Homelessness: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Ойын-сауық

With homelessness increasing nationwide, John Oliver takes a look at the way we discuss the unhoused, what policy failures are making the problem worse, and how we can help.
Connect with Last Week Tonight online...
Subscribe to the Last Week Tonight KZread channel for more almost news as it almost happens: / lastweektonight
Find Last Week Tonight on Facebook like your mom would: lastweektonight
Follow us on Twitter for news about jokes and jokes about news: lastweektonight
Visit our official site for all that other stuff at once: www.hbo.com/lastweektonight

Пікірлер: 18 000

  • @MasterAndreRaven
    @MasterAndreRaven2 жыл бұрын

    When I was the assistant manager of the local KFC, on nights when I'd have the closing shift, I'd keep the store open for an extra couple of hours, after the rest of the staff had finished up and gone home. Why? Because there were homeless people who were digging through our trash, looking for food that was perfectly edible but had been thrown away for different reasons (it needed to be sold or discarded by the end of the day, it needed to be sold or discarded for so long after it was cooked and held at temp, etc.). Before I'd started working there, they were coming into the area where we stored our garbage bins outside and rummaging around inside of them, looking for something -- anything -- to eat. So what did I do? On nights that I'd close the store, I'd finish everything like normal, put away all the money, make sure the restaurant was clean, the staff had finished their jobs and cleaned their stations properly, and then send the staff home. And instead of locking up the store, I'd let the 20-or-so homeless people in the town (it's a pretty small town comparatively speaking to Seattle and Tacoma, which are only a few dozen miles away) come inside the store. I'd have set aside the food that we hadn't sold or were supposed to have thrown away for the length of my shift, and I'd pass that out to them, along with cups to get something to drink from the fountain. I'd let them sit in the dining area and rest for a little while, so they could relax and charge their phones. I'd leave the bathrooms open so they could relieve themselves. And when they were finished, and after they'd had a good meal, I'd tell them they had to be out of the store by midnight, and every single one of them would be out of the store by midnight; no complaints, no fighting, no arguing. Just people grateful to have been treated like people. I've told people this before. And the first question most people ask is, "Weren't you worried about being robbed?" And the truth of the matter is, I wasn't. All of the money had been put away in the safe and was untouchable. All of the food that was there was being given freely. There was no reason for any of them to want to rob the store or me. And after they'd leave the store, I'd go back over the areas where they'd been sitting, clean the surfaces again, clean the bathrooms again, make sure there wasn't a trace they'd ever been there, and lock up the store properly. Before I started working there, there had been a couple of break-ins at night in the months prior to my hiring, one person had been robbed at gunpoint, and our trash cans were being raided almost every night. After I was hired, there was nothing; no attempted break-ins, no violence towards the staff, and the trash cans were kept clean. Hell, most days, we wouldn't even need to clean the parking lot of the detritus that normally accumulates. It would be spotless every morning after I'd finished my shift. I gave up about two hours of my life every night, five nights a week. In return, a couple dozen people or so were happier, they were more able to get back onto their feet with a hot meal in their bellies, and our store was safer and cleaner than ever. There's no downside to helping those who are less fortunate than yourself. After all, you're here to make the world a better place for those unborn and yet to come. That starts with at least a little decency and respect for your fellow human. Good luck out there, people. [EDIT 11/18/2021] Wow, this is getting a lot more attention that I expected a comment on KZread would get. Since I wrote this, there've been new comments virtually every single day, so I feel like it's a good time to address some of them (feel free to let me know if there is anything in this addendum that wasn't covered or you'd like answered; I'll take the time to respond when I can). - I didn't get fired for this, and the owner of the franchise never addressed what I was doing while I was working there. I eventually left this job because the owner (who is also the manager of the KFC) had unreasonable expectations of staff when it came to coming in to work on days off, when other people had called out, because there was a snow storm and the store should have been closed for the safety of staff and patrons. If he ever discovered what I was doing, he never mentioned it directly to me, and there was never any inquest done that I'm aware of. - If there had been any official investigation about what I was doing, I would have happily fought like hell against any sort of reprimand or punishment for not only doing what was right, but also doing what made sense. Our garbage bill was based on weight; if less food is being disposed of needlessly, then there is less garbage to be thrown away. Quod erat demonstrandum: Whatever was spent on additional detergent, soap, paper towels, and toilet paper used in excess of normal business operations was offset by the additional savings from giving away literal hundreds of pounds less of "garbage" (i.e. perfectly edible food that was otherwise set to be disposed of because it couldn't be sold to the public). - What I did doesn't actually cross any legal lines when it comes to food safety. If you're unsure about this, there is a program on Food Waste by Last Week Tonight that covers "Good Samaritan" laws in accordance with food. It's actually not illegal to give people food that has passed its mandated expiration (in accordance with food safety / ServSafe guidelines); it's only illegal to make people PAY for food that has passed its mandated expiration, because that is then false advertising (as in, selling an inferior product for the normal price despite the product being inferior in some way to what is expected by the customer). - I've tried to go through and make sure that everyone who spoke in agreement or support of what I did received a like for their comment, just so you know that I see you, I respect you, and I appreciate that you took the time to respond. That's important in today's world. It's a lot easier to voice concerns and criticism, but stay silent when you approve of something. It's worth remembering that, if you want to foster good, encouragement goes a long way. Never be afraid to let yourself be heard. Still wishing you all nothing but the best. Stay safe out there!

  • @txlee5513

    @txlee5513

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bless you. Two hours each day plus all the cleaning up afterwards is a huge gift. And a huge blessing for the people who could eat and rest. Bless you.

  • @ifeoluwaadeoye6557

    @ifeoluwaadeoye6557

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your service. You are the model example of what those that call themselves "Christians" are supposed to exemplify. I don't know when these people became so selfish. I do hope there's a heaven just for your sake.

  • @thatfuzzypotato1877

    @thatfuzzypotato1877

    2 жыл бұрын

    Damn sir... you got me in tears.

  • @JEMurl

    @JEMurl

    2 жыл бұрын

    for I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in; I was naked and you clothed Me; I was sick and you visited Me; I was in prison and you came to Me.’ “Then the righteous will answer Him, saying, ‘Lord, when did we see You hungry and feed You, or thirsty and give You drink? When did we see You a stranger and take You in, or naked and clothe You? Or when did we see You sick, or in prison, and come to You?’ And the King will answer and say to them, ‘Assuredly, I say to you, inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of these My brethren, you did it to Me.’ Matthew 25:35-40 -JESUS (said that!)

  • @sabreenabdullajirrow7566

    @sabreenabdullajirrow7566

    2 жыл бұрын

    This heart worming. May Allah bless your heart. Am greatfull to know there is people who are welling to act with kindness like you. You treated them with humanity and showed them they are better than what people make them feel in the street. Thank you

  • @InvisiblePeople
    @InvisiblePeople2 жыл бұрын

    To all of the team at Last Week Tonight THANK YOU! This is the first time a national show has addressed how public perceptions influence policy change. The show also hit every talking point those of us working in the sector try to communicate. We are grateful. YOU ARE AWESOME!

