Privileged vs Homeless - Law & Order

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • The court fights over whether a homeless man should be judged for his crimes in the same way as those more privileged than him.
    Stream Law & Order on Peacock: pck.tv/46lNAcm
    From Season 14, Episode 11 "Darwinian" - After a hit-and-run victim is left to die, the shocking circumstances of the case leave McCoy and Southerlyn determined to get the driver on a murder charge.
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Komentáře • 899

  • @rabbitsfoot8
    @rabbitsfoot8 Před 3 lety +2656

    "I lost it all...you don't know what that feels like...to be a failure..to go to bed on a wet piece of cardboard..wondering how did this happen to me" ..I felt that. Fantastic acting as usual

    • @stephanieflores277
      @stephanieflores277 Před 3 lety +88

      It's still an issue to this day. Shelters are temporary but it would be nice of they can help these ppl learn skills to help themselves

    • @janetmerner3731
      @janetmerner3731 Před 3 lety +60

      @@stephanieflores277 Some people have mental health issues it is not skills we need it is our fellow man to show some compassion. Next month I will probably be homeless, I do not have the money to pay first and last months rent I am on disability I usually save up but my current landlord decided to sell the house I live in only three months after I moved in. I can't save the up the money in only three months. I am not ashamed of having mental health issues because I was as a civilian thrown under the bus by the Canadian armed forces in 1991 in an incident involving radar leased from an American defense contractor and I was was dragged under the bus by the US Department of the Navy between 1991 and 1995. I went to the Americans for help in 2012 and they tortured me for months.

    • @mikebasil4832
      @mikebasil4832 Před 3 lety +17

      @@janetmerner3731 I’m so sorry that all that happened to you, Janet.

    • @magnus33john
      @magnus33john Před 3 lety +34

      It's easy to judge from the outside but it's one hell of a lot harder when you see them for who they are. That was one hell of acting job by anyone's standards.

    • @rabbitsfoot8
      @rabbitsfoot8 Před 3 lety +10

      @@magnus33john it was.. brilliant even

  • @7249xxl
    @7249xxl Před 3 lety +1360

    The actor that played the homeless man is amazing.

    • @bchristopher7584
      @bchristopher7584 Před 3 lety +18

      for real man. would love to see more of his work. fantastic emotion. got me choked up for sure

    • @Hartwik
      @Hartwik Před 3 lety +7

      This actor is the best actor. You should see him in 1984.

    • @douglasducoteclown228
      @douglasducoteclown228 Před 3 lety +3

      He nailed it!

    • @efuller3333
      @efuller3333 Před 3 lety +1

      sad to see this role didn’t lead to more roles, it seems.

    • @7249xxl
      @7249xxl Před 3 lety +11

      @@efuller3333 Christopher Donahue

  • @renko9067
    @renko9067 Před 3 lety +772

    This actor’s performance is the most moving one I’ve seen. Sadly, I don’t think his career took off like it should have. One of the best-written Law & Order episodes ever.

  • @ishikawagoemon4397
    @ishikawagoemon4397 Před 3 lety +935

    It's sad since alot of people look away from these homeless people like they don't exist. Ever since the pandemic started, I can't imagine what they been through out there

    • @gorbashs6500
      @gorbashs6500 Před 3 lety +35

      Well the sad part is that even when you do look at them and even try to help, they will get agressive, hostile or bash you head in for your vallet :(

    • @cslantz4020
      @cslantz4020 Před 3 lety +44

      @@gorbashs6500 the sad part is that that isnt every homeless person. some people do bad things. some people do good.

    • @WorkDayPegasus
      @WorkDayPegasus Před 3 lety +12

      @@cslantz4020 cslantz, how is it sad that not every homeless person is aggressive, hostile or will bash your head in for a wallet?
      That's a GREAT thing that not every homeless person does that. It's not a sad thing. It's great that there are good people as well!

    • @cslantz4020
      @cslantz4020 Před 3 lety +12

      @@WorkDayPegasus i agree. and i was pushing forward the notion that it is sad that people like Gorbashs will think such things.

    • @higunner00
      @higunner00 Před 3 lety +15

      @@gorbashs6500 Well, homeowners and bussiness owner and just shitty people in general will do the same so is not inherent of homelessness

  • @BB-tt6fl
    @BB-tt6fl Před rokem +87

    The homeless man is Christopher Donahue, who is a stage actor. Unfortunately, this was his last TV show, film credit on imdb, which only showed 3 total. Wish there was more, as you can tell from this role he’s a great actor.

  • @kathrynadkisson8964
    @kathrynadkisson8964 Před 3 lety +605

    I like how he called the guy human at the end. So much emotion on both sides

    • @MsWiccanpriestess
      @MsWiccanpriestess Před 3 lety +18

      @Kathryn Adkisson McCoy did come off a little privileged, I remember this episode Mr. Edgars was I believe found not guilty.

    • @lostinthestorywithjeremymi9385
      @lostinthestorywithjeremymi9385 Před 3 lety +9

      @@MsWiccanpriestess No, he was found guilty.

    • @michaeldorosh5047
      @michaeldorosh5047 Před 3 lety +21

      McCoy was saying it to take away the man's excuse for assaulting his victim. It was intended for the jury, to see the defendant as responsible for his crime.

    • @mr.berardine1694
      @mr.berardine1694 Před 3 lety +20

      @@michaeldorosh5047 McCoy is the villain in this episode.

    • @gorbashs6500
      @gorbashs6500 Před 3 lety +9

      @@mr.berardine1694 why? If you kill someone you are the bed person. Only excuse is, if it is someone worse than you.

  • @Loveroffood41
    @Loveroffood41 Před 3 lety +623

    In the immortal words of CS Lewis comes this quote: experience is a brutal teacher but you learn my god do you learn.
    EDIT:Thank you for the likes.

    • @matthew28-acts238
      @matthew28-acts238 Před 3 lety +18

      You can't live the dream without, living the nightmares.

    • @throttleblipsntwistedgrips1992
      @throttleblipsntwistedgrips1992 Před 3 lety +4

      Reference to trench warfare in WW1?

    • @AlexKS1992
      @AlexKS1992 Před 3 lety +8

      I don’t know who said this but here’s this, “Pain is a good teacher but a bad friend”.

    • @75flash
      @75flash Před 6 měsíci +3

      How you apply it and Whether or not you’ll get the chance to apply what you’ve learned is a huge question mark though

  • @DeepGreenLimeshark
    @DeepGreenLimeshark Před 3 lety +433

    I love how he knows he has to stay acting as a prosecutor, has to stay on point with his case, but knows what he just heard is not something he can respond to any further.
    So he says: "Sounds Human to me." tells him that he sees him, sees his issues, sees who he is but also stays on point for his own job. It's straying dangerously close to that line, but it's done so well and I love it.
    This show lost it's character over the years, but these old ones? These will ALWAYS be amazing to go back and watch.

    • @obliviouz
      @obliviouz Před 2 lety +55

      No, you missed McCoy's genius. The entire argument was whether the accused was a human, and so should be judged as one, or as lesser, and so should be held to a lesser standard.
      The homeless person made McCoy's argument for him: He was every bit a human, he feels and he despairs, and he suffers as a human. *And by that same token* - he ought to be judged as one. That's why McCoy didn't go any further, he didn't need to: The argument was already won: The homeless person is still human, and should be judged as a human.

