 lety +6

    Expensive rents and low wages, this is the results. The poor have to live somewhere

  • @mamarobyn
    @mamarobyn Před 3 lety +115

    This is exactly what the bridge by my daughter's school looks like. It breaks my heart. How is this normal Miami? Miami isn't what people think it is...

    • @176103cw
      @176103cw Před 3 lety +18

      That's for sure...super rich and super poor in Miami

    • @2wheelhooligan649
      @2wheelhooligan649 Před 3 lety +2

      It's the most democrat ran city in the state push them out.

    • @petrinajc
      @petrinajc Před 3 lety +20

      It’s a American issue. It’s capitalism at its finest. The United States never dealt with it. Now you’re seeing it

    • @JasonOwensYT
      @JasonOwensYT Před 3 lety +16

      @@petrinajc Its a white liberal progressive communist issue. Has nothing to do with capatalism. Every homeless city you'll find another white liberal mayor in charge of. Garcetti, De Blasio, Ted Wheeler,This Austin clown. The list goes on. White neoliberal progressivism is the problem.

    • @tyvanderpump2317
      @tyvanderpump2317 Před 3 lety +36

      @@JasonOwensYT you sound so stupid lol. Actually NY/CA bails out most of the poor states: Mississippi, Louisiana, Kentucky, West Virginia, Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Sc/NC. All republican controlled. And waaaay worst. But nice try.

  • @casienwhey
    @casienwhey Před 3 lety +886

    Classic quote: "Every time I have to pick up human sh**, my liberalness just got lowered one more notch."

    • @gerardgmz
      @gerardgmz Před 3 lety +78

      That's because living in the third world isn't the same as hearing about it in an infomercial.

    • @bones549
      @bones549 Před 3 lety +40

      Reality is hard.

    • @JTScott1988
      @JTScott1988 Před 3 lety +6

      Why are they having to use the bathroom like that? They havent a home

    • @SolutionsNotPrayers
      @SolutionsNotPrayers Před 3 lety +32

      A Republican would step in it and track it into your house and on to your carpet. They are the most unkempt savages.

    • @themexicano1106
      @themexicano1106 Před 3 lety +17

      That’s when the moron should just turn conservative, it’s the best way to go

  • @LilOBX
    @LilOBX Před 2 lety +3

    walked down that street at night after a 6th street night.... probably wasnt the greatest idea. 3 homeless dudes tried to fight me lmao.

  • @-Bloomingtales
    @-Bloomingtales Před 2 lety +4

    I flew into Austin in June and was appalled at the amount of homelessness… people were sleeping any and everywhere. I also saw a woman who was naked (shirtless w/ nips out) who looked as if she was spiking and talking to herself. When I see that many homeless people in a city I know there’s plenty of tech companies there sad to say. Starting to look a lot like San Fran.

  • @bvandyke10
    @bvandyke10 Před 3 lety +196

    I was in Austin this past weekend and could not believe what I was seeing. Their situation, like so many other cities, is baaaaaaaaaaaaaaad. Something needs to be done.

    • @marissas7282
      @marissas7282 Před 3 lety +16

      Get the commies out of leadership. Casar on council has been elected twice as a communist. Adler is as far left as you can go.

    • @cmil432a
      @cmil432a Před 3 lety +19

      @@marissas7282 so get the people who wanna give the homeless housing out off office for the people that dont wanna help them at all thats ur solution?

    • @ahorowitz15
      @ahorowitz15 Před 3 lety +29

      @@Masterho310 The conservative solution to this has been to just keep the homeless out of sight so they don't need to think about them and do nothing beyond that.

    • @DoctorChained
      @DoctorChained Před 3 lety +2

      @@marissas7282 Commies? So long as these people are out of sight, no need to think about them right?

    • @aj-sz8mu
      @aj-sz8mu Před 3 lety +9

      @@Masterho310 nope. both sides have no "funding" solution. What the difference is. liberals don't like segregation, thus allows camping anywhere (so the homeless can have access to stores, public services etc). Conservatives want segregation. out of sight, out of mind. Neither makes the problem go away. But the latter allows you to be more selfish.

  • @charliewilliams2735
    @charliewilliams2735 Před 3 lety +163

    Im sure there are tons of malls that sit empty. Convert them to apartments
    Da!