  • @PlsGiveBeans

    @PlsGiveBeans

    2 жыл бұрын

    Invisible People, thank you for also shedding light on a very large issue in our country. Without people like you who tirelessly work to shed your own light on it which then helps John snd his team make it more national! You're an excellent human and you deserve to be cherished as well! Thank you good sir!

  • @Meliaison

    @Meliaison

    2 жыл бұрын

    Love the work you do, thank you for providing such wonderful and humanizing interviews with beautiful people who are struggling the most. You help ease the stigma.

  • @mgartz

    @mgartz

    2 жыл бұрын

    No Mark, YOU are awesome. Thanks for all of your work.

  • @laratahm8124

    @laratahm8124

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your work!

  • @ceebrzee3351

    @ceebrzee3351

    2 жыл бұрын

    @naked alienwith respect - dropping a random link into someone else's comments without some qualification ain't going get far.

  • @scarlettraven6505
    @scarlettraven6505 Жыл бұрын

    As a formally homeless woman, I can also add the complication of just being female. Period products can be very difficult to come across and a lot of shelters and programs are run by religious organizations that aren’t really all that interested in helping homeless women. Thank you for shining such a bright light on serious topics.

  • @coalblooded

    @coalblooded

    4 ай бұрын

    Period products should be free for everyone, but especially those who are experiencing homelessness.

  • @___Kelli___

    @___Kelli___

    4 ай бұрын

    I’ve been homeless at two different points in my life and I can attest that finding help for my situation was unbelievably restrictive in regards to the charities unwillingness to help me because I wasn’t catholic, because I cohabitated with my long term bf (we were unmarried) and I think it’s atrocious that those were deal breakers.

  • @coldscorpion6973

    @coldscorpion6973

    3 ай бұрын

    ​​@@___Kelli___ I am a Catholic and it makes me sick how conservative and not helpful the Catholics are in the US. The whole point of believing in Jesus is that you don't discriminate anyone because you must love even your enemies. As the pope said "the only time you can look someone from above is to help them get back on their feet"

  • @gloomyblackfur399

    @gloomyblackfur399

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you. As a male (mostly) I really hadn't thought of that aspect of homelessness.

  • @randallcauley9484

    @randallcauley9484

    2 ай бұрын

    Just being able to access a bathroom for human needs, find clean water, change clothes, or show up clean for a job .... If people just used any amount of consideration (even if they were a bit short on the empathy spectrum, or like, diminutive), it would be obvious (and easy) to create solutions (and livable cities). The Frisco interview - spot on. So many folks doing this. It's what Frisco means

  • @YukariOro
    @YukariOro7 ай бұрын

    I was a caregiver to my father for 5 years until he passed away due to Parkinson's disease and related dementia. I suffer from childhood ptsd as well. Since my father's house was sold, I've been sleeping in my car with my dogs at rest stops and inexpensive federal campgrounds, the latter with a half-price discount access card. To enter a shelter, I've been told I must give up my dogs-who are often the only thing keeping me going. I wouldn't give up on my Dad and I won't give up on my dogs. I made a commitment to them, and I won't break it. I don't do drugs, I don't smoke or drink. I live this way because I'm on disability and can't afford to rent anywhere that allows dogs, and I have no rental history and at the time of my Dad's death, I was credit invisible. Homelessness isn't a choice-you become homeless due to a lack of choices.

  • @Sundeep6543

    @Sundeep6543

    27 күн бұрын

    I really hope you are in a good place right now. May god bless you.

  • @thexalon
    @thexalon2 жыл бұрын

    One thing John didn't get into, but could have mentioned: How we treat those of us without homes also affects domestic violence in a big way. If you don't have a way to leave a situation without risking freezing to death on the streets, you'll stay, even if that involves getting beaten regularly.

  • @JesseLeeHumphry

    @JesseLeeHumphry

    2 жыл бұрын

    Could have mentioned it, but that seems at best tangential to the homeless problem.

  • @CrystalLynn1988

    @CrystalLynn1988

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's very true. I moved in with my boyfriend of several years when he became abusive and controlling. I called a helpline and they told me to leave my cat and personal belongings to go to a womans shelter. I couldn't do that so I stayed and tolerated the abuse longer until I could find an escape plan where I could get my cat and sentimental belongings. I lived in a tent in the woods with my cat until I could get us someplace safe.

  • @peachybuttercrunch4409

    @peachybuttercrunch4409

    2 жыл бұрын

    a sad effect, and one that i didnt think of

  • @hmlqrt2716

    @hmlqrt2716

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@CrystalLynn1988 Honestly thats pretty dumb. Its like if youre starving but refuse food bcs its bot organic

  • @lynxaway

    @lynxaway

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@goji508 you don’t know anything about her or her life beyond that single youtube comment. Does it bring you joy to sneer at someone who’s been through unimaginable struggle?

  • @milkteamachine
    @milkteamachine2 жыл бұрын

    My mom and I were homeless when I was a child. It was genuinely one of the most traumatic things that ever happened to me, she had to fight tooth and nail to get housing, and I almost ended up in foster care. We’re all closer to being homeless than we are to being millionaires.

  • @olandir

    @olandir

    2 жыл бұрын

    That right there is poignant. For most people it only takes one lost job or one landlord eviction or rent raise to lose a home. Yet people are convinced that everyone can raise themselves up to upper-class / millionaire status if you just "work hard enough" and "hustle".

  • @epothos1

    @epothos1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same here. Unfortunately that is all too true. I ended up in foster care under my mom’s friend’s house then I had to wait until my mom got housing when she did we ended up moving a couple of times. My mom then started dating this one guy who seemed normal. He stole the car and her check book and fucked up her credit after that we were evicted and were living in a shelter for a bit. After that we caught a break from a friend from mom’s NA group. It was in a more dangerous part of town but at least we didn’t need a credit check for the apartment. We moved to a small town bounced around apartment to duplex then we got into a house in like 2006. 2008 the mortgage crisis happened and we were almost homeless again but my grandparents finally started helping us out they bought our house for us. Now we are one decision from being homeless again. I have lived life with most of it in the hands of another for awhile now and I gotta say that though I count myself as lucky to have friends and family I don’t like having this feeling of being unable to help myself.

  • @justinturk9369

    @justinturk9369

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's a fact we are conditioned to ignore from a very young age. We are brainwashed into believing that we are all one lucky break away from being millionaires, but the reality is that we are all a hell of a lot closer to being a paycheck or less away from being homeless and starving.

  • @konigstiger3252

    @konigstiger3252

    2 жыл бұрын

    Where was her man? Oh wait, she had kid outside of wedlock. Sound like her problem hmm?