    • @armanvranka7520
      @armanvranka7520 Před 2 lety +10

      Yeah u totally missed the point of this line of questioning big hoss

  • @CommonSenseRevolution
    @CommonSenseRevolution Před 3 lety +763

    To this day, there is no other show more gritty, more palpably REAL than this series. Many times I've found courtroom drama mind blowing, episodic conclusions gut-wrenching. No other television series has brought out these emotions in me, not even close.

    • @joes622
      @joes622 Před 3 lety +10

      While I agree with your description of this series, I must disagree it is the only one. NYPD Blue was arguably grittier IMO.

    • @Bytional
      @Bytional Před 3 lety +7

      How about "The wire"?

    • @_gungrave_6802
      @_gungrave_6802 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Bytional The Wire is a different kind of show entirely.

    • @gregpenismith8884
      @gregpenismith8884 Před 3 lety +5

      If you think this is how cops, and the legal system work, you couldn't be more wrong.

    • @cearig
      @cearig Před 3 lety +3

      this show sucks

  • @lucianmartin3389
    @lucianmartin3389 Před rokem +222

    What separates the privileged from the homeless is one bad day. One bad day where everything we love, own, and subconsciously take for granted gets stripped away from us and is seen as nothing more than vermin. This episode makes me see how we should be grateful and appreciative for what we DO have and that there are people who have it far worse than us.

    • @JohnSmith-ct5jd
      @JohnSmith-ct5jd Před rokem +6

      Sadly, so true. There but for the grace of God....

    • @henrywilson2136
      @henrywilson2136 Před 11 měsíci +3

      One Bad Day is also what separates The average citizen from the Joker.

    • @robertfergusson5367
      @robertfergusson5367 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Been there, done that. Was fortunate enough to get into a program that got me back on my feet.

    • @victorstein24
      @victorstein24 Před 10 měsíci +8

      It isn't one bad day. It is a series of bad days. Bad months. Bad years. A day does not make a man what he becomes. Mental health and homelessness are issues that need helped. People drinking wine over dinner at a fancy restaurant most of us couldn't enter, disparity causes despair.

    • @marcushoward6560
      @marcushoward6560 Před 6 měsíci

      Someone drinking a bottle of wine over dinner they paid for with their own money, at a fancy restaurant, has never had, nor ever will have, a single shred of impact on how *I* live *MY* life. @@victorstein24

  • @destinythomas5537
    @destinythomas5537 Před 3 lety +684

    What did he expect a homeless man to show up to court in? His best suit?

    • @amyinalaska2823
      @amyinalaska2823 Před 3 lety +140

      Usually the defense dresses the defendant up for court-often there are funds available to the public defenders office for cases like this.

    • @GAshoneybear
      @GAshoneybear Před 3 lety +72

      I was about to say this. Our Salvation Army periodically donates suits and dresses for homeless people who have to go to court.

    • @commanex
      @commanex Před 3 lety +72

      Thats literally the point of the argument. Mccoy says that its against decorum AND that the defense is using his appearance to skew the jurors into looking at him more as downtrodden, thus making them pity him as a homeless person first instead of judging his actions.

    • @sonrouge
      @sonrouge Před 3 lety +34

      One of the witnesses, also a homeless man, was cleaned and dressed up.

    • @Wimpymind
      @Wimpymind Před 3 lety +2

      He was wearing his best suit. What do you mean?

  • @hestiaa9354
    @hestiaa9354 Před 3 lety +199

    I wonder if the reason why so many people ignore the homeless is due to terror-because most of us are balancing on a razor’s edge and just one stiff breeze could cause us to slip off and get cut and we could end up like the guy in that episode.

    • @sitdowndogbreath
      @sitdowndogbreath Před 3 lety +12

      Don't forget most new apartment complexes now require you to make 3 times the rent

    • @AlexKS1992
      @AlexKS1992 Před 3 lety +1

      Or it could that they’re on drugs and they will rob you of murder you. Not every bum is like this guy in the video.

    • @obliviouz
      @obliviouz Před 2 lety +12

      Or maybe because they might kill you for a piece of orange. That'd be reason enough not to risk interacting with them.

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 Před 2 lety +1

      @@sitdowndogbreath
      It used to be four.

    • @sitdowndogbreath
      @sitdowndogbreath Před 2 lety

      @@TheBatugan77 for what what state is this?

  • @petervaczovsky9211
    @petervaczovsky9211 Před 2 lety +96

    Having been there, I can relate. Been homeless, slept behind dumpsters that block the wind when it's 20 degrees and the snow's falling; seen how people turn their backs when you ask for a cigarette; went everywhere I could find, even fast-food places, looking for a job. That's when the recession was on, NOBODY was hiring. Unless you've been there, you'll never know.

    • @martinsusanto510
      @martinsusanto510 Před 2 lety +3

      one thing I don't understand, you were homeless, but why you're asking for cigarette instead of food or necessity? (blanket, or other things that is essential). I'm sorry, I will also turn my back if some homeless ask me for cigarettes, but I will buy them food if that's what they need.

    • @petervaczovsky9211
      @petervaczovsky9211 Před 2 lety +10

      @@martinsusanto510, like I said, unless you've been homeless you'll never know. You're made to feel like you're trash, you're some freak that doesn't even deserve to live. I fought against that and finally got out of it. Others, almost seems like they want to be that way. Go figure.

    • @martinsusanto510
      @martinsusanto510 Před 2 lety +1

      @@petervaczovsky9211 I see... I'm happy for you then that you manage to get out of that. Great fight.

    • @isaac3736
      @isaac3736 Před 2 lety

      If you don't mind sharing your story with a stranger on Internet, how did you manage to straighten out your life?

    • @petervaczovsky9211
      @petervaczovsky9211 Před 2 lety +5

      @@isaac3736, I had a plan in mind and it worked. Not saying I didn't pay a price or two, had to expect that. Only that's how it is. When someone sees you're willing to pay a price for what you want to do and you don't care what the price is, your plan, such as it is, and was for me, will work. Tough to describe, it's different for every person.

  • @hal900x
    @hal900x Před 3 lety +123

    That actor got his one shot as guest on the show and boy, he took it.

  • @MrALPHA318
    @MrALPHA318 Před 3 lety +111

    Never again.
    I'm never going to take anything for granted again.
    Not matter how rough things get.

    • @gorbashs6500
      @gorbashs6500 Před 3 lety +11

      I would like to belive you. But we are all humans... Three months from now you will forget all about this video, and be too busy with live to remeber it.

    • @youcantmakemetosuscribe4745
      @youcantmakemetosuscribe4745 Před 2 lety +2

      @@gorbashs6500 and someday he will be full gratefullness again ,
      Up n down ,up n down till the day we die

    • @gorbashs6500
      @gorbashs6500 Před 2 lety

      @@youcantmakemetosuscribe4745 Exactly. :)

    • @CriticalSurvival0
      @CriticalSurvival0 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@gorbashs6500 naah i come back to twin peak moments all the time to humble myself again. people dont just forget.

  • @dcomp420
    @dcomp420 Před 3 lety +469

    And in the end nobody learned a thing and the homeless stayed homeless
    Goodnight kids

    • @maosama3695
      @maosama3695 Před 3 lety +33

      Nah he's in prison with free food and free medical care.

    • @Maniac742
      @Maniac742 Před 3 lety +4

      Why wouldn't the homeless stay homeless?