    • @gerardgmz
      @gerardgmz Před 3 lety +5

      Mayor Adler's plan is to create a crisis so the cronies get your tax dollars in the form of contracts to house them. Redistribution.

    • @cherryslat5702
      @cherryslat5702 Před 3 lety +19

      @@gerardgmz Yeh taxes are meant for that. Helping the community and building infrastructure

    • @gerardgmz
      @gerardgmz Před 3 lety +6

      @@cherryslat5702
      Housing the homeless is not infrastructure, tho.

    • @kushal4956
      @kushal4956 Před 3 lety +7

      those malls are owned by companies and people, you can't just convert them to apartments without their permission

    • @Popeyedfreeze
      @Popeyedfreeze Před 3 lety +11

      Most of these people are severely mentally ill and have violent tendencies or drug addiction. Thinking that putting a roof over their head would solve the problem is just ignorant.

  • @sonic1k
    @sonic1k Před 2 lety +15

    Texas 2008: look at California and their homeless, we're smart, will never have homeless in our state
    Texas 2021:criminalize the homelessness

    • @T.R.E.D.
      @T.R.E.D. Před 2 lety

      Austin isn’t Texas, we don’t claim Austin.

  • @dano3803
    @dano3803 Před 3 lety +10

    I was born and raised in Austin, Texas and I still live here. But everything I loved about Austin is just gone… the laid back attitude, the music, the culture, the beautiful city. Now Austin is a hellhole thanks to Mayor Steve Adler leaning towards a California lifestyle. I feel bad for homeless people, but at the same time I don’t want my kids to see homeless junkies shooting up. As I am writing this comment I was in downtown Austin today 08-04-2021 and I was approached by three homeless guys and they asked me for cigarettes and they cussed me out when I told them I don’t smoke and with COVID-19 it’s not safe to have these people just laying around everywhere!

    • @shasmi93
      @shasmi93 Před 3 lety

      Global warming will ruin you and your child’s life more than any homeless problem can. Why is no one concerned with fixing that problem first? Especially all you folks WITH children? Doesn’t make any damn sense.

    • @dano3803
      @dano3803 Před 2 lety

      @@shasmi93 Oh please. Opinions like this are the reasons why people don’t like liberals. Liberal policies destroy cities. NYC, Detroit, Chicago, Seattle, Portland, LA, San Francisco and now Austin. Thank god for Texas Governor Greg Abbott for signing a statewide camping ban. Now these tents are going away! Take your liberal propaganda to California where it will be welcomed.

    • @shasmi93
      @shasmi93 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dano3803 yeah…. I’m not liberal. I support many republican initiatives and I am more in the middle. All I’m saying is, it’s funny how people want to argue sides on a planet that lets them have that privilege. Yet we are destroying that planet that even set the stage for debate. It makes no sense. None. But you calling me a “liberal” and shutting down conversations that really need to be had are a prime example of why our species is on the door out. So thanks for your input. But it won’t change the underlying issue we should ALL be focusing on.

  • @juanmacias5922
    @juanmacias5922 Před 3 lety +81

    Wes is right, this is a health issue, they deserve mental health, and ease of transition into which ever life they'd like to live. I've seen this work in Japan, and LA just recently passed something similar.

    • @debi1451
      @debi1451 Před 3 lety +9

      In Japan, They have tiny little houses for the Homeless. The government supplies them. They are really small but are a Godsend until they can get something better.

    • @Indigololz
      @Indigololz Před 3 lety +1

      You can't transition back into a normal life without first addressing what led you into homelessness. A tiny house doesn't fix a severe heroin addiction.

    • @johnsnow5955
      @johnsnow5955 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Indigololz Yah just skip over the "Mental Health" portion of the comment.
      You are the problem.

    • @Indigololz
      @Indigololz Před 3 lety +1

      @@johnsnow5955 Mental health may lead people to drugs, but once someone is physically reliant, it's no longer a mental health issue.

    • @jsl2411
      @jsl2411 Před 3 lety

      How is it financially possible to provide mental health support to all these homeless people? Not possible you need to think realistically

  • @Preacher_.
    @Preacher_. Před 3 lety +323

    4 walls, a roof, and running water.
    That's all these people need. Anyone who's been homeless knows that just having a safe place to sleep at night & somewhere to shower means everything.