  • @Odinsday

    @Odinsday

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@justinturk9369 Something like 40% of Americans couldn't afford $400 of medical expenditures, and this was before the pandemic, so I'm sure that number increased even more. What an amazing country.

  • @abstract_extremist
    @abstract_extremist2 жыл бұрын

    "You wear your bias like a badge of honor when you see my history. You judge me for having children, for needing assistance. You hate me for wanting the stability you take for granted and why, because you didn't like looking the other way when you saw me on the street or is it simply because I make you uncomfortable and your discomfort is enough to disqualify a person from the American dream." -kiana Scott Powerful words. Excuse my terrible grammar i was just disappointed I didn't see anyone else mention her.

  • @rebeccah.4983
    @rebeccah.49832 жыл бұрын

    Playing "it's raining tacos" to annoy and harass sleeping homeless people is an especially cruel song to play to people who very probably do not have access to daily food sources.

  • @lindamorris3149

    @lindamorris3149

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought so too!

  • @johnhamilton6003

    @johnhamilton6003

    Жыл бұрын

    I was very disappointed John Oliver missed this very obvious point.

  • @ChickSage

    @ChickSage

    Жыл бұрын

    The practice is cruel enough, but picking that song might keep someone from entering heaven

  • @stoodmuffinpersonal3144

    @stoodmuffinpersonal3144

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm so mad that being a dick or being cruel going to people going through unimaginable pain seems so much easier and cooler to people, than. Idk. Trying to fic a single thing.

  • @GottaWannaDance

    @GottaWannaDance

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnhamilton6003 This show is about homelessness, not food, clothing, etc. Homelessness and it's opposite ( living in a home, with a toilet, shower or bath, bed to lie flat and safely in, etc.) is the topic.

  • @johnfaber100
    @johnfaber1002 жыл бұрын

    How to solve homelessness: Finland: Give them all homes Germany: We'll pay your rent and help you get a job America: Make everything they do illegal

  • @tovanto3971

    @tovanto3971

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/k6uovNSTgM_XqJc.html

  • @drummilein

    @drummilein

    2 жыл бұрын

    There are still a lot of homeless people in Germany. Our system isn't working for everyone. Yeah its better than the US, but it's still shit.

  • @koenkoe7

    @koenkoe7

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@drummilein no system works for everyone. The goal of the system is to make it work for as many people as possible and the other cases require special attention and might even provide small fixes to the system if they learn from it.

  • @rayperez6322

    @rayperez6322

    2 жыл бұрын

    facts

  • @blackjacki2

    @blackjacki2

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's only in red states where they make everything they do illegal. In progressive cities like San Francisco, Portland, Seattle they spend a lot on homelessness and the homeless are free to camp wherever they want. Take a guess where the bigger homelessness problem exists.

  • @Ellary_Rosewood
    @Ellary_Rosewood2 жыл бұрын

    As someone who was homeless a few different times when I was younger, the first time being when I was 13, so many people don't realize exactly how EASY it is to one day lose everything and become homeless. How traumatic it is, how it changes your entire life, and how hard it is to get out of it. So many people in the U.S. are just one hospital visit away from homelessness, or even just one paycheck away from it.

  • @manuginobilisbaldspot424

    @manuginobilisbaldspot424

    2 жыл бұрын

    People who haven't experienced something often just don't have the empathy in this country. Well I do know. My apartment burned down in 2003 and I lost everything. Staying in roach motels only because of the grace of friends to wandering the streets for weeks before my best friend sent for me...it permanently reshaped the way I try to treat people.

  • @cerebraldreams4738

    @cerebraldreams4738

    2 жыл бұрын

    Or you get arrested and don't have enough cash on hand to post bail. Even if your charges are bullshit, you're going to be in jail for three to six months before the charges get dismissed. By the time that happens, your apartment has already completed the eviction process, and all of your stuff is gone.

  • @sasak369

    @sasak369

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've never been homeless, but once a homeless guy sat across from me in the tram, struck up a conversation and really gave me the impression that he was just glad to be treated like a person for once, be listened to. I realized that the only thing that separated me from him was I have parents who can afford to house me even when I'm not in a position to completely take care of myself out in the world yet, as a mentally ill student. I'm just lucky. The injustice broke my heart.

  • @AnthonyGoodley

    @AnthonyGoodley

    2 жыл бұрын

    As other replies here show becoming homeless can happen a multitude of ways to people. Often through no fault of their own. Yet so many people who are a paycheck or two away from being homeless look down upon those without and have no empathy. I'm rather confident that things are going to keep getting worse before it gets better Things will be forced to change as the number of people going hungry and sleeping on the streets increases else crime will.

  • @krejados1

    @krejados1

    2 жыл бұрын

    You're right, Ellary. Both of my homelessness stints were brought on by traumatic events - first time, fleeing an abusive marriage and, second, losing everything in a housefire (set by the guy that was selling me the house, so he could collect the insurance). Each time, finding the will to dust off and rehouse for the sake of my kids incredibly difficult.

  • @stoneharper7038
    @stoneharper70382 жыл бұрын

    “Far too often stories focusing on homelessness only talk about how it affect people with homes when it is the people without the homes who need help” That absolutely blew my mind, spot on with the accuracy

  • @PROVOCATEURSK

    @PROVOCATEURSK

    2 жыл бұрын

    The capitalists prefer to fund armies for non-existent threats.

  • @pauld.b7129

    @pauld.b7129

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, but if you've ever done volunteer work, you'll know that solving homelessness basically needs providing everything for these people. While there are some people who are just in unfortunate circumstances, most just aren't motivated to take care of themselves. I've seen people begging withing visual distance of a "now hiring" sign... What we really need is designated camping areas so druggies aren't hanging out in people's front yard, and they can live without being disturbed by cops.....

  • @Kardia_of_Rhodes

    @Kardia_of_Rhodes

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's because homelessness is unfortunately viewed by most people as a societal constant rather than something that can be actively fixed.

  • @ChrisDoyle2112

    @ChrisDoyle2112

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pauld.b7129 don't be part of the problem...your volunteer work doesn't make you an expert on homelessness...go try surviving a week or a month in one of those camps, then give us an informed opinion...until then...well, you know the saying...i've lived it and you're just spewing stereotypical rhetoric #whitepeopleproblems #firstworldproblems

  • @pauld.b7129

    @pauld.b7129

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ChrisDoyle2112 you don't have to stay in a homeless camp. I've been homeless and still not been one of those dirty, idle people sitting around asking for money. I volunteered because I have lived it. It's not misinformation. If your in a hole, dig yourself out. Waiting around for society to do the heavy lifting for you does nothing for nobody. Also, if someone is on the street, they've probably burned all their bridges with friends and family already. There's a reason a friend doesn't take them in....

  • @TheOriginalMarkJones
    @TheOriginalMarkJones2 жыл бұрын

    My wife was homeless at one point. She worked 3 jobs and put herself through law school while couch surfing and depending on the kindness of strangers. People desperately misunderstand the state of homelessness in this country.