    • @LaFonteCheVi
      @LaFonteCheVi Před 3 lety +6

      @@maosama3695 "Food"

    • @LaFonteCheVi
      @LaFonteCheVi Před 3 lety +31

      @@Maniac742 Responsible societies uplift and shelter the homeless. Not abandon them. It is better for everyone.

    • @maosama3695
      @maosama3695 Před 3 lety +2

      @@LaFonteCheVi ? Prison food isn't that bad though. I can say it's actually better than what they serve in American school.
      Probably because American prisons are privately owned.

  • @ryang54712
    @ryang54712 Před 3 lety +203

    I love this episode. Powerful stuff. I feel bad for this guy. He really had it rough and this happens to him. It’s bittersweet to think he went to jail where they give him food and shelter. The acting in this scene was spot on.

    • @DorvellTStewart
      @DorvellTStewart Před 3 lety +17

      The closing scene of this episode really drives that point home as well; I don’t remember if the conversation was between McCoy and Serena, Mccoy And Arthur or all three of them together, but McCoy said something like “We’re taking him out of one jungle and putting him in another.”
      Really wish this clip had included the closing arguments, the verdict and the final scene.

    • @Durhandoni80
      @Durhandoni80 Před 2 lety +2

      I don´t feel bad for him at all. There are many many homeless, but this one is a murder.

    • @ryang54712
      @ryang54712 Před 2 lety +9

      @@Durhandoni80 but he has remorse. U can see it

    • @lucianmartin3389
      @lucianmartin3389 Před rokem +2

      Yeah, to the privileged, jail and prison are hell. But to the homeless, it's a blessing.

    • @harrisonhurst6480
      @harrisonhurst6480 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@lucianmartin3389 Prisons are awful. "3 hots and a cot" is a myth. Prisioners die all the time due to neglect.

  • @danielk5780
    @danielk5780 Před 2 lety +77

    "The problem doesn't go away if you throw more money at the problem."
    In this particular case, it does. In Germany, we have a social safety net and work- and health-insurance. If there is an accident at work, insurance pays for your treatment until you're recovered. After six weeks being sick, the insurance takes over paying your wages until you're recovered. Then you can get back into your job. You can't be fired from your job for being sick, much less if you've been injured in a work-related accident.
    If you can't recover, there is something called disability-insurance, that's part of the insurance your employer is mandated to pay for. They will probably not pay your entire wages, but you'll get good money out of it and can for sure make a living if you add a decent side-job.
    People that get hurt at work don't become homeless in Germany. That's what we pay taxes for.

    • @oceanberserker
      @oceanberserker Před rokem +9

      That sounds beautiful, my guy.

    • @CainEverest
      @CainEverest Před rokem +11

      Yeah it's almost as if investing in people actually makes most of these problems go away *stares at corporations and the 1%*

    • @ajc-ff5cm
      @ajc-ff5cm Před rokem +1

      This is true of the US as well, but it depends on who you work for and what insurance you have.

    • @bored1ca
      @bored1ca Před rokem +6

      @@ajc-ff5cm you might want to watch Michael Moore's film Sicko because Health Insurance in the US is a myth.

    • @JohnSmith-ct5jd
      @JohnSmith-ct5jd Před rokem

      Thank you. A better system than we have in the US. In America, it is just, tough luck. This is not a liberal or a conservative issue. I am, btw, a pro-Trump Republican. Maybe we should spend more money on American citizens and less on illegal migrants-who are put up in hotels free of charge.

  • @trippinballs101
    @trippinballs101 Před 3 lety +39

    I heard stories where when homeless have finally lost hope they get on the nearest highway out of town and just roll the dice and walk ... and walk ... and walk ... like a drone till they find a wood, lay down; and pass on...

    • @Stormkrow280
      @Stormkrow280 Před 3 lety +3

      You can live without hope, but I wouldn’t recommend it, hope is not an endless ocean, it’s a well, and if all you have is hope but no payoff then eventually that well will dry up and you are left with nothing but misery. The famous quote of “where there’s life there’s hope” is backwards, it should be “without hope, there’s no life”

  • @Orion3741
    @Orion3741 Před 9 měsíci +29

    Powerful acting by the man who portrays the homeless accused. And a brutal reminder that we are all vulnerable. This scene reminds me of the movie "Falling Down", starring Michael Douglas. A movie about a man who has become redundant. That same man experiences a meltdown. And then it gets ugly. Real fast. A brutal reminder that we are all vulnerable.

    • @gtw4546
      @gtw4546 Před 8 měsíci +1

      More vulnerable than we know. For those from small families, every sibling death puts you one step closer - but it also makes us even more appreciative of our kin.

  • @alcd6333
    @alcd6333 Před 3 lety +54

    Most L&O episodes are strong, but this one is very relevant. Homelessness in the US is a tragedy and there is no "one size fits all" remedy. Instead of political parties blaming one another, it's time to brainstorm effective methods to treat those mentally ill and addicted and institute responsibility and work ethics for others. And that's just for starters.

    • @PokeMageTech
      @PokeMageTech Před rokem +3

      Fairly sure one side demonizes them while the other suffers from “Not In My BackYard”.

    • @haven_lady675
      @haven_lady675 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Not just the US. Japan, Canada, Russia, etc. It's a worldwide epidemic.
      It's even sadder if it's women, elderly, and kids. They are vulnerable.

    • @1337penguinman
      @1337penguinman Před 5 měsíci

      We shut down the mental institutions in the 70s and a lot of those people have nowhere else to go and are basically incapable of caring for themselves to any reasonable standard. Combine that with substance abuse and that's where 95% of the problem comes from.

  • @americannomadnews5370
    @americannomadnews5370 Před 3 lety +123

    The trial at the end where he gives his testimony is one of the best representations of what it's like to be homeless that I've seen in Media, and I've been homeless since 2012.

  • @Tanzenergise
    @Tanzenergise Před 3 lety +58

    "homeless first an a human being second" you know the writers wanted him to sound like a complete fist magnet.

  • @EthanMandelson
    @EthanMandelson Před 3 lety +76

    This and ER were the best shows, they really picked their cast well, no other shows compare to these at all!

  • @theinvisiblecunt6417
    @theinvisiblecunt6417 Před 3 lety +102

    A problem I have with this story is that it frames the conclusion as either this or that (guilty and 12 years time or not guilty and he walks away free)
    The prosecutor makes it sound like the guy killed the other only because of the orange but he also did it because he felt like he was gonna get killed if he didn't. His speech about justice for the homeless sounds a little hollow if you recognize that the killer didn't even have the benefit of circumstances that put the gravity of his crime in another light. The killer sounds really desperate, he really felt like he had no choice and that should have been accounted for

    • @kellharris2491
      @kellharris2491 Před 3 lety +11

      Yea and it was largely an accident. He looked ok walking away.

    • @sonrouge
      @sonrouge Před 3 lety +14

      Why did he think he was entitled to the other guy's orange?

    • @mechanomics2649
      @mechanomics2649 Před 3 lety +16

      @@sonrouge Maybe watch the clip before asking questions.

    • @Deborahtunes
      @Deborahtunes Před 3 lety +9

      @@sonrouge ~ I believe it's because he felt "entitled" to it. If you listen how he talks about the shelter, with their drug addicts and such, he seems to put himself above them. As if he deserves more than they do, because he perceives himself as "not like them"...