    • @emuriddle9364
      @emuriddle9364 Před 3 lety +47

      As a homeless guy myself, I want to add:
      Bureaucracy is a big thing. I tried to get assistance. But they would look for any excuse to reject the application.
      Didn't get anything. Lost my apartment. And was on the street the next day.
      My story is pretty common with disabled Homeless too.
      One guy I met did landscaping for 20 years. Got a knee injury, and couldn't keep the job. Same bureaucratic mess too.
      There's a reason why other countries have lower Homeless rates.
      I mean, there aren't any Tent Cities in places like London, Copenhagen, or Helinski.

    • @silentassassin6162
      @silentassassin6162 Před 3 lety +18

      Exactly how can you go out and look for a job apply for applications,get back on your feet if you don’t have a stable place to lay your head that is safe.

    • @SirStoneFace
      @SirStoneFace Před 3 lety +3

      You really don’t think it’s about mental illness? And rehabilitation?

    • @usser1138
      @usser1138 Před 3 lety +18

      @@SirStoneFace do mentally ill people not need a bed and a shower???

    • @josemondragon5311
      @josemondragon5311 Před 3 lety +16

      They don't want to live by the rules of the housing centers. They rather be on the street.

  • @thinktwice8897
    @thinktwice8897 Před 3 lety +6

    The "American dream" what they don't tell you is Freddy kueger can show up anytime

  • @Littlekitten_
    @Littlekitten_ Před 3 lety +4

    An easy fix is lowering property taxes and stop letting multimillion dollar companies buy our homes ..

  • @christinearmington
    @christinearmington Před 3 lety +154

    “As your safety declines, so does your compassion.”

    • @tuntematonsotilas3533
      @tuntematonsotilas3533 Před 3 lety +7

      US spends nearly 1 trillion a year in the military,
      US has nearly 800 military bases around the world,
      US is getting out of Afghanistan but is picking a fight with Russia, China, Iran and so on...

    • @cy8999
      @cy8999 Před 3 lety +1

      @@tuntematonsotilas3533 Then, what’s your point? Unless you welcome a few homeless people into your home, shut up. You don’t even know what we go through everyday.

    • @adrianrubin7406
      @adrianrubin7406 Před 3 lety +1

      And yes, I would call the authorities if a homeless person took up residence on my property... but only because I'm not allowed to handle the problem on my own with whatever means I deam fit

    • @jamesmueller8701
      @jamesmueller8701 Před 3 lety

      @@cy8999 ,,, i went through a homeless stage decades ago.. A tent would have been great,, as some of that time was minnesota winters ... You walk for days without sleep or drugs ... because you know if you lay down you stay down ... same as alaska i'd say ... and at the southern border they are being given motel rooms ... and not the budget inn types,, the good ones...

    • @genieglasslamp5028
      @genieglasslamp5028 Před 3 lety +1

      @@cy8999
      You dont go through anyhting. I live near homeless people and they hardly have any impact on my day to day life. The people who actually need help are those homeless people you dont care about.

  • @navirodrigo4055
    @navirodrigo4055 Před 3 lety +531

    I suggest they all set up camp outside of mayor adlers house.

    • @kushal4956
      @kushal4956 Před 3 lety +19

      why only outside?

    • @eddycarpenter8989
      @eddycarpenter8989 Před 3 lety +5

      Lol we want to start sending our homeless here in the SF Bay Area to Texas

    • @gabrielort3531
      @gabrielort3531 Před 3 lety +5

      @@kushal4956 LOL!!

    • @johnny_tapia
      @johnny_tapia Před 3 lety +13

      He lives in a high-rise condo inside The W, so that won't work. He can hide from them.

    • @ChildrensRightsFirst947
      @ChildrensRightsFirst947 Před 3 lety +4

      Most of them probably need to be in mental institutions. No one should be homeless - they belong somewhere, under a roof.

  • @soul2soul399
    @soul2soul399 Před 3 lety +4

    Housing is not the only solution… dedicated camping areas with facilities, transportation, and storage. That would help.

  • @lucianarobledo7982
    @lucianarobledo7982 Před 3 lety +19

    I wish they would place the (small mini homes) for the homeless here in austin tx like they did in California its humane and it helps the public and keeps the city clean everyone wins 🙂

    • @himbourbanist
      @himbourbanist Před 3 lety +1

      It's a great first step, and it's the only real solution to the homelessness crisis

    • @paulfroelich1024
      @paulfroelich1024 Před 2 lety +1

      They have those over on the East side of town. It was started by Mobile Loves and Fishes.