  • @randallcauley9484

    @randallcauley9484

    2 ай бұрын

    If not for the kindness of friends...There are so many good people who get it. But there are a LOT of people working (at all levels of government and in businesses that should know better) to make it harder on Americans. Dumb. Regressive. And a major policy fail for a so-called developed country. This issue alone drags us from "#17" in the world in terms of quality of life, to #29 and dropping in terms of well-being and "happiness" index (think, life, liberty, and the pursuit metrics). F (fail)

  • @SidV101

    @SidV101

    9 күн бұрын

    She actually *did* choose that for herself though; being in grad school opens the door to student loans. Couch surfing is a really smart way to avoid student debt but she could have rented if she wanted to.

  • @TheOriginalMarkJones

    @TheOriginalMarkJones

    9 күн бұрын

    @@SidV101 She did eventually. There was just this period of time that was simply not possible.

  • @JRubin3
    @JRubin32 жыл бұрын

    I’m currently living in my car. I have a job at Wendy’s working as much as I can. I want to get a second job but my driver’s license is listed as my previous apartment where I was evicted from. I can’t update my license because of the real i.d act which requires me to have a physical address. I have a P.O. Box that I thought I could use, but that doesn’t count anymore (at least in Florida). Without that drivers license I’m stuck in the single job making enough money to eat fast food and live in my car barely. If I ever have a medical emergency or a car accident/theft I’m screwed. My town has 3 shelters, two of which are women or family’s only and the last one has such a big problem with theft and vandalism that I won’t touch it with a ten foot pole. Hell I just got the vaccine because I needed to have a valid i.d just to get it till recently. Thank you for shining a light on this John

  • @dannydaw59

    @dannydaw59

    2 жыл бұрын

    How does the real id act relate to employers?

  • @Primalxbeast

    @Primalxbeast

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm also living in a car with a driver's license that has been expired for 2 years because of that stupid real id law. I lost my birth certificate, so that's a problem on top of the no address problem. You need a birth certificate to get ID and you need ID to get a copy of your birth certificate. I'm lucky that the police in my area have been understanding about me not being able to get my licenses renewed, but I'm afraid to drive to other areas for things like doctor's appointments.

  • @ol1294

    @ol1294

    2 жыл бұрын

    Can you ask a Co worker to lend you there address if they rent a apt. Or find someone that is willing to lend you an address

  • @tovanto3971

    @tovanto3971

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/iYNrzNSNgauzl9I.html

  • @goodvibrato

    @goodvibrato

    2 жыл бұрын

    Eating fast food is expensive. Try throwing together some cheap meals that don't need refrigeration. A can of Ranch Style beans is amazing by itself, rice cakes and peanut butter, can of mixed nuts (expensive but makes a good snack for several days or a week), dark chocolate (72% cacao for something relatively tasty and healthy), can of tuna and whole grain crackers, pickled vegetables, almonds, apples, bananas, carrots, bell peppers. Obviously raw fruits and veggies need to be eaten within a few days.

  • @Yerp_To_Da_Skerp
    @Yerp_To_Da_Skerp2 жыл бұрын

    As someone who was homeless its absolutely the most dehumanizing I've ever experienced. I was beat multiple times while sleeping, sometimes from police sometimes just random people, had food and drinks thrown on me, had the police cut my sleeping bag into pieces, and even now that I own my own company work every day and support my family and in fact own a house I've been mocked or shamed by people who found out. I am just as human now as I was then and yet stray dogs are treated with more kindness than I ever was

  • @HarshRajAlwaysfree

    @HarshRajAlwaysfree

    2 жыл бұрын

    sucks man... civilization have truely fcked us up they have made surviving detached from it really difficult, they say you are free but it almost seems like hoax if I'm free i should have a choice to just detach and live on my own but all the resources are hoarded by the people at least mostly accessible one are how can we survive out of this slavery for money, for things we don't even care, we have become a slave of each other its really disappointing, we are supposed to be free but we don't even know anyway out of the system we were raised in this only to be a gear, if function badly we just get thrown away and replaced

  • @poundfoolish6702

    @poundfoolish6702

    2 жыл бұрын

    Chris . I’m proud you and the changes you made you are more man than most people will ever be. God bless you and your family

  • @leok7193

    @leok7193

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hey, don't bring dogs into this. I like them more than humans anyway.

  • @RetardGamingHDx

    @RetardGamingHDx

    2 жыл бұрын

    /r/thathappened

  • @Yerp_To_Da_Skerp

    @Yerp_To_Da_Skerp

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@RetardGamingHDx ....? Why would someone even lie about something like that. I was a herion addict for 15 years constantly in and out of sober houses and on the streets... but I could honestly careless if you believe me. But just saying, you're definitely part of the problem here and you may need to self reflect on that a lil buddy.

  • @susanc8220
    @susanc82202 жыл бұрын

    I just left an abusive marriage and am now living in my parents' basement. I never even considered that I am homeless due to domestic abuse. What an eye-opening moment for me. Thank you, John Oliver. And I know that I am lucky enough to have a soft place to lay my head being with my parents, but it is not where I want to be, and I am not in a position to afford my own home at this time.

  • @ariane9214

    @ariane9214

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope you're doing better now. I wish you the absolute best ❤

  • @Noah-lo9vb

    @Noah-lo9vb

    7 ай бұрын

    Wishing you the best

  • @erikaarnold4780

    @erikaarnold4780

    5 ай бұрын

    You have a chance for a fresh start. 🕊️Now you can write whatever story you want for your life. Healing and plotting is your next initiative. 🧘🏾‍♀️Be intentional. Forgive yourself. Kick some ass this year! You got this! 🌍🎇🦄✊🏾🧞‍♀️

  • @coalblooded

    @coalblooded

    4 ай бұрын

    Really late here, but I'm so happy you left that hell and were able to be safe at your parents' house. That takes so much strength. I hope you are doing well these days :)

  • @user-cn8ip5ym3j

    @user-cn8ip5ym3j

    3 ай бұрын

    you are not homeless if you have a basement to live in. your only living in a condition your not completely comfortable with.

  • @adde9506
    @adde95062 жыл бұрын

    Fun fact: raccoon turds can look like they came from a human. When a tent city springs up, the amount of animal-accessible food goes up, making a trash panda population boom possible. People don't generally poop on your lawn, homeless or not, but I swear raccoons do it just to screw with you.

  • @bigmarty11288

    @bigmarty11288

    Жыл бұрын

    Raccoons are almost smart enough to know it annoys people

  • @caseyleirer9677

    @caseyleirer9677

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s also a lot of humans. It’s absurd in a lot of places. They have literal shit maps.