    • @Murphy82nd
      @Murphy82nd Před 3 lety +11

      @@Deborahtunes exactly. It’s not fair that this happened to him. My guess is the orange was just another reminder of how unfair it all was and the anger he had built in himself finally overwhelmed him and he lashed out. That behavior isn’t the sole domain of the homeless. It happens to people of all walks of life.

  • @kevinxiao0
    @kevinxiao0 Před 2 lety +18

    Something I don't think was mentioned enough in this episode is that he didn't take out his frustration on the privileged. He took it out on another homeless person. And that is scarier than I like to think about.

    • @Ragitsu
      @Ragitsu Před rokem +1

      Keep people on the same social stratum fighting one another.

    • @thefuturist8864
      @thefuturist8864 Před 5 měsíci +1

      When the police officer says he didn’t intervene because he didn’t know who started it, it seemed pretty clear that in actual fact he just didn’t care. Perhaps he saw the two homeless people, fighting, as examples of who he needs to protect everyone from, rather than people he needs to protect.

  • @ValdezJu
    @ValdezJu Před 3 lety +73

    Why would Brisco & Green quote the police usage of the derogatory terms 'skell or lice-head' in their report? The answer is; they wouldn't!

    • @GAshoneybear
      @GAshoneybear Před 3 lety +16

      That part annoyed me. The only detective throughout the show run I could see doing that was Curtis, and even that would be be pushing it.

  • @neville1103
    @neville1103 Před 3 lety +20

    That was one hell of a scene. The actor that played the homeless man killed that part.

  • @greywolf0167
    @greywolf0167 Před 2 lety +9

    this homeless man problably one of the best actors i have seen in a long time and the writers did a great job

  • @supernerd2333
    @supernerd2333 Před 3 lety +48

    This hit close to home for me. I was almost crying at the end. Good stuff.

  • @thomasaitken1345
    @thomasaitken1345 Před 3 lety +13

    The dead can't speak.
    But their murderers can pull on your heart strings for sympathy

  • @I_Love_my_adblock4408
    @I_Love_my_adblock4408 Před 3 lety +27

    Fred Thompson (Arthur) was an outstanding actor, so was the man who played the homeless man.

  • @Durhandoni80
    @Durhandoni80 Před 2 lety +8

    Thx, Mccoy for showing, that because just someone is homeless, doesn´t mean that defines his human qualities.

  • @LadyB_20
    @LadyB_20 Před 3 lety +102

    I don't know which side to lean on more but this is a reality that is well conveyed in the actors part. Just amazing, you could feel the weight.

    • @TheMistressMisery
      @TheMistressMisery Před 3 lety +5

      I'd imagine if you have any kind of compassion or empathy that the defendant is the one to be on the side of. No question.

    • @matthewhoward6106
      @matthewhoward6106 Před 3 lety +9

      @@TheMistressMisery He killed someone though. Where's the compassion for the dead?

    • @nano15j
      @nano15j Před 3 lety +11

      @@matthewhoward6106 Empathy is key here. He killed someone that is true and that was wrong. But empathy would tell us that we cannot judge a person living in such, sub-human circumstances the same way we would judge someone that lives well, especially considering what such an environment does to a person's psyche. In an ideal society, he would still go to jail but jails would be set up as a transitioning facility for persons who are "a danger to society and themselves" to help them overcome and change rather than a stigmatized punitive system.

    • @matthewhoward6106
      @matthewhoward6106 Před 3 lety +5

      @@nano15j So what should we do? Try to rehabilitate the man into society after he took the life of another? We can't rehab that dead man, and we certainly can't fix his circumstances in the least. If you really believe that this man cannot be held responsible for his actions, then we have nothing further to discuss. Every average intelligence human being has the ability to understand that killing a person under most circumstances is wrong. At no point should we accept that his actions were not his own.

    • @nano15j
      @nano15j Před 3 lety +13

      @@matthewhoward6106 I didn't say that he shouldn't be held responsible. Rather that his case should be viewed considering the context and his mental state at the time. Also why cant his circumstances, or the circumstances of the millions of people in the US that are homeless, or live in similarly desolate conditions be improved? You are so quick to judge this man (albeit he is fictional) for his actions as an individual but chose to ignore the actions of society that let this man and many others live in such inhuman conditions.

  • @Stratigic_Cheese_Reserve
    @Stratigic_Cheese_Reserve Před 3 lety +172

    I bet the Writer patted themselves on the back after finishing this script, then stepped over a Homeless person on their way home.

    • @flightevolution8132
      @flightevolution8132 Před 3 lety +27

      Oh Mr. High and Mighty, what are you doing for the homeless?

    • @maxpowerii7368
      @maxpowerii7368 Před 3 lety +37

      @@flightevolution8132 what are you doing? OP is right...writers love to incorporate ideas of social justice issues in their writings while simultaneously profiting from their high positions in a system that creates said issues.

    • @buttofthejoke
      @buttofthejoke Před 3 lety +17

      @@maxpowerii7368 They bring out stories like this, this becomes a conversation, this results in people standing for elections with possible solutions, then people can vote for them and make changes, that is how democracy works. What do you expect the writer to do? Because they don't have a solution to this, they should just write another La La Land? Art has changed the world, be it making people realize issues about discrimination, wars, sexual assaults, environment, success or failures. This scene would help people look at homeless a bit different from thinking of them as just a bunch of lazy people. Those people vote, for school budget, for social safety nets, for healthcare etc etc. So yes, they did much much better than a CZcams keyboard warrior.

    • @maxpowerii7368
      @maxpowerii7368 Před 3 lety +4

      @@buttofthejoke yeah liberal democracy is a sham and a puppet show. Art is the last preserve of the selfish and cowardly rebel who wants the kudos with none of the necessary sacrifice.

    • @themanonthepan
      @themanonthepan Před 3 lety +11

      @@maxpowerii7368 you're literally brainwashed LMFAO keep on throwing buzzwords around 5 year old

  • @erinleafty6273
    @erinleafty6273 Před 3 lety +10

    This is one bay is one criminal in law and order I actually feel bad for because being homeless is a living nightmare and the actor portraying the homeless man did an excellent job portraying his character

  • @Chemdawg2009
    @Chemdawg2009 Před 2 lety +10

    That defense backfired tremendously.

  • @Roonlovesfish3874
    @Roonlovesfish3874 Před 3 lety +28

    The acting is superb. Law and Order is brilliant.

  • @babibabu7766
    @babibabu7766 Před 3 lety +64

    I wonder if there was universal healthcare in America would he be homeless in the first place. He would not have been in debt if healthcare was free after he had the construction site accident, which makes you wonder how many people are in the same situation that he was in right now!

    • @Loveroffood41
      @Loveroffood41 Před 3 lety +6

      It definitely brings up a million different questions

    • @H1delta
      @H1delta Před 3 lety +20

      The maga hatters would never allow it. They're against helping the poor, the down trodden, people of color, and foreigners from poor countries. What they don't understand is by helping this people who they despise, they help themselves and the country. Short sighted, they are. When you lose empathy for other people, you lose your humanity. And when you lose your humanity, it disqualifies you from membership in the human race. Pity.

    • @jamieroark5769
      @jamieroark5769 Před 3 lety +9

      The vast majority (99.9%) of the American population would be strongly against Universal Healthcare.

    • @sonrouge
      @sonrouge Před 3 lety +12

      There's no such thing as a free lunch. And people are in debt from healthcare because of the government's constant meddling in the healthcare industry. Among other things, this meddling jacks up demand without doing a thing to up supply.

