I’m a filthy fucking socialist.

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 27th, 2023

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  • Thanks for the offer, but unless you have quite a bit of disposable income, my situation cannot be improved by one person due to the nature of how this country works. As kind as your offer is.

    Homelessness is a systemic issue. Getting housing often requires a job. Getting a job often requires housing. And it’s easy to lose that job if you’re unhoused, even if you’re in a shelter.

    Then there are infrastructure issues, like LA being terribly car-centtic while also having massive traffic issues, and pathetic alternative transit options. Lack of biking, walking, shade, third places, etc. There’re 2 buses that stop nearby, but they are slow, and connections infrequent. Even the fastest public transit is slower than typical LA traffic. The region has a short term car rental option that’s handy, but the kiosks aren’t within reasonable distance.

    I live within a 15-minute walk from 3 different grocery stores, but they’re the “not good” kind. Many other homeless shelters are within food deserts. Since I can’t have a fridge and can’t really cook (1 tiny microwave for ~100 clients), I require shelf stable foods, which usually contain excess salt, fat, and sugar. Also more expensive per ounce / unit. And they’re about to crack down on our “pantries” because the COO did a walk thru recently and didn’t like what she saw (instead of trying to understand and rectify the causes).

    There are no nearby gyms for things like cardio and resistant training, or alternative showering (the main driver of homeless in gyms). Yes I could go for a walk – or try some running, but I’m overweight with several injuries – but the aforementioned showers are terrible, so I try to shower every 2 days.

    Most in this building aren’t permitted to do laundry on the weekends, as that’s reserved for people who work (with no apparent regard to when they actually work). And laundry hours are limited between 8am and 3pm. With ~100 clients it’s easy to potentially miss days of laundry. The laundromat nearby is a massive ripoff.

    Public healthcare is often laborious with long wait times (like all other public assistance).

    Wages have stagnated across the country. My last job was my best ever paying job at $22/hr. And while it’s possible to subsist on that in Los Angeles, it’s not a wage anyone can thrive on. Especially if they decide to use a car. I was taking Uber rides after work since there were no buses at that time.

    I have a savings. I’m getting unemployment (after months of hassle). I’m even planning a trip abroad in the next year since the math works (because I’m not gonna sacrifice what little joy I might get in this shit life just because I’m homeless).

    I lost my prior job working at a detox after 3 months due to “performance” (it wasn’t a good fit, I preferred more outpatient environs). Despite living in a tumultuous homeless shelter while working 2nd shift (and the shelter turns the lights on at 7am, off at 11pm), I managed to do the majority of my work effectively. They didn’t care. Bye-bye. Despite that, I’m possibly the person with the best stability in this specific shelter.

    Again, thanks. But I doubt any single individual can provide what I and most other homeless need in this capitalist hellscape run by fascists.

    In the USA, it’s easier for the housed to become homeless, than it is for the homeless to become housed.







  • The fact that you (an average US citizen, presumably) think tasing is de-escalation is literally part of the problem.

    I was trained by US cops multiple times during my 10 years of security work. Sadly, I didn’t receive much for de-escalation training. I had to learn it myself. Oh sure sometimes escalation (like sounding intimidating while moving your hand to your hip) worked as a method of de-escalation, most of the time it was to reinforce the mantra to “ensure you go home at night”.

    Tasers aren’t even non-lethal, they are now (properly, with public outcry) considered “less lethal”. No pepper spray or mace mentioned, no trip attacks, no net, no means of incapacitating him before reaching to the nearest gun-like object.

    Meanwhile, we have no one there to assess him to determine what his medical and/or psychological needs are, because “he’s dangerous”.

    The cops brought the rifle.