  • @williamslater-vf5ym

    @williamslater-vf5ym

    Жыл бұрын

    Whether it's human shit or raccoon shit, it's shit, caused by the existence of a tent city. So I'm not sure what your point is here. And humans also do things "just to screw with you". I had a friend who took a dump in somebody's car, "just to screw with him". If you're a human, pissed off that another human has a home and you don't, you might take a dump in their yard. Especially if you're withdrawing from opiates.

  • @mammawlee

    @mammawlee

    Жыл бұрын

    If the raccoons and the homeless cats ever get together, we will all be vegetarian. AND homeless. Because raccoons have HANDS and cats feel they are at the top of the food chain.

  • @williamslater-vf5ym

    @williamslater-vf5ym

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mammawlee If it came to that, we would just see a lot more cat and raccoon stew.

  • @70528g
    @70528g2 жыл бұрын

    "despite Tyra's best efforts, homelessness is still a huge problem in this country" almost got me killed...

  • @VoodooV1

    @VoodooV1

    2 жыл бұрын

    waitwaitwait. You mean to tell me....a rich and famous celebrity....didn't solve the problem?? I need to sit down here and think about that.

  • @Gepstra

    @Gepstra

    2 жыл бұрын

    Get well soon!

  • @estefanolivares4159

    @estefanolivares4159

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@VoodooV1 well when the people won't let you build in their " backyard " is it any surprise

  • @religionisapoison2413

    @religionisapoison2413

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@estefanolivares4159 "y'aint building huts in my town. No no. My town's a sanctuary city for life, the real life: unborn babies. Not actual people. Ban abortions and homeless people." -Mason, OH Laura Strietmann right to life, divorcee and foreclosed upon person (Hamilton county Ohio court records);

  • @TexelGuy

    @TexelGuy

    2 жыл бұрын

    The punchline to that joke came AFTER the punchline.

  • @SSenderling
    @SSenderling2 жыл бұрын

    My wife and I were homeless and addicted to meth and heroin for 5+ years. Then we finally got a housing voucher through Boulder Housing Partners in Colorado in jan 2019 with this same exact housing first model. Now on Christmas of 2021 we have had our apartment for almost 3 whole years! I'm working. We have 2 vehicles and our drivers licenses (something I had never had until now). We have been sober for 2+ years and my wife's 2 daughters (my step daughters) just moved in on the 6th permanently and we just had our first Christmas as a real family. The housing first model absolutely works! Especially if you want to better your situation. I do understand from being on the streets for so long that some people just aren't ready to start healing yet but one of the main reasons for that is because your still experiencing hardship on a daily basis. Once that is eliminated (as much as it can be) it can give people the motivation and hope and resources they need to want to get better.

  • @johnryan5133

    @johnryan5133

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm so sorry to hear what you went through mate but I'm glad things are looking up for you and wish you and your family all the best for the future.

  • @janycebrown4071

    @janycebrown4071

    2 жыл бұрын

    Keep up the good work 👏 👍 💪 👌

  • @SSenderling

    @SSenderling

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@janycebrown4071 thank you I certainly will!

  • @SSenderling

    @SSenderling

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnryan5133 thank you! The housing first model seriously saved our lives. I really hope that it gets more support and funding in more states. I'm in Colorado and here there is lots of support and resources for the homeless population but I know that's not the case in a lot of other states and it's just sad that they don't understand that people really can't grow and better themselves when they are not in a safe and stable environment.

  • @Iwannaps5

    @Iwannaps5

    2 жыл бұрын

    This made me teary eyed, it’s so amazing that you are your wife were able to come from rock bottom to now living a better life with a loving family. Keep it up!

  • @siriusputsch1842
    @siriusputsch1842 Жыл бұрын

    "Far too often, stories focusing on homelessness are presented solely through the lens of how it affects those with homes, when, in reality, it is obviously the people without them who need the real help." ~John Oliver

  • @josephdrury8579

    @josephdrury8579

    5 ай бұрын

    That is such a dumb quote and it is even more idiotic to idealize it. Let me rephrase it for you - " Far too often, stories focusing on homelessness are presented solely through the lens of those with homes and or apartments, aka basic normal fucking individuals who are very clearly the majority in society and thus the narrative portraying an issue through the lens that most of the population sees it through is not inherently bad." And that, my friend, is a huge point that this episode missed. Normally a great show, but this one was terrible.

  • @chinmaypurohit3431

    @chinmaypurohit3431

    5 ай бұрын

    @@josephdrury8579 This is where the “Not in my backyard attitude stems from”. A lot of them could really go ahead and improve their lives but without a home, you cannot take a shower for a job interview, or apply for jobs, so essentially people like you call them abnormal and also block their pathway to normalcy, not very different from the slave owners

  • @ejshafer

    @ejshafer

    4 ай бұрын

    @@josephdrury8579Haha! Oh yeah. I couldnt make it past 10 minutes. What a bunch of bullshit. I'll go find another episode to watch instead....

  • @bobpurcell7175

    @bobpurcell7175

    3 ай бұрын

    Actually, not all Americans are assholes. 1 out of 3 deserve to live. I'm sure I don't need to name names here.

  • @bobpurcell7175

    @bobpurcell7175

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@josephdrury8579 If you haven't experienced it, your opinion shouldn't mean shit to anybody, just like it doesn't to me.

  • @kumayasei
    @kumayasei2 жыл бұрын

    The concept of "homeless veterans" really tells a thing. If they do not respect enough their so-called heroes to grant them decent living conditions, I can't even imagine how rthey think of the rest of people that, for one reason or another, find themselves in a situation of indebtedness or just not making enough money to pay rent

  • @katherinetutschek4757

    @katherinetutschek4757

    Жыл бұрын

    This is how I've always felt. It's a disgrace to let veterans be on the streets or go without proper healthcare when it was literally their government that put them in that position in the first place.

  • @hooting-ton5215

    @hooting-ton5215

    Жыл бұрын

    "Hey, thank you for fighting in a war we started... now fuck off and survive on your own dipshit!"

  • @TheNinthGenerarion

    @TheNinthGenerarion

    11 ай бұрын

    The Roman Empire and the Republic before it experienced many revolts from their soldiers for not providing them land to own after their years of service, seems like the US is making the same mistake.

  • @DiegoAlvarezBeltran1993.

    @DiegoAlvarezBeltran1993.

    8 ай бұрын

    You're a hero until you serve your purpose and then, once you've served that purpose, you are expendable. The myth that serving your country is for honor, glory and the pride of defending a system that actively and viscerally hates you.

  • @zuzanazuscinova5209

    @zuzanazuscinova5209

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@DiegoAlvarezBeltran1993.it's dumb to serve any country to begin with

  • @dylank.4498
    @dylank.44982 жыл бұрын

    As a veteran myself, it really grinds my gears that we have those in government, who don’t dare increase spending on social programs but have ZERO hesitancy to increase spending on the military, police, and jails/prison. Their excuse to not supporting social programs seems to always be “we cannot afford it.” Problem is we can afford it. We just have our priorities out of whack.