    • @babibabu7766
      @babibabu7766 Před 3 lety +18

      @@sonrouge What demand and supply? Healthcare is a human right and should be accessible to everyone without crippling them with debt. There should be no for-profit institutions when it comes to healthcare.

  • @beccablueeyes99
    @beccablueeyes99 Před 2 lety +6

    To get a job you need to be clean and well presented and spend money to have a printed copy of your resume along with being able to send an online version with an application. So you need access to the internet. You also need an email address and a phone number. So again, you need a phone and money to pay the phone bill. You have multiple applications and even if you do get the job, you need a bank account, money for public transport to get there on time unless you live in a park nearby. You will need shoes and at least 2 of each item of clothing so you can clean 1 while wearing the other, so you need some kind of soap and a safe place to dry your clothes. You won’t be able to take your merger belongings with you to work, so you would need a safe place to store them, which is unlikely. You need bank info and multiple ID’s for the company because of tax and misc employment records. You usually don’t get paid until you have worked for 2-4 weeks. During that time you will still be scrounging for food and money, just in the limited hours that you aren’t working. So, without current ID, bank account, clean clothes, access to regular water, soap and a toothbrush along with work appropriate clothing and shoes and a way to explain the gap in your work history along with trying to find food and a safe place to live along with how to get to the places you need to be, it sounds like you are stuck in a pit with walls that crumble every time you try to pull yourself out. But sure, why don’t you just get a job?

  • @emoteen011
    @emoteen011 Před 11 měsíci +7

    the entire scene where they are debating the validity of the case while at a restaurant two wine glasses per person, is rich if you ask me.
    its like the situation is lost on them that they can't see privileges.

    • @colin8696908
      @colin8696908 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I guess that makes it ok to kill someone over an orange.

    • @burnaboy8434
      @burnaboy8434 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@colin8696908They literally neither said nor implied anything like that. Cool straw man though.
      Edit: Typo

  • @HermioneSharman15
    @HermioneSharman15 Před 3 lety +63

    I swear, Serena and Arthur's feud only got worse from this point till season 15. It's like writers had run out of ideas to sell in the 'Order' format.

    • @aaronburgin1442
      @aaronburgin1442 Před 3 lety +1

      Or that they were looking for a way to write her off.

    • @Deborahtunes
      @Deborahtunes Před 3 lety +2

      I thought it was very poignant in this...

    • @michaeldorosh5047
      @michaeldorosh5047 Před 3 lety +8

      I wonder if the current crop of television shows would ever have a sympathetic character utter the phrase "limousine liberal" in earnest.

    • @obliviouz
      @obliviouz Před 2 lety +2

      @@michaeldorosh5047 It's no wonder the Dems are always over-confident about their chances. Because Hollywood doesn't tell it as it is anymore. The concept of the "limousine liberal" is almost the entire explanation for the Dems' failures over the past 20 years - they've focused so much on virtue signalling and identity issues they've lost sight of the actual people. Like Serena here - she thinks working at a soup kitchen one day a year actually makes her better, like it makes a difference. Yeah- as much difference as a tweet today does.

  • @johnmccrossan9376
    @johnmccrossan9376 Před 2 lety +56

    Yes this backstory is tragic, yes homelessness is a real issue but let's not forget this man murdered another human being, and a mentally ill human being at that, because he felt entitled to that man's orange. "Slamming his face into the ground" key word being slamming, that is to say slamming repeatedly. He was aware and he was sane, disturbed and under high stress but fundamentally this man killed without a good reason and he knew it was wrong, he's guilty.

    • @horsepuncher95
      @horsepuncher95 Před 2 lety +13

      Well yeah 100%, but the overarching message in this ep is about how someone can in a first world country be in such a dire situation as this. Where you feel you need to kill a man for an ORANGE. Still guilty and must be held accountable of course, but there is something fundamentally broken about how homeless tend to be treated in us anglophone societies

    • @johnmccrossan9376
      @johnmccrossan9376 Před 2 lety

      @@horsepuncher95 sorry my mistake, I confused this guy and Roland kirk there was a somewhat similar episode

    • @horsepuncher95
      @horsepuncher95 Před 2 lety +1

      @@johnmccrossan9376 Not a problem at all no need for apologies

    • @obliviouz
      @obliviouz Před 2 lety +4

      @@horsepuncher95 He didn't need to kill another man for an orange.

    • @PokeMageTech
      @PokeMageTech Před rokem +2

      But the man also flipped out over being ASKED.

  • @metalltitan
    @metalltitan Před 2 lety +11

    We had a sorta famous homeless guy in the city I studied in. Amazing guy to talk to when drunk. But that was the point. He was always drunk or stoned out of his mind. Sometimes you wish you could help but watching him... he completely lost hold over his existence.

  • @isabellamccann7395
    @isabellamccann7395 Před 6 měsíci +2

    He is 100% right. I'm in a shelter at the moment. As I faced eviction on my own, feeling like a failure, I wondered," How did this happen to me?" 😭 "You think I chose this for my life?" 😭

  • @zachdillenger5468
    @zachdillenger5468 Před 2 lety +19

    In the end, I felt Mccoy was wrong here, yes the guy was wrong for killing the other dude but he didn't hit him to kill him, he didn't intend to kill him. The world he lived in is different than the one Mccoy lived in, like it or not. Weakness gets you killed or attacked.
    Not to mention Hospitals do not like Homeless people. US Hospitals are private and used to make money, sure they help people....but only if you got insurance or a big fat wallet. They wouldn't have helped that homeless guy anyways, they just would have kicked him out and been like "we looked him over, he seemed fine".
    The charge IMO wasn't justified, just another example of Mccoy not caring about the fine details and just wanting to win his case, which makes him a real POS in a way.

    • @Tommy92gunner
      @Tommy92gunner Před 2 lety

      Stone > Mccoy, but anyway murder is murder, intent means nothing, you kill someone you're GOING to pay, and the defending justifiying his kill to be "alpha" these animals don't deserve life in our nation, you raise your hand against me, your life is forfit, criminals are running around FREE and the left are ALLOWING it. Douchebags keep making excuses as to why they "lose everything" *THEY CHOSE TO THROW IT AWAY* I don't care what excuse they say, THEY CHOSE TO BE H O M E L E S S, and the law will NOT tolerate it as an excuse to commit crime.

    • @gaptainkinyutv9786
      @gaptainkinyutv9786 Před 2 lety

      So should he be allowed to murder freely? Or do you think he should of had a lesser charge

    • @zachdillenger5468
      @zachdillenger5468 Před 2 lety

      @@gaptainkinyutv9786 a lesser charge while what he did was wrong, his circumstances weren't what a normal person would face nor did he intend to kill the guy

  • @teowes7528
    @teowes7528 Před 11 měsíci +2

    The fantastic thing about this show is how every episode feels real. I'm sitting here typing out what his lawyer should have done knowing full well the character had a script. LOL.

  • @BWS891
    @BWS891 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I live paycheque to paycheck, and am so scared that one day that I'll be homeless because I've lost my job and can't afford a place to live. This really drove home that it could happen to anyone

  • @whitearabianhorses
    @whitearabianhorses Před měsícem +1

    At the very end, McCoy and Southerlyn are talking, and McCoy says, “Don’t get me wrong: he killed somebody over an orange, he deserves to be punished for it.”
    Southerlyn: “. . . But. . .?”
    McCoy: “We just moved him from one jungle to another.”
    Very chilling and solemn.

