R
Ridgerunner
Guest
I don’t know how things are in Georgia, but I do know a very significant part, if not the largest part, of homelessness is among the very seriously mentally ill. Due in part to the courts which have taken a very wide view of “least restrictive environment”, states like mine have closed down the facilities that once housed people who need constant monitoring to make sure they eat, sleep, and take their medications.I don’t like Putin, and I really am not very wild about the Russians either, however Ukraine is not a member of NATO.
We simply cannot jump back into another cold war chess game against Russia, unless we are absolutely forced to, and at this point we are not. I don’t see where inaction by NATO undermines them as a deterrent.
American and for that matter English interests are not at stake, as far as I can tell, maybe I am wrong. What I do know is that we have a terrible homeless problem,
“On a single night in January 2013, 610,042 people were experiencing homelessness in the US.”
endhomelessness.org/library/entry/the-state-of-homelessness-2014
The UK also has a serious homeless problem. Everyone has heard the stats for the US DOD budget figures are. If that is not a deterrence, I don’t know what is. I am sick to death of the US spending our tax dollars on proxy wars when so many homeless families and mentally ill people sleep in the streets or live in filth and poverty. We need jobs not more wars that in the long run accomplishes little other than killing people. Iraq was enough.
The price of the Iraq and Afghan wars cost in excess of 4 trillion dollars to the US taxpayers.
washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/study-iraq-afghan-war-costs-to-top-4-trillion/2013/03/28/b82a5dce-97ed-11e2-814b-063623d80a60_story.html
Enough is enough.
As a result, lots of them roam the streets. Now and then they get so crazy the police gather them in and bring them to psych centers. Those folks feed them, see to their illnesses, get their meds stabilized and then what…??? There’s nothing they can do but put them back out on the street and wait until they come in again next month or next week or whatever. Sometimes those sick people have thousands of dollars in SSD or other benefits available to them, but they stick the checks in a paper bag or throw them away or get robbed of them and don’t have money to eat or get shelter.
It’s saddening. Me, I primarily blame the courts and this obsession they have with “least restrictive environment”. It’s respect for human freedom gone nuts.