  • @garbageparade5144

    @garbageparade5144

    2 жыл бұрын

    The problem is you have no idea what you are talking about we spend far less on the military then social programs actually look at some budget reports

  • @TitoTimTravels

    @TitoTimTravels

    2 жыл бұрын

    We outspend every other country in the world for military. We have unlimited funds to waste on war, and no one asks who will pay for it. But try to actually help our own people? Oh...perish the thought.

  • @angelan6121

    @angelan6121

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@garbageparade5144 it's how amazing how confident you are with being wrong. You should look at the budget report yourself before you advice others to do so.

  • @jocelyncooper1738

    @jocelyncooper1738

    2 жыл бұрын

    The people in government in this country care absolutely nothing for the average person living hear. That becomes more e apparent to me as the days pass on.

  • @jashanestone

    @jashanestone

    2 жыл бұрын

    ✅✅✅💯

  • @jaridkeen123
    @jaridkeen1232 жыл бұрын

    I was homeless for 4 months in my early 20s. I have never felt so much hate. I worked 50 hours a week and I was so frustrated on why I couldn't afford a place to live. Edit: Where i was working: - Publix (Grocery Store) - Some Fast Food Job ( I dont remember what one, i worked for so many food industry jobs) I lived in Florida and Delaware homeless time to time. In Delaware I was paid $7.25 an hour and i think my take home pay was $900 or something a month after tax. Florida was not much better, made $1200 a month but rent was $1400 - $1750 No, im no longer poor or homeless. Im a Software Engineer now. No, hard work didn't get me where i am. It was knowing people

  • @BlackJesus8463

    @BlackJesus8463

    2 жыл бұрын

    vanlife

  • @Andreamom001

    @Andreamom001

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have a family member who had a similar situation. Work friends offered a room but charged her exorbitant rates and then locked up the toilet paper and food so she couldn’t have any. She went to a shelter.

  • @johnsmith-so5do

    @johnsmith-so5do

    2 жыл бұрын

    What did you do for work, where do you live and when was this ?

  • @mostbestjia627

    @mostbestjia627

    2 жыл бұрын

    Have you tried moving to a different city? You don’t have to be stuck at one place forever

  • @robertblokdijk901

    @robertblokdijk901

    2 жыл бұрын

    America.. home of the homeless. so FREE. to live under a bridge. Poverty is everywere.. but.. in a country with trilloinairs it is insulting .

  • @Panfrog.7
    @Panfrog.72 жыл бұрын

    I'm a 16 year old when I was 11 me and my family lost our home because we were renting and it was sold out from under us with little warning we slept in a motel and it was one of the worst experiences of my life but we still had enough food and had a warm place to sleep at night these people who don't have either of those deserve much better

  • @jacob07221
    @jacob07221 Жыл бұрын

    living here in portland oregon, i’ve had my fair share of experiences with the houseless, and i can say without a doubt the overwhelming majority of them have been positive. i’ve bought them dinner, i’ve talked and laughed with them, hell i even helped one move by shoving their stuff into my car. it’s been an incredibly humbling experience for me and done nothing but motivate me further to fight for equity in this disgusting system of oppression we call the US. i myself am fortunate enough to have housing with great roommates, a full time job, and a family that would take me in in a heartbeat if that was ever to happen to me, but even still i live very much paycheck to paycheck and it’s not any less stressful

  • @ulfrmolette1043
    @ulfrmolette10432 жыл бұрын

    I remember in Florida when it was passed to make it illegal to feed the homeless, and a priest who refused to cooperate (he and his church regularly gave food services and donations on a frequent basis) was arrested. I'm not a Christian, but damn. This man was doing right.

  • @ChineduOpara

    @ChineduOpara

    2 жыл бұрын

    Christianity in the dUSA is a facade for domestic terrorism and pure hatred.

  • @lackeyreader

    @lackeyreader

    2 жыл бұрын

    I remember that story. I felt such rage at those who thought that making it illegal to feed people was a good idea. Talk about the devil walking among us.

  • @aoeu256

    @aoeu256

    2 жыл бұрын

    Have a camera out and speak to people who defend that law...

  • @XaadeTheBlade

    @XaadeTheBlade

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ChineduOpara So is humanitarianism. People are people. Whether they are religious or not, they will either act for good or for evil. Religion is not inherently anything. Notable atheists have advocated for genocide or racial superiority, and so on, list goes on.

  • @cherachapin3826

    @cherachapin3826

    2 жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately, its becoming illegal to feed homeless in many places. I was 16 working as a lifeguard and there was an elderly man well known for living outside the ballpark. Anyone going to a baseball game knew this man. He was in a broken down old wheel chair and had no legs. He never asked anyone for money. Instead he asked for food, which he often shared with other homeless individuals who were too ashamed even to "speak" to the people spending hundreds of dollars to see a baseball game. Everyday when I went on my lunch break, I used to go to Subway and pick up an extra sandwhich for him. He was really nice and interesting to talk to. Not creepy or anything like that. One day I was stopped by police because "feeding the homeless is illegal". When I asked them how could such a ridiculous law exist, they explained that often people will buy food of some sort and do something to it to make it dirty or even poisonous and that is why it is illegal. Honestly, that was the most horse 💩 I'd ever heard in my life, but sadly I can also see it being a thing. Infacr, not long ago there was a man in Missouri who was arrested because he was bragging to his friends that he 💩 in a sandwhich and fed it to a homeless person on a regular basis...gross. But I can't imagine the number of people doing that is so high that making it illegal to feed someone is justified. Afterall, you could come to my house and I could barbeque some meat and piss all over it and with all the sauce you might not even know. So I guess anyone eatting outside the home should be illegal? Or cooking a dinner for your date should be illegal cause who knows, they might put some date rape drugs or something. So wildly ridiculous

  • @bodenlosedosenhose1590
    @bodenlosedosenhose15902 жыл бұрын

    Screaming "go home" at homeless people might be the single most idiotic thing I've ever heard about.

  • @ewarren4244

    @ewarren4244

    2 жыл бұрын

    It comes from the lie that's a lot of news outlets perpetuate that the majority of the homeless population came to the city because they heard it was soft on homelessness. (This is very popular in Seattle, but it turns out, if you include the Seattle area, most homeless people here lived here before they were homeless) It helps sell the idea of homeless people as invaders who can be forced back to 'where they came from' with sufficient cruelty.

  • @bodenlosedosenhose1590

    @bodenlosedosenhose1590

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ewarren4244 Forgive me my rather disrespectful tone, but it seems that quite a few people in the US, despite the country owning the reputation of inhabiting the most patriotic people on this planet, really enjoy tearing into each other for the most outrageously idiotic reasons.

  • @simplyincorrigible7708

    @simplyincorrigible7708

    2 жыл бұрын

    er, other cities have a habit of bussing their homeless to more liberal places. Spend some time around that crowd. A sizeable number aren't from that area at all.