  • @JSolar590
    @JSolar590 Před 3 lety +74

    It sucks that his family kicked him out.

    • @gutz1981
      @gutz1981 Před 3 lety +33

      Welcome to what its like being a man in society. The media say "Privileged" a lot to describe men. Why do you think those men may make more money at a job than a woman? Because a lot of them work double shifts. Weekends. Overtime. Anything to keep their jobs. When we men lose it, we lose it all. Women for the most part are more protected by our society. In a divorce 9/10 they get the house, the cars, alimony, the kids. When a woman fails at something, their is usually a safety net to let her try again. When a man fails, there is no net. We walk a tight rope every day. We are heroes as long as we don't fall. Once we do, the show is over an no one wants us. We don't get a net and left to either die or crawl away.

    • @zammmerjammer
      @zammmerjammer Před 3 lety +15

      @@gutz1981 And who makes society that way...? (Hint: it ain't women)

    • @derzz
      @derzz Před 3 lety +11

      @@gutz1981 what a weird way to tell us youre a misogynist

    • @andreyromashchenko8967
      @andreyromashchenko8967 Před 3 lety +18

      @@derzz what a weird way to tell us that you don't understand the word "misogynist".

    • @SimonKnight1023
      @SimonKnight1023 Před 3 lety

      @@derzz I think that’s the best way actually. lol

  • @maxpaschke2297
    @maxpaschke2297 Před 3 lety +24

    I agree with everything the homeless man says, because thats exactly what it's really like to live out on the streets, it a constant struggle to survive!

  • @Mr_Myers_
    @Mr_Myers_ Před rokem +4

    "Why didn't you get a job?"
    Its really, REALLY not that simple sometimes.

  • @mrt094
    @mrt094 Před 3 lety +119

    "Limousine Liberals." Nice one.

    • @dlf7789
      @dlf7789 Před 3 lety +8

      too bad its usually red ties in red corvettes. Liberalism is the least wealthy next to leftism of the political ideologies in america, if you want to make money its easier made in the GOP.

    • @neverlimb5931
      @neverlimb5931 Před 3 lety +3

      @@dlf7789 LMAO ok bro... you are poor like the rest of us

    • @dlf7789
      @dlf7789 Před 3 lety +2

      @@neverlimb5931 wut?

    • @TISOA_1173
      @TISOA_1173 Před 3 lety

      @@dlf7789
      Yes, money is easier made if you support the party who doesn't follow "Ladder cutting". Ladder cutting is described as climbing up in rank,, whether that be in financial ground or social standings, but cut the way up behind you to prevent your hierarchical area from becoming bloated by other people. Why do you think Bezos, Gates, or the Walton family support increasing taxes to pay for social programs? It's because their money has already been made and taxed, if they keep running their multi-billion dollar businesses at a net neutral in capital, they are set for life. If you want to make money follow fiscally conservative ideals. If YOU want to be the only one with money, follow fiscally liberal ideals.

    • @dlf7789
      @dlf7789 Před 3 lety +7

      @@TISOA_1173 except none of those people are taxed nearly as much as the lower and middle class. You also forget about the fact of political racketeering. The best solution is to tax and" liquidate" the wealthy and redistribute their assets amongst the state and public projects to refurbish homing facilities and farming.

  • @korrde
    @korrde Před 3 lety +25

    The ending was weak. McCoy said nothing to rebut what the homeless man said. And it felt like he knew he had nothing to really come back with.

    • @milamberarial
      @milamberarial Před 3 lety +15

      He wasn't trying to rebut what the accused said. He was rebutting the defense attorney's strategy. She was trying to make the case that a homeless person like him can't be judged by the same rules other people are judged by. That the lifestyle he is living doesn't allow for him to do things the way you are supposed to. Thats what the "should we treat you like animals then" part was all about. By showing that the guy is as human as anyone else in the courtroom is, he is also showing that the defense's argument isn't valid. He is human. He has to be judged according to the law, not a different system. Nobody can legally blame a dog for fighting with another dog, even if one of them dies. But humans are judged by the law. If he is human in mindset, desires, fears, etc, then he is subject to the law. They didn't have to prove he killed the guy, he had already confessed to that. They had to prove that he isn't subject to a different law than the rest of humanity in that city.

  • @RolandanceVarner
    @RolandanceVarner Před 4 měsíci +1

    I just went to the courthouse in Atlanta. While parking my car, I saw a homeless man underneath a bridge living amongst rats. This is a true story. I said to myself we have to take our jobs seriously.

  • @jeremykershaw
    @jeremykershaw Před 3 lety +132

    Gotta admit, the defense has a convincing case

    • @Joeh1154
      @Joeh1154 Před 3 lety +14

      Unless you're the relative of the victim.

    • @gideonjones8088
      @gideonjones8088 Před 3 lety +28

      I haven't seen the full episode, maybe I'm missing something important, but how? To me the entire defense sounds like "Oh it's so awful being homeless, his life is too sad for him to be guilty."
      He says he couldn't walk away without risking becoming a target to others. Well, too bad, that's not a good enough excuse to commit a crime.

    • @Deborahtunes
      @Deborahtunes Před 3 lety +17

      @@gideonjones8088 ~ 👍 He seems to want it both ways. Expecting pity from people after committing a crime. Then when it's suggested to go to a shelter (or to help himself), those places aren't good enough, for him, because of the crazies druggies and thieves ({oh my} - sorry, couldn't resist).
      I've been homeless in the past, and had far less options than the character in this episode. But I never gave up on my future. I picked myself up, found another place to live, and have never looked back. It's all in what a person is willing to do. The person here, decided to do nothing for himself. While still acting as if he deserved more than the other people in his position...

    • @popcorn8153
      @popcorn8153 Před 3 lety +21

      @@Deborahtunes so your argument is that it was easy for you so people must be overreacting about being homeless?

    • @Deborahtunes
      @Deborahtunes Před 3 lety +10

      @@popcorn8153 ~ No, you are way off. Where did I say it was easy for me? I said I did what I had to do to pick myself up and move on. I DIDN'T sit around and act as if I was better then the other homeless people around me. Which is exactly what this character here did...

  • @obliviouz
    @obliviouz Před 2 lety +13

    "The court fights over whether a homeless man should be judged for his crimes in the same way as those more privileged than him." - that's a stupid question. The video asks us if they should be treated more leniently. Would people agree with treating them more harshly? Discrimination, better or worse, is not to be accepted.
    And it's all besides the fucking point. He didn't choose to be homeless? Fine. He chose to assault and attack another person.

    • @samjones6046
      @samjones6046 Před 2 lety +1

      He's right about one thing, if he let that go, the consequences in the future could be dire.

    • @obliviouz
      @obliviouz Před 2 lety +1

      @@samjones6046 You don't get to kill someone to protect yourself unless it's to protect yourself from that person in self defence. That actually makes it worse, far worse, because it means it was premeditated and planned and thought out. Not lashing out, not a schizophrenic break, but conscious and deliberate.

    • @vincentfichtler7758
      @vincentfichtler7758 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@obliviouzplus the homeless man could have just walked away from the delusional guy after refused to share but he didn't.

  • @louiscypher4186
    @louiscypher4186 Před 5 měsíci +1

    You gotta love this comments section, "oh think of the poor homeless man"
    That's exactly why he gets convicted the jury thought of the poor defenceless homeless man he mudered.
    Ask yourself why you empathize with a murderer instead of his victim.