  • @stephenprice3357
    @stephenprice3357 Před 3 lety +100

    Seeing this makes me realize even more how blessed I am

    • @Kelz_X
      @Kelz_X Před 3 lety +3

      You took the words out of my mouth brother

    • @staywoke2198
      @staywoke2198 Před 3 lety +1

      Are you homeless? Must be nice to live downtown for free and never worry ever using a trash can.Just dump it in the streets or tow lake.

    • @heidibangbang
      @heidibangbang Před 3 lety +4

      @@staywoke2198 it's very difficult to be homeless. You know nothing about it.

    • @GEVINCHYGAMEZ
      @GEVINCHYGAMEZ Před 3 lety +3

      U ain't lying....makes u wanna save until u can't no more.....life is scary man at times

    • @megamrsoftee
      @megamrsoftee Před 3 lety +2

      @@staywoke2198 your name must be a joke, because comments are far from woke, homie

  • @pshhh5741
    @pshhh5741 Před 3 lety +238

    Meanwhile... billionaires are multiplying their wealth while also skipping out on paying taxes on any of it..

    • @jameslong2618
      @jameslong2618 Před 3 lety +17

      So? Billionaire don’t waste their lives getting high and blaming others for their failure.

    • @pshhh5741
      @pshhh5741 Před 3 lety +36

      @@jameslong2618 I don't even know or care to know why you even responded 🙄

    • @niroshapriyadarsahani2877
      @niroshapriyadarsahani2877 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/SvQRPnQBJdQ/video.html

    • @REA.Design.Studio
      @REA.Design.Studio Před 3 lety +10

      @Jing Bot you are using a phone or a computer whose creators and marketers are billionares, on an app whose managers are also millionaires. You are actively benefiting from the hard works of the millionaires almost every single moment, yet critise them so thoughtlessly.

    • @ChristianF15cher
      @ChristianF15cher Před 3 lety +7

      I think you're confusing personal taxes for corporate taxes. Billionaires pay millions in income tax, some of them have billion-dollar tax debts.

  • @snorfietsers4006
    @snorfietsers4006 Před 3 lety +4

    2:10 what even is that quote? Basically sums up to "I'm gonna vote against it so I can feel good about myself, but I hope other people vote for it". That's so weak

    • @user_7239
      @user_7239 Před 3 lety

      💯. It’s extremely weak and he’s putting his daughter at risk. He must be deranged to not see that.

  • @BrianD146
    @BrianD146 Před 2 lety

    Always good to shed light on social issues.
    As a mostly retired social worker I really like the documentary on CZcams called Seattle's Dying and it's sequel.
    It promotes the Rhode Island model of dealing with the homeless as being best.
    I would have to agree.
    It's not compassionate to leave people on the street that will die and heard others along the way.
    The Rhode Island model dedicates a prison just for the homeless.
    Not the student going to college who lives out of his car but the chronic homeless who choose it as a lifestyle.
    I'm talking about the drug addicted mentally ill. Talking about the squatters who break local laws regularly.
    In the prison you differentiate the ones that are so mentally ill who will never know how to brush their teeth versus the drug addicted, the mentally ill or both.
    The graduates of this program are thankful and say they would have ended up dead if it wasn't for intervention.
    The great homeless industrial complex is costing way too much money and doing way too little care. Truly special interest at the trough of the taxpayer.
    These tiny home villages are crazy expensive when we could have army barracks that people can voluntarily live in.
    You staff it with tons of mental health workers and social workers in case managers who get these people out of the barracks into housing in a community that they can afford. You cannot expect Los Angeles to be affordable for everyone.
    Yes we need low cost housing for people who work in the service industry.
    The homeless do commit crimes but we're not prosecuting so the ones that refuse the army barracks solution for getting off the street then can find themselves in this dedicated prison.
    Society has got to stop feeding the homeless. If you feed them you only encourage this lifestyle.
    Hardly anybody makes a change in their life unless it gets painful enough.
    Not everyone will survive this process and many people will die but that is a fact of life. People are dying constantly everywhere, whether they're homeless or not.
    Letting homeless have this lifestyle is not compassionate. It is not freedom. It's a lifestyle that brings death, mental illness, is a danger to others and a plague on the city with blight.
    People work their whole life to buy a home and tourists save up to go on vacation but when the homeless take over an area what's the point of the American dream of saving and working hard and doing the responsible thing that leads to a lifestyle of abundance.
    Success in abundance is nothing to apologize for.
    The taxes of these citizens should be used in a productive good way, not wasted on crazy programs that are failing us all.
    This lifestyle has got to come to an end!
    The open-minded politicians, the homeless industrial complex are supposed to be the grown ups in the room yet they're failing all of us.
    We need to get back to common Sense. This notion of personal freedom and expression is crazy when it tears down property values and shutters businesses and is a danger to everyone.
    Taking over sidewalks, feces, urine and danger that makes our city unlivable is not okay. It is not compassionate to the homeless or the taxpayers.
    With the Rhode Island model there will be some who upon graduation will only be able to live in a group home. They've done so much damage to their brain that it may take years if ever to come back on line where they can live independently.
    We have to have a carrot and stick approach. An option to get off the street. Yet if not chosen then involuntary lockup in the dedicated prison staffed with workers to help them regain their skills to live independently.
    I'm not willing to be open-minded about this even as an old social worker.