  • @leok7193

    @leok7193

    2 жыл бұрын

    Living in Southern California, it isn't that strange. We have a ton of homeless showing up from other cities and states because of ridiculously liberal laws, good climate, and relatively generous population.

  • @bodenlosedosenhose1590

    @bodenlosedosenhose1590

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@leok7193 Still one doesn't know a homeless person personally, so one could yell that at somebody who actually hasn't been bussed to their city, and furthermore this way of interaction with homeless people shows very prominently a certain, if not great disdain for folks "underneath" one in society.

  • @HIMAslapU
    @HIMAslapU Жыл бұрын

    My rent went from $500 a month to $350 a week (was living and working in a hotel, new owners came in with no warning). Now I live in a tent behind my job trying to save up enough to get a place. But people don't realize how expensive being homeless can be (yes there are different levels of homelessness), and how hard sometimes seemingly impossible it is to find a place.

  • @karenlebeter4196
    @karenlebeter41962 жыл бұрын

    My son & I lived in an old house (1940s) we rented for 15 years, in a neighborhood of 17 homes. Right before Covid shutdown, we were told the property under 17 homes had been sold and we had to move. I thought we would be living in our cars. His employer had shut their doors due to Covid but he was able to get a temp job in a nearby town. I am a disabled vet and get a pension. We looked everywhere for a place we could afford. Finally found something less than a thousand $ a month. It's an old mobile home. I drive 100 miles to go to the V.A. to see my Dr. and I am 70. My son drives 50miles to get to work. Our furnace broke, so we bought small space heaters. Now our older cars need more upkeep. I drive 30 miles to Safeway or Wal-Mart for fresh vegetables, when we have the money for gas. Lack of affordable housing & community gardens is the problem.

  • @karinagutierrez7134
    @karinagutierrez71342 жыл бұрын

    As someone who has worked with those experiencing homelessness, I want to point out that experiencing homelessness in itself can create mental illness. Everyone goes through trauma differently, but constantly being in a fight or flight state because you don’t have your basic needs met changes your neuropathways and can lead to illnesses such as PTSD and anxiety.

  • @HonestlyYrTrippin

    @HonestlyYrTrippin

    2 жыл бұрын

    It can also lead to "Brief Traumatic Psychosis" Literal hallucinations induced just by stress.

  • @ashleygarcia7608

    @ashleygarcia7608

    2 жыл бұрын

    I feel you. I also work with homeless transitional age youth and all their stressors add up and it’s difficult for them to find housing

  • @stevenkaz28

    @stevenkaz28

    2 жыл бұрын

    Never thought of that. EXCELLENT point.

  • @anontheshade

    @anontheshade

    2 жыл бұрын

    This. There are many root causes of homelessness, but it's mental illness and addiction that keeps then there. We should focus funding on treatment, and not government assisted housing in over priced cities.

  • @xuto2693

    @xuto2693

    2 жыл бұрын

    Having been homeless I can attest to this. The unimaginable stress, no safety, no relaxation, no peace, no rest, no recovery. It's trauma inducing. Psychosis inducing. It breaks you mentally. Truly breaks you. And that just makes getting out even harder, if you even can.

  • @Stampede103
    @Stampede1032 жыл бұрын

    Playing “It’s Raining Tacos” to hungry, starving homeless people trying to sleep is just cruel and unusual punishment

  • @ProbotX-eo5ln

    @ProbotX-eo5ln

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hahahahaha

  • @christinafidance340

    @christinafidance340

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree!

  • @vienlacrose

    @vienlacrose

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its psychological warfare

  • @nataliekhanyola5669

    @nataliekhanyola5669

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's republican "christian compassion" for you.

  • @marcosolo5718

    @marcosolo5718

    2 жыл бұрын

    Soak in the fact that sleep deprivation is prohibited and considered torture under international rules and conventions even to PRISONERS, let alone to normal citizens.

  • @SavageEcaterina
    @SavageEcaterina2 жыл бұрын

    My fiancé and I currently have two roommates who would be homeless if it wasn’t for us moving heaven and earth to give them a home. Both suffer from mental health problems, but we do everything we can to make sure they are taken care of. It bothers me when people don’t want housing for homeless in their area. They are the kindest people and they sometimes have break downs think they are unworthy of our kindness. They are far more worthy in my eyes then most people.

  • @tracesprite6078

    @tracesprite6078

    Жыл бұрын

    You and your finance are wonderful people. May blessings come into your lives all the time and I hope your room-mates can be happy and healthy.

  • @duncanmchenry3349
    @duncanmchenry33492 жыл бұрын

    I just watched this sitting in a tent, in a very affluent county in Virginia..i have been homeless since the start of the pandemic.. I have a job making more than minimum wage and still can't even afford a room here.. I don't spend money on drugs..and still can barely afford food.. I can't afford to simply move somewhere less expensive..i don't have a job there.. Even a couple months of housing would probably allow me to get ahead of this problem.. Just time to take a deep breath, feel like a person again..just a little break is a some people need.. Thank you so much for shining a realistic light on this problem..its never going to get better until more people see it this way...

  • @discon_csert
    @discon_csert2 жыл бұрын

    Playing "It's raining tacos /in the street/ it's raining tacos /all you can eat" to someone hungry and homeless could be considered torture. I would want to cease to exist.

  • @amberleighstorms126

    @amberleighstorms126

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@richardmaclean4519 ......I'm sorry, what?

  • @lS-qp6zq

    @lS-qp6zq

    2 жыл бұрын

    Definitely evil.

  • @frankielopezzamudio4127

    @frankielopezzamudio4127

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes its insane how systematically cruel humans can be but it's our task to make this world a better place before we leave it 👍

  • @ioanbotez7128

    @ioanbotez7128

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactly, it's in such bad taste it left me speechless. The lack of empathy is amazing, and likely linked to the division in US society.

  • @MrTwenty20video

    @MrTwenty20video

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@frankielopezzamudio4127 ✌

  • @codelicious6590
    @codelicious65902 жыл бұрын

    "Your discomfort is enough to disqualify a person from the American Dream" wow, nail on the head.

  • @timothymiddleton6651

    @timothymiddleton6651

    2 жыл бұрын

    Says the person who bought a smart phone instead of buying 50 meals for the homeless.

  • @codelicious6590

    @codelicious6590

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@timothymiddleton6651 Fallacious logic aside, me and my smartphone are far from being the cause of suffering.

  • @avokevo5394

    @avokevo5394

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@codelicious6590 it goes without saying, but please disregard Timothy. Literally pure nonsense, so we’ll keep it moving. That woman really did nail it. We need to help give these folks a foundation to stand on. No pun intended.

  • @timothymiddleton6651

    @timothymiddleton6651

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@avokevo5394 I’m in awe of how good of a person you are.