  • @DorvellTStewart
    @DorvellTStewart Před 3 lety +14

    You’d think a more conservative leaning person like Arthur would be more inclined to actually want to help the homeless, considering a good percentage of homeless people are veterans…
    You know, the people they say we should all support?

    • @MasterGhostf
      @MasterGhostf Před 3 lety +13

      conservatives are against helping people, its the whole movement. Conservatives are to benefit the rich, it has been since 1700's France, where the philosophers first took place.

    • @sidwulf6859
      @sidwulf6859 Před 3 lety +5

      @@MasterGhostf Actually this has nothing to do with conservatives and liberals. This has nothing to do with just the United States either. This is a problem all over the world, and it’s a problem for humanity really. Unfortunately, there is no system of government currently in power that can resolve this issue. Our thinking hasn’t evolved far enough to make such a system.

    • @override367
      @override367 Před 3 lety +5

      conservatives hate veterans in any circumstance where they aren't convenient political props

    • @PR--un4ub
      @PR--un4ub Před 3 lety

      @@override367 Watch a veteran support gay or trans rights and you will see conservatives turn on that veteran in an instant.

    • @WarsawHess88
      @WarsawHess88 Před 5 měsíci

      ​​@@PR--un4ubwatch a white liberal support blacks who vote Democrat one minute then turn into a Klan member when they vote Republican.

  • @lithara5302
    @lithara5302 Před rokem +3

    I can understand now why some homeless people choose jail. A murder sentence wouldn't be worth it, but a few years of food and a bed plus the small amount they can make working, or finishing/starting an educational goal sounds way better than the streets.

  • @Tarotlynx
    @Tarotlynx Před 10 měsíci +1

    She was right. It's just discrimination to demand someone wear a suit when they don't have any chance of owning or storing one just because you're in court.

  • @insertclevername4123
    @insertclevername4123 Před 3 lety +15

    Of all the episodes I've seen of this show and all the performances, this one has always stuck with me. Just gutting. (And it's funny--the show has such confidence in the rightness of its main characters that the cops and DAs usually get the "undercut the perp's argument" last line, but this time it just feels unspeakably cruel, even though they probably didn't plan it that way.)

  • @americannomadnews5370
    @americannomadnews5370 Před 3 lety +16

    Hospitals will often treat the homeless incredibly badly in fact I've had them lie to me. When it comes to the homeless some of the people that those who read this me live right next door to have the same kind of job pay their bills smile wave go by this is the same people who will take the most vulnerable person at the worst point part of their life judge them and kick them. The people who do these things have jobs just like anybody else in every industry every Nation and every city in nearly every business are these people who will abuse someone who cannot defend themselves well they treat you with courtesy and friendliness. That's part of what it's like to be homeless

  • @deandrebrown4521
    @deandrebrown4521 Před 3 lety +4

    This actor did a phenomenal job

  • @BeerNecessities727
    @BeerNecessities727 Před 3 lety +14

    It's called bondage...bound by evil. I feel for this character as I have been through something similar. I really need to find the rest of this. ✝

  • @terrynasonisasupervillain9017

    I love law and order and in Rotterdam Netherlands there is crime too

  • @vaporhtrail4350
    @vaporhtrail4350 Před 3 lety +38

    This guy deserves an emmy

  • @Barrythebarnabas
    @Barrythebarnabas Před 6 měsíci +1

    5:00 he has a point. Lots of people virtue signal so they can feel better about the fact they don’t really contribute to their communities or civilization as a whole. They don’t actively choose to do good, selfless things, they’re just not doing bad things so when compared to actual good people they feel mediocre because not being evil doesn’t make you a saint. Just like volunteering at a soup kitchen once a year doesn’t make you a humanitarian

  • @luvlylady55
    @luvlylady55 Před 2 lety +2

    wow..his acting is so good..so real.. and it most likely represents the truth as to what homeless people go thru..how they feel?? its truly sad..

  • @sonnyp3228
    @sonnyp3228 Před 3 lety +4

    And the sad part are the people who question and judged them are the people have every thing in life, from wine and dine in 5 star restaurant, live in 4 bed room and 3 car garage. possessed every toys or gadgets in world have to offer even they don't even know what s that for.

    • @bryanm64
      @bryanm64 Před 10 měsíci

      Yeah, was this a jury trial? If it's supposed to be a jury of your peers, shouldn't it be composed of homeless people? I bet they'd love to earn min. wage for a few days.

  • @emmetpbyrne
    @emmetpbyrne Před 3 lety +7

    Have to say McCoy was heartless in this one.

    • @BDTXIII
      @BDTXIII Před 3 lety +5

      I understand he is doing his job, but no need for harsh criticism on the poor defendant.......

    • @AlexKS1992
      @AlexKS1992 Před 2 lety +3

      Cry me a river.

    • @GabesEdtiz
      @GabesEdtiz Před 2 lety +4

      @@AlexKS1992 only tears I’m shedding are ones of laughter at your sheer lack of sympathy 😂

    • @gigafreckle
      @gigafreckle Před rokem +1

      McCoy was pretty brutal in the court room as it’s his job as a prosecutor to get a conviction. However, there’s a scene not in this clip as they’re leaving the courthouse where he says, “At least he’ll have plenty of food and shelter” Southerlyn replies, “careful, Jack. It almost sounds like you have sympathy.” “Don’t get me wrong, we are just moving this man from one jungle to another.” I think that showed that McCoy wasn’t completely heartless

  • @thefuturist8864
    @thefuturist8864 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I’ve not experienced homelessness, but people I know who have say that among the many problems they face is lack of sleep, sometimes to dangerous levels. Even one night of no sleep can bring on symptoms similar to schizo-affective disorder, so if it’s likely that this man has lived on the streets for a long time it’s equally likely that his mind is stressed and tired and not at all functioning well. We live in a society where there needs to be some basic rules of conduct, but we tend to apply these rules to everyone without thinking about whether they’re in a position to follow them.

  • @Spock0987
    @Spock0987 Před 3 lety +4

    So health living costs destroyed yet another individual.

  • @zoebellanfante5017
    @zoebellanfante5017 Před 3 lety +47

    They need love they need compassion they need to be treated with some respect too it’s sad to see people have no other choice but to live on the streets 🙏🏾

  • @allways28
    @allways28 Před 3 lety +11

    Rats eating your fingers while you sleep. Man that’s rough

  • @setaside2
    @setaside2 Před 3 lety +18

    Having been homeless three times in my life, I couldn't even look at the man while he was screaming in the stand. All I could do was clutch and fold inward. I know that desperation. This country, built on the poisonous PR that is rugged individualism, the idea that promotion of better civics and social welfare is weakness, that taking care of your neighbor as you would like to be taken care of is laziness, parasitism... We've been raised wrong and we vote against enlightenment and the raising of the quality of life of the greater whole because of it.

    • @billlarussa5908
      @billlarussa5908 Před 2 lety +1

      "This country, built on the poisonous PR that is rugged individualism"
      BOO HOO HOO. You're just looking for an excuse to be lazy.
      And you wonder why you've been homeless multiple times.
      Maybe look inward, champ.