  • @dearbeaw
    @dearbeaw Před 3 lety +156

    This is a public policy choice by lawmakers. They have the money for oil and gas subsidies but don’t have the money or resources to help unhoused people get off the street.

    • @BokeemWoodbeezy
      @BokeemWoodbeezy Před 3 lety +16

      Exactly! Sheltering homeless and helping people does not provide a direct ROI. Therefore it’s overlooked, as corporate America mostly influences the polices passed.

    • @Durgenheim
      @Durgenheim Před 3 lety +6

      Yeah, they don't want to upset big business so they sit back and allow big business to trample all over their citizens.

    • @youraverageimperialguard7932
      @youraverageimperialguard7932 Před 3 lety +4

      California, Oregon, and Washington have spent 10s of billions of dollars on homelessness and the problem has gotten a lot worse for all 3 of these states. Spending money on them doesn't fix anything, it makes stuff worse.

    • @S489_20mg
      @S489_20mg Před 3 lety +5

      @@youraverageimperialguard7932 lol what’s the solution then , because it can’t be in cutting taxes and federal aid to favor big business in Texas. This is coming from a native Texan

    • @matthewsaunders4820
      @matthewsaunders4820 Před 3 lety +10

      @@youraverageimperialguard7932 it's true in the sense that they haven't spent enough money building homes. They spend more paying the cost of homelessness sweeps, policing, and emergency services. It's cheaper for the state to build a home than it is to pay for homelessness

  • @sk8punk318
    @sk8punk318 Před 3 lety +78

    how do you expect average people who are scraping by to help the homeless out? let them move in? let them camp in their garage? the city needs to actually do something like have a set area they can go to or have some type of main shelter instead of letting them camp wherever the hell they want.

    • @ricardobarahona3939
      @ricardobarahona3939 Před 3 lety +5

      They already have a shelter, shelters are terrible for many homeless people and they never address housing. I do agree that there should be a main area where they can live and it will take time until there’s a way to build low cost housing. I think people are open to live next to low cost housing but I understand the safety and sanitation concerns with the camping in the city.

    • @natrone23
      @natrone23 Před 3 lety +4

      You can’t drink and do drugs at the shelter so the bums don’t want to go there. Maybe they can stay at your home?

    • @cokoblazED
      @cokoblazED Před 3 lety +2

      Many shelters also don’t allow people with violent criminal records in. Secondly also many of those people don’t even want to stay in a shelter, some you wouldn’t believe actually like the freedom of not having all the responsibilities of residing in a house.

    • @usser1138
      @usser1138 Před 3 lety +1

      just give em housing and healthcare boom problem solved. Once you have a stable residence; it’s easier to get a job

    • @natrone23
      @natrone23 Před 3 lety +1

      They don’t want a job you idiot, that’s why they’re bums. They want to drink hang out and do drugs. What do you think they do all day, fill out job applications?

  • @DJ-ws6je
    @DJ-ws6je Před 3 lety +5

    “it’s just made the problem more visible”

  • @evandunkle5510
    @evandunkle5510 Před 3 lety +1

    3:11 is not Portland Oregon. It is Portland Maine. The video clip shown was taken during a “sleep-out” protest in July 2020

  • @starmaker75
    @starmaker75 Před 3 lety +33

    Texans: this homeless crisis is so frustrating!!! Why is the government bad at this?
    West coast states: first time?