  • @avokevo5394

    @avokevo5394

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@timothymiddleton6651 thanks

  • @Ashley-cv8bd
    @Ashley-cv8bd2 жыл бұрын

    I asked my mother once why so many charities would come into our building looking for donations, when so many of us barely survived on a pay check. She told me because those little are more likely to help because they know what it's like to be without.

  • @alicialapatra7416
    @alicialapatra74162 жыл бұрын

    I've worked with persons experiencing homelessness for over 10 years now... thank you for shedding light on this very serious issue that affects us all.

  • @Overthought7
    @Overthought72 жыл бұрын

    "Far too often, stories focusing on homelessness are presented solely thru the lens of how it affects those with homes, when in reality it is obviously the people without them who need the real help." This is always my reaction to these stories, but he said it way better than I could have!

  • @Wwetitanfan27

    @Wwetitanfan27

    2 жыл бұрын

    so true

  • @Enoch-Root

    @Enoch-Root

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's easy for John Oliver to make jokes and virtue signal about this issue while getting paid large amounts of money, but he hasn't really provided a solution. Is he willing to have homeless people in his backyard?

  • @lilyhammer6661

    @lilyhammer6661

    2 жыл бұрын

    Enoch Root it sure sounds like he is. Also he presented that Affordable Housing First and Rapid Rehousing are both effective programs.

  • @bradfieldheiser7106

    @bradfieldheiser7106

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lilyhammer6661 he presented? So what has he done individually in terms of his time and money? Did he donate the proceeds he made from this show to the homeless problem? No he pocketed the proceeds, hypocrite

  • @Enoch-Root

    @Enoch-Root

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lilyhammer6661 He mentioned that giving houses to the homeless is cheaper, fine. But people are going to be angry if illegal immigrants are being given houses, especially if they get them instead of American citizens. The problem is either you can have open borders, but low taxes and very little in the way of social services. Or you can have closed borders and social services that can provide much more. Most people just aren't willing to have their taxes used to help people who have no legal right to live in their country. I'm not American by the way and never been there, the homeless problem in America is just shocking, and something that American media has for the most part hidden away from the rest of the world.

  • @Dicearoo
    @Dicearoo2 жыл бұрын

    "A man was walking around with a machete" oh no, imagine people walking around with weapons in Texas

  • @TheWizardMus

    @TheWizardMus

    2 жыл бұрын

    So they're saying that seeing a random stranger openly carrying a weapon doesn't make them feel safe and actually makes them feel in danger because they dont know the random strangers intentions? Wow! I never would have expected that!

  • @uncannyvalley2113

    @uncannyvalley2113

    2 жыл бұрын

    right?

  • @fourlightsorchestra

    @fourlightsorchestra

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most conservatives don't have any real values. They say they do, but what they really have is double standards. Blue lives only matter when they see them as on their side, sex trafficking is wrong only when it's not a republican doing it, Abortion is wrong only if it's not them secretly doing it, and now here we are at the right to bare arms.

  • @centerrightpunk

    @centerrightpunk

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fourlightsorchestra no, you're just an ideologue

  • @fourlightsorchestra

    @fourlightsorchestra

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@centerrightpunk If the answer is truly no, what explanation can there be for why so many conservatives seem to hold such strong ideals, only to completely abandon them the moment it's inconvenient? And no, I'm not an ideologue. I examine why I feel and think the way I do, and I'm also a pretty flexible guy. If there was an alternative explanation that made sense to me, I'd change my opinion.

  • @meowmix6081
    @meowmix60812 жыл бұрын

    I literally almost choked to death laughing at the grandparents in bed bit. Totally worth it. I've been homeless so yeah you're right about everything, but I'm waiting to hear more about Charlie's twisted grandparents.

  • @TheOldHippiebilly
    @TheOldHippiebilly Жыл бұрын

    This is one of John's best segments ever. I'd like to see a follow-up.

  • @quinnwatson6060
    @quinnwatson60602 жыл бұрын

    Don't forget, you have more in common with a homeless person than a CEO. Many of us are one or two bad circumstances away from living on the streets, even if we don't realize it or think so Also-- I had completely wiped all memories of "raining tacos" from my mind, I had completely forgotten that song and video existed until watching this episode. It filled me with an indescribable emotion something akin to nostalgia and rage

  • @JT-xj1pg

    @JT-xj1pg

    2 жыл бұрын

    Raining tacos is a low key racist song

  • @edelweiss8168

    @edelweiss8168

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most people don't realize that a mental breakdown can happen to ANYONE. I had a wonderful, happy life when I was hit by a psychosis. Out of the blue. Thankfully, I had a loving family that took care of me. Not everyone has that. So they don't get treatment. They lose everything: job, home, car, friends, and often their so-called partners. And they end up on the street. If you think it can't happen to YOU, you're wrong.

  • @NajxxTrebla

    @NajxxTrebla

    2 жыл бұрын

    God bless america

  • @sengabrockerhoff5750

    @sengabrockerhoff5750

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yep! Reality is we're in a capitalist system where we're all just 3 missed paycheck or 1 mental breakdown from homelessness.

  • @boink666
    @boink6662 жыл бұрын

    I was homeless as a kid. I can say it wasn't a choice. It wasn't from addiction. I was lucky and got rehoused. Thanks John Oliver bringing this up. So many people live this horror in their lives, it doesn't have to be this way.

  • @Chrisko1492

    @Chrisko1492

    2 жыл бұрын

    And? You were clearly in the minority of homeless people. The majority are dangerous no-goods, with drug addictions and/or severe mental illnesses. This video only showed the good ones, like the guy who was singing without reason, or the woman with the letter. If those people lived near you in affordable housing, no one would have anything against that (well, except legit white-supremacists - so, republicans). BUT the truth is that the majority of this affordable housing will be savages, shitting on your lawn, harassing you and maybe even commit crimes like breaking into your house. Of course, those people weren‘t showed in this video. Can‘t destroy the narrative.

  • @HarryBalzak

    @HarryBalzak

    2 жыл бұрын

    How about your parents? What happened to them? Death, abandonment, drugs, or mental illness?

  • @latch9781

    @latch9781

    2 жыл бұрын

    Glad to hear you got help Zack

  • @solsystem1342

    @solsystem1342

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HarryBalzak wow, definitely need to punish children for their parent's actions by making them grow up on the streets. Also, have you perhaps considered that people just legitimately can't afford their rent? I've worked with people who worked around 80 hours a week in order to make ends meet. What do they do if they have a medical emergency? Get a 4th part time job? What if they get injured and can't work? (For reference she did have two dependents one of which needed specialized medical care). Not everyone grew up with middle/upper class parents like us that could always afford the necessities.

  • @boink666

    @boink666

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@solsystem1342 It wasn't the fault of my parents either. Back in the 90's brain injuries weren't fully understood or treated. I along with my family experienced a violent car accident that caused my parents to lose their jobs/prospects/dreams/minds, the family dