The Bell Riots start on Sunday. Stay safe out there!

<Anyone coming from /c/all please note this is a joke post for an in universe Star Trek event. Remain Calm.>

  • Flying SquidM
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    724 months ago

    Meanwhile, in the real 2024, a lot of homeless people would probably prefer being put into a sanctuary district than having their very existence made illegal and cops either clearing them out or arresting them wherever they went.

    • @samus12345
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      564 months ago

      When the actual future dystopia is worse than the one that writers came up with.

    • Melllvar
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      -24 months ago

      In reality, getting them to accept services and help is the #1 obstacle to getting them services and help.

      • Spider
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        144 months ago

        Most homeless shelters in San Francisco dont allow people to take their belongings in with them.

        Attitudes towards the homeless are highly backwards - demanding sobriety as a condition for aid, when in reality drugs are used as a way to escape the pain of trauma and homelessness. SF residents voted and passed Proposition F, cementing the idea that feeling smugness over the homeless is more important than actually trying to help them escape poverty.

        • Melllvar
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          -14 months ago

          Most shelters do in fact allow people to bring their belongings with them (within reason). Some even provide storage space, and the city provides a free self-storage facility.

          Prop F addresses CAAP (cash welfare), not housing. You don’t have to be receiving CAAP to qualify for housing assistance, and you don’t have to be homeless to qualify for CAAP.

          SF has been struggling with a chronic homelessness problem for decades. Offering voluntary services does not work. To put in in Trek terms, the problem isn’t the gimmes, it’s the ghosts and dims. Gimmes are easy to help because they can act on their own behalf and in their own best interests. They accept services and don’t end up being chronically homeless. The ghosts and the dims, on the other hand, are a different story.

          Is sweeping their encampments an ideal solution? No, far from it. But what else is there for us to do? Let them languish on the streets? Honestly, what would you have us do?

          • @Keeponstalin
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            4 months ago

            Housing First is the correct way to reduce homelessness. The main cause of homelessness is being priced out of the housing market, because the vast majority of housing in America is entirely privatized. Plus most public housing in America is not done nor funded well, until our European counterparts.

            Drug addiction is a symptom of late-stage homelessness, not a cause. The cause is almost always the private housing market pricing people out of affording even rent. In the US, housing is first and foremost an investment, not a necessity.

            Numerous studies show that housing first participants experience higher levels of housing retention and use fewer emergency and criminal justice services, which produces cost savings in emergency department use, inpatient hospitalizations, and criminal justice system use.

            https://www.pdx.edu/homelessness/housing-first

            This has worked famously in Finland

            • Melllvar
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              -14 months ago

              Housing First has been the policy in San Francisco since 2008, and state-wide since 2016.

              • @Keeponstalin
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                24 months ago

                No they haven’t. Shelters and Housing Lotterys are not Housing First. Housing First is free housing, like studio apartments, where homeless people can get stability in order to recover from addiction and join the job market.

                https://sfplanning.org/housing Housing for All is going in the right direction, but Housing First is specifically important for addressing and reducing homeless.

      • Flying SquidM
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        84 months ago

        And that is because a large amount of time, those services and help come with conditions they can’t accept.

        Take shelters for example. If you’re a homeless woman, you could stay in a shelter (until they kicked you out) but you probably have a dog to protect you since you’re a woman on the streets. The shelter would make you abandon the dog.

        • Melllvar
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          14 months ago

          I actually work in the SF housing industry, and worked at a housing site in SF that was converted to permanent supportive housing during COVID. In that case, barely 30% of the people even showed up to their intake appointments.

          • Flying SquidM
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            34 months ago

            What were the conditions in order to get an appointment? Who was offered appointments? Who was informed about them?

            • Melllvar
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              04 months ago

              Certification of homeless status from the city (already acquired if they were referred to us) and proof of income (if any).

              • Flying SquidM
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                34 months ago

                I think we both can come up with a great many reasons why someone wouldn’t want such a certification.

      • Flying SquidM
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        64 months ago

        Not even close to saying that. I think you need to look at what SCOTUS recently ruled about what cities can do with homeless people. Because sanctuary districts would be kinder.

        • @[email protected]
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          54 months ago

          you cant leave a sanctuary district, thats a prison, why would anybody want to go there? theres three main ways you end up there, you are too poor, your caught sleeping on the streets, or you have mental problems and cant afford the healthcare.

          inside the sanctuarys you have no guarantee for housing, no way to get a job, increased gang activity, more mentally unstable people, food shortages, how is that any better than living on the streets in our world?

          the rulings from the scotus is the first step to sanctuary districts my friend, and if you think that locking poor people in cages is kind, then you have a funny definition of kindness.

          • Flying SquidM
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            34 months ago

            I don’t think you understand the difference between “kinder” and “kindness.”

            Spitting in someone’s face is kinder than stabbing them in the throat. Does that mean spitting in their face is kindness?

            • @[email protected]
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              -34 months ago

              if you say something is kinder, then it must pass the bar of being kind first. I would say none of the things being described, (spitting , stabbing, and locking people away) counts as kind in the first place

              • Flying SquidM
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                44 months ago

                No, that’s not how language works.

                You can say that flies are smarter than bacteria despite neither being smart.

                You can say that Bob is uglier than Dave when neither Bob nor Dave are ugly.

                And I’ve already made it clear to you that I was not suggesting either was kind, so I’m not sure why you’re arguing this with me as if I were.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -24 months ago

                  you can say bob is uglier than Dave sure, but if it’s not true then it means nothing, similarly if you call something unkind kind, then that also means nothing. you said that sanctuary districts would be kinder, in order to be kinder they must first be kind, so yes you did say sanctuary districts are kind.

  • Miles O'Brien
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    294 months ago

    The fact that even when trying to be dystopian as fuck, depressingly bad, showcasing the worst decisions that the more aggressive (and let’s be honest, savage by comparison) people of the past, they give humanity WAY too much credit.

    Not a chance in hell anyone would create special areas for homeless people unless there were some ulterior motive. Because even though the cost of housing and programs to educate, therapy to help with any issues stemming from homelessness or mental disorders (including many that you will likely get just from being homeless that never showed up before) and substance abuse problems (that again, likely were not present pre-homelessness) is WAY lower than what we pay to “deal with it” the way we do, everyone just kind of seems okay with how the homeless get treated.

    And when you are watching 27 different angles of a bunch of people filming cops going around beating homeless people and dragging out of tents by their hair in order to burn them down with all the possessions inside, and nobody fucking lifts a finger to help those being opressed, it really winks in that maybe we don’t deserve to make it past the bell riots.

    Because even the shitty oppressive government of a fictional universe where most governments are completely changed, gone or barely dangling by a thread is a hell of a lot better than the shit we’re stuck with.

    • @Seasm0ke
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      134 months ago

      I feel like DS9 imagined a 2024 where liberals had morphed into champagne socialists, providing a social safety net to assuage guilt for their treatment of the people disadvantaged by society but keeping them out of sight. In reality the liberal parties stymie the left and work to keep government moving to the right so that the basic safety net never gets implemented. Instead we have neoliberals and party liners still obsessed with reaching across the aisle and shaking hands with those who would advocate for a ‘final solution’ to homelessness before voting to feed them. Thats not just America, look at Macron too.

    • @trolololol
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      34 months ago

      There’s assuming the percentage of homeless people is not threatening to create a rebellion. Increase the number to tipping point like 30% of all people and it will make sense.

      By the way that’s the goal of capitalism in a round about way - accumulate more money by fewer people. And it’s getting it’s way.

  • NegativeNullM
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    194 months ago

    I’m heading up to the mountains for camping this weekend, just to be safe.

    • teftOP
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      214 months ago

      Remember to bring your emergency comms system. The mountains can be treacherous.

      • @thessnake03
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        104 months ago

        I thought it was super easy in the future

      • @aeronmelon
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        84 months ago

        Just rip it out of the bulkhead and push it up the mountain.

    • @Kintarian
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      94 months ago

      Me too. I plan to make some coffee and watch the world burn.

  • @gibmiser
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    164 months ago

    If we get a star trec future out of it… I say it’s worth it

    • teftOP
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      124 months ago

      That’s the attitude we want around here!

      • @lugal
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        54 months ago

        Honestly, the end justifying all means is an attitude I’d expect from lemmygrad, not from here. I know, that’s not how you put it, but think about it that way

        • Echo Dot
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          4 months ago

          “The ends justify the means” is an argument often used by people that know the thing that they’re doing is pretty awful, and are trying to come up with some kind of hand waving justification.

          But as a thought process it isn’t bad in and of itself. Every time you undergo surgery it’s because the ends justify the means.

          It could be more favorably expressed as “short-term pain, long-term gain”.

          • @lugal
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            14 months ago

            And power structures reproduce themselves. Unity of means and ends is crucial when you don’t want to just build a new oppressive system

  • @aeronmelon
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    164 months ago

    And all Japan gets on Sunday is a lousy typhoon.

    • @[email protected]
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      34 months ago

      You could always move to (northern)Tohoku… not as many jobs but at least the typhoons and quakes are rare.

  • @Agent641
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    124 months ago

    I shall not remain calm!