    • @tuntematonsotilas3533
      @tuntematonsotilas3533 Před 3 lety +1

      US spends nearly 1 trillion a year in the military,
      US has nearly 800 military bases around the world,
      US is getting out of Afghanistan but is picking a fight with Russia, China, Iran and so on...

    • @dilloncrain9111
      @dilloncrain9111 Před 3 lety

      The military industrial complex is real and it has been proven that people in the pentagon would rather keep us at war always instead of solving the issues we have at home.

    • @dubpizi777
      @dubpizi777 Před 3 lety +2

      Everyone wanted California big tech companies in their cities.... Californians : please take them.

  • @1981vt
    @1981vt Před 3 lety +42

    He’s going to vote against it (to make himself feel better about himself, I guess) but hopes there will be more people who vote for it. Too funny

    • @robertwagner5171
      @robertwagner5171 Před 3 lety +9

      Hes either a liberal who knows the truth or a whiney fringe conservative

    • @JasonOwensYT
      @JasonOwensYT Před 3 lety +5

      He looks like the type of simp to spend all of his money on Onlyfans and then cry about being broke

    • @lukefromtexas
      @lukefromtexas Před 3 lety +10

      That’s progressives in a nutshell. All heart, no balls or brains.

    • @ameyas7726
      @ameyas7726 Před 3 lety +1

      @@lukefromtexas And conservatives...let's just sweep the problem under the rug and make America great again!!....It takes real balls to face the problem, out of sight out of mind mentality is easy and requires less brains....And American founding fathers were progressives...if they were conservatives, American Constitution would've been based on colonization, slavery and exploitation of the human race, instead off liberty, equality and freedom..

    • @kristjanrom9429
      @kristjanrom9429 Před 3 lety

      Fr haha

  • @yageshabazz3456
    @yageshabazz3456 Před 2 lety +11

    I don’t understand why the city can’t designate areas that are out of sight for homeless people to camp on. They have somewhere to stay and those with homes will feel safer; everyone wins

  • @eggy315
    @eggy315 Před 3 lety +2

    you guys should do one on methadone mile in boston (mass ave). i live an hour away from boston and its so crazy because they’re everywhere and cops and EMTs dont do much. seen a guy laid out on the sidewalk. emt pull up and kick his syringe out the way, helps the guy wake up and stand up, and was like “u good buddy? ok..” and the guy just walks away still stringed out

  • @lesofages
    @lesofages Před 3 lety +34

    the entire block where my work is in downtown Austin is overrun by homeless people. We have to deal with them on a daily basis. They're always causing some sort of ruckus, constantly attempting to either steal from us or just make trouble. Many of my coworkers have been verbally and in some cases even physically assaulted by them. They're all either strung out on K2, mentally ill, or both. And a lot of them don't even want help despite multiple offers by others. I realize they need assistance but if they flat out refuse it every time, then what the hell are we supposed to do?

    • @icoz7
      @icoz7 Před 3 lety +4

      I got an unsolicited text from someone telling me I should oppose the ban measure. Instead of ignoring her I prodded and tried to hear if she had any tangible solutions. She just kept dancing around the issue, saying we need "more services and support" for the homeless. I tried to get her to be specific on what services and who's paying but she couldn't.
      At the end of the day these people opposing the ban have have no real plan in mind to solve this crisis, other than "someone (not me) needs to throw money at this and that will solve the problem."

    • @bmona7550
      @bmona7550 Před 3 lety +1

      Take this from someone who is from a poor country, the homeless being brought to the cities isn't because they want to help them it is most likely to gain extra votes from them. This is corruption 101 and you guys really need to be aware. They're just taking advantage of the homeless at this point. That's clear as daylight. So please vote wisely

    • @riverjimm
      @riverjimm Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, addiction is an illness that should be treated. It's difficult to see how to get out of the cycle once you are caught up in it, and there's usually a lot more to a given homeless person's story than "I got into drugs". It's unfortunate that it effects you and your co-workers, but isn't the problem a little bigger than all that? Saying as someone who worked right by the Arc. You get these people the help the need by treating them with compassion and showing them that it can be worth working to get out from under the weight of addiction and to begin forming goals for the future. It takes time and organized effort, and asks a lot of a community, but is well worth it in the end. Also, "Multiple offers from others"-what does that even mean? Someone walked up and offered a homeless person a place to stay, consistent meals, and health insurance for treatment? or? And then they proceeded to say no to that...? No, that didn't happen.

    • @riverjimm
      @riverjimm Před 3 lety

      @@bmona7550 a couple thousand votes isn't likely to sway an election in a city of more than a million, but I'm curious how you think that would even work?

    • @riverjimm
      @riverjimm Před 3 lety

      @@icoz7 The problem is there is no easy single-bandaid solution, it doesn't work that way. She couldn't reference a working service or option for support because they didn't exist yet. You should check out Community First, the tiny home project trying to help provide shelter and assistance

  • @02.21atx
    @02.21atx Před 3 lety +123

    Gentrification backfired lol we moved in and raised the prices now the very ppl we moved out live on your sidewalks help us !!!

    • @ncokeke1958
      @ncokeke1958 Před 3 lety +12

      Exactly

    • @gorillaguns
      @gorillaguns Před 3 lety +5

      Displacers get displaced

    • @Snowshowslow
      @Snowshowslow Před 3 lety

      Okay, assume they didn't move in there, where would the middle class people live then? It's easy to point fingers at the evil gentrifiers, but at least in my city, they have nowhere else to go and live either. If there are not good policies in place to ensure enough affordable housing and you live in a capitalist society, the problem will keep moving down the wealth ladder until it's the people with the least financial means who end up on the streets.

    • @Durgenheim
      @Durgenheim Před 3 lety +15

      And the gentrifiers HATE the homeless in their neighborhoods, but they'll vote down any new shelters or ballot measures that help get the homeless off the streets.

    • @elibullockpapa9012
      @elibullockpapa9012 Před 3 lety

      ​@@e.t.ethics1771 I've never seen that happen. At least where I am, they only build them in already really rich neighborhoods. I don't think people move somewhere just for access to a whole foods! I think the only way to stop gentrification is to allow for new high-income residents to build *new* homes in an area, instead of having to buy up old housing stock and kick people out. Unfortunately, zoning laws make building anything but single family homes nearly impossible in most areas.

  • @turnertrevor17
    @turnertrevor17 Před 3 lety +4

    What a cocky answer from the mayor put them in his neighborhood and see how he feels.

    • @jacqdanieles
      @jacqdanieles Před 2 lety

      Or cut his salary & benefits & reallocate them to the homeless.

  • @Texas466
    @Texas466 Před 3 lety +23

    Austin will instantly fine homeowners for having a car parked in their driveway with a flat tire.But didn’t even try to get the homeless to tidy up their messes. I swear last month I saw a homeless guy off of trinity with a whole shed put up on the sidewalk, I bet it was there for months. Anyone in a wheel chair or handicapped would have to walk in the street, both sidewalks were blocked.

  • @Covid-xo5um
    @Covid-xo5um Před 3 lety +178

    Prices are going up Housing,Groceries. Bills The only thing not being raised is our pay

    • @tuntematonsotilas3533
      @tuntematonsotilas3533 Před 3 lety +10

      US spends nearly 1 trillion a year in the military,
      US has nearly 800 military bases around the world,
      US is getting out of Afghanistan but is picking a fight with Russia, China, Iran and so on...

    • @CyberspacedLoner
      @CyberspacedLoner Před 3 lety +7

      @@tuntematonsotilas3533 1 trillion is also spent on tax breaks

    • @CyberspacedLoner
      @CyberspacedLoner Před 3 lety +6

      Oligarchy and Plutocracy in action

    • @petermichaels1704
      @petermichaels1704 Před 3 lety +15

      HouseholdHandyman That is far from the truth with the leading causes actually being (1) lack of affordable housing, (2) unemployment, (3) poverty, and (4) low wages, in that order.

    • @ninomarinkovic1904
      @ninomarinkovic1904 Před 3 lety +3

      Same thing in Dallas. You can thank all of the Californians that are moving here ☺️

  • @thorlong2983
    @thorlong2983 Před 3 lety +46

    Housing is too damn expensive, it is too hard to get back up to the expected level of normal, and shelters are never a solution.