    • @GabesEdtiz
      @GabesEdtiz Před 2 lety +2

      Sorry about that, man. I hope you’re doing better now 🙏🏽

    • @setaside2
      @setaside2 Před 2 lety +2

      @@GabesEdtiz thanks, man. I appreciate you. Ba weep grannah weep ninny bong.

  • @josefajoe4138
    @josefajoe4138 Před 2 lety +3

    I love how he acts so awesome

  • @matchstyx3460
    @matchstyx3460 Před 3 lety +18

    Annnnnnd here we go… my feed now belongs to the SVU algorithm…

    • @NeSeeger
      @NeSeeger Před 3 lety

      thats how the algorithm gets you

    • @Ricky_Spanishh
      @Ricky_Spanishh Před 3 lety

      This isn't SVU though...

    • @matchstyx3460
      @matchstyx3460 Před 3 lety

      @@Ricky_Spanishh I get law order CI and SVU, mostly SVU

  • @allistairlethbridge-stewar163
    @allistairlethbridge-stewar163 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I sleep peacefully knowing that at the very least, he’s probably getting better treatment and a full stomach in prison

  • @Yasuda9000
    @Yasuda9000 Před 3 lety +16

    I was just watching this episode an hour.

  • @TheDarkMaster1989
    @TheDarkMaster1989 Před 2 lety +1

    This was one of the first episodes of L&O I ever watched. Still think it's a great episode.

  • @gutz1981
    @gutz1981 Před 3 lety +14

    No offense. But why fight going to jail. He would get a warm bed (bad as it was) meals each day and free medical attention. Sure, jail is jail. But its better than being homeless by the looks of things.

    • @Pewling
      @Pewling Před 3 lety +10

      American jails are rather notorious for sexual abuse, drug abuse, violence etc. At least as a homeless, if there's trouble, you can move to a different area to avoid it. A sense of freedom, even if your living conditions are limited. In jail you're dead meat if you catch the wrong attention. Dude probably just wants to live.

    • @CAPDude44
      @CAPDude44 Před 3 lety +1

      Why fight being a slave?

  • @thomasdevine3716
    @thomasdevine3716 Před 5 měsíci +1

    This is why Law & Order is so great even the side characters are unbelievable

  • @zacharyboyd7493
    @zacharyboyd7493 Před 2 měsíci

    Incredible acting. That dude needs a show

  • @TheOmegaRiddler
    @TheOmegaRiddler Před rokem +2

    The thing that bothered me about this scene is that it made me want the "good guys" to lose because they acted like assholes.

  • @Colmenero444
    @Colmenero444 Před 3 lety +3

    I have been homeless and it feels hopeless. But I got a job to feed myself, I stayed away from alcohol and drugs and didn't have that much friends. Took showers at the gym and trained. Just because you dont have a zip code doesn't mean you can't better yourself.

  • @juliantapia1407
    @juliantapia1407 Před 3 lety +53

    There's no real winner here. Arthur's more conservative standard lack of compassion or action vs Serena's token attempts at placating guilt to appeal to more liberal sensibilities.
    All the while virtually nothing actually gets done to affect lasting improvements for the homeless or the mentally ill.

    • @sonrouge
      @sonrouge Před 3 lety +9

      Justice won. The guy was found guilty.

    • @juliantapia1407
      @juliantapia1407 Před 3 lety +10

      @@sonrouge that does nothing to fix the bigger issues that were brought up. Homelessness and mental health issues

    • @nathaniels9141
      @nathaniels9141 Před 3 lety +6

      @@juliantapia1407 How do you help someone that doesn't want your help and fights you when you try to give them help? Just keep throwing money at the problem? California gave homeless people 90 in hotels with hygiene supplies and food with counselors. Very few were able to turn their life around. The majority stole everything for drugs and then had to be forcefully evicted after 90 days. So what do we do just keep putting them into hotels?

    • @juliantapia1407
      @juliantapia1407 Před 3 lety +5

      @@nathaniels9141 that's a bigger and more expensive issue, taking the time and money required to get people clean or properly medicated so that they can Want to be proactive again (excluding those who don't need that much assistance).
      Things have gotten worse over the years, and it requires more of everything than it would've years back.
      You can't help everyone, it's impossible, but not knowing how many just need some assistance and instead writing them all off as lost causes isn't the way to go either

    • @lossmoss7378
      @lossmoss7378 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nathaniels9141 Weirdly enough, throwing money at problems with v little in the way of a system or a plan and then blaming ppl who are suffering may not be the solution you are looking for. Maybe consider real structural change.

  • @friskecrisps8038
    @friskecrisps8038 Před 9 měsíci +2

    "One day a year? So you and all the other limousined liberals can look at yourself in the mirror"
    He's got a point. Volunteering one day a year to make yourself feel good doesn't help a lot. On the other, I doubt he's done any volunteering himself and expects other people to do all of it for him and then badgers volunteers for not doing enough.

  • @michaeljensen2013
    @michaeljensen2013 Před 3 lety +18

    I grew up in NYC and have seen homeless/helpless people. It's so much worse today. Politicians have the power and money to help but they lack the desire or fortitude. Just the other day I watched a clip someone made, think it was "a walk down Kensington avenue, Philadelphia". It was just 2 minutes long but it was overwelmingly sad. I suggest you check it out..

  • @michaelnally2841
    @michaelnally2841 Před 2 lety +1

    I have never been homeless and I hope to never wind up homeless. But I can’t imagine what it’s like. There’s homeless shelters and soup kitchens to help them but they’re basically bandaids. There’s some programs in to help homeless people get back on there feet such as temporary places to stay until they can get a job, and afford a place of their own. I admittedly don’t know the exact conditions for it but I imagine you have to at least stay sober, show proof of getting a job, etc.

  • @johnhatter7852
    @johnhatter7852 Před 6 měsíci +3

    5:04..."Limousine liberals"...haven't head that one in a while LOL

  • @farquadshmoogle9120
    @farquadshmoogle9120 Před 3 lety +23

    i forget when i first saw this episode and scene. it really touched me hard. this scene is one of the main reasons i give to the homeless whenever i can. Bc it is true, not like that life was planned or chosen, they had misfortune and ending up homeless was the result. and remember, it could happen to anyone. one day you could be on top having millions, but you have those millions in stock, house, car, possessions. stock crashes, there goes those millions of dollars.

  • @domgluhwein
    @domgluhwein Před 3 lety +9

    Dr. Ellis Grey is a powerful lawyer too 👏

  • @goldenvulture6818
    @goldenvulture6818 Před 3 lety +7

    A jail or a prison is a jungle filled with tigers

  • @billedefoudre
    @billedefoudre Před 3 lety +1

    What you call a bad night, having one nightmare, I call it a tuesday morning, in an endless eternity of suffering and doom.

  • @SmarkAngel
    @SmarkAngel Před 6 měsíci +2

    That's cool man, but you're only on trial for the murder part.

  • @daryllzoss9523
    @daryllzoss9523 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Im taking the homeless guy side… why dont you get a job??? Really??? They tried the society shut them out

  • @MarkArandjus
    @MarkArandjus Před 3 lety +9

    Homeless guy actor has a really nice soft voice.

  • @Immortalis7771
    @Immortalis7771 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Accept being homeless isn't an excuse to beat another person and inflict injuries that lead to death. This is an open shut case.

  • @heyysimone
    @heyysimone Před rokem +1

    Its also almost impossible to get a job when youre homeless - you need an address to put on job applications. You cant get any benefits because you have no address for the forms. So 'just get a job' doesnt really work.