    • @davidlang4546
      @davidlang4546 Před 3 lety +6

      Theres housing available but mist wont get clean and prefer to stay on the streets so they can get high

    • @ShadowOfAntioch
      @ShadowOfAntioch Před 3 lety +10

      Building cheap public housing and putting these homeless people in them (temporarily) costs a lot less than all the medical and prison costs associated with leaving them on the street.
      Ideally, the federal government would step in with a massive programme across every major US city.

    • @chuzzrocket
      @chuzzrocket Před 3 lety +1

      You forgot to mention drug addiction, which they can't do in shelters.

    • @ShadowOfAntioch
      @ShadowOfAntioch Před 3 lety +1

      @@chuzzrocket Sure they can-we're not talking about shelters, we're talking about public housing. It's how Singapore eliminated homelessness. This will be their small apartment so they can do whatever they want inside, though one would hope that public housing would come along with encouragements to join drug rehabilitation programmes.

    • @GEVINCHYGAMEZ
      @GEVINCHYGAMEZ Před 3 lety

      God life getting rough....gotdamn

  • @weebo19
    @weebo19 Před 3 lety +4

    you have to bring back mental institutions.. some are incapable of living on their own and need assistance.. the solution is not cheap and already has not been popular in the past

  • @josephrowtey2236
    @josephrowtey2236 Před 3 lety +3

    Us is crazy the largest economy in the world. That's heart breaking...you guys have most of the greatest minds why can't you fix this . Am an African but I think Africa's homelessness is better. What do they do in winter OMG...

  • @clintongwanyama7188
    @clintongwanyama7188 Před 3 lety +170

    People think they cared about homelessness until it’s time to build affordable housing in their neighborhoods

    • @jessereading8973
      @jessereading8973 Před 3 lety +18

      Affordable housing isn’t affordable when you spend all your money on Heroin.

    • @Thaheadband33
      @Thaheadband33 Před 3 lety +23

      @@jessereading8973 those that are addicts aren’t going to stop being addicted if you just shove them from city to city or throw them in jail.

    • @latyshal.2286
      @latyshal.2286 Před 3 lety

      Exactly!

    • @alucardhellsing666
      @alucardhellsing666 Před 3 lety +2

      That would be better then tents and garbage under freeways and the sides of the road.

    • @JasonAlexzander1q47
      @JasonAlexzander1q47 Před 3 lety

      Righto!

  • @joeyj9638
    @joeyj9638 Před 3 lety +75

    Limited resources for the citizens, unlimited resources for everything else.

    • @niroshapriyadarsahani2877
      @niroshapriyadarsahani2877 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/SvQRPnQBJdQ/video.html

    • @usser1138
      @usser1138 Před 3 lety +7

      profits over people

    • @ryanharvey9800
      @ryanharvey9800 Před 3 lety +9

      Unlimited resources for bombs and tax cuts for the rich

    • @joeyj9638
      @joeyj9638 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ryanharvey9800 at some point the people must wake UP,

    • @Durgenheim
      @Durgenheim Před 3 lety +4

      America isn't even a country; it's just one big corporation.

  • @London349
    @London349 Před 3 lety +6

    I live in Austin and when I use to live off of Riverside I was robbed by a homeless person. They had so many of them where use college kids lived which was a huge safety hazard. Even though what I went through gave me PTSD and extreme paranoia I still didn’t want them to ban camping. Instead they could’ve zoned them somewhere away from us kids and residents and hired some workers to pick them up routinely around the city and bring them to that zoned place. A lot of them are on drugs, confused and hungry so they’ll do anything to eat or feed their drug habit. If We made one little life mistake we could easily be in their shoes so please if you’re in austin show compassion & respect towards them.

  • @markcampbell7577
    @markcampbell7577 Před 2 lety +4

    The key to reduction of homeless population is living wages. Every job is a good paying job. There should not be any child wages or wife wages. Every job should pay enough for one person to live in an apartment local. This is the meaning of the minimum wage act and not a transient wage. A landlord rightfully expects 4 times the rent in income to qualify for a lease. The minimum legal wage should be the same or greater. That is the purpose of the 1939 minimum wage act 4 times the rent for one bedroom apartment local or local commute. You have to have legal wages every where. Then your transition programs work consumer rep homeless project ccc ca

    • @nnyv0040
      @nnyv0040 Před 2 lety

      Agree but also more quality support for people with mental illnesses. Subsized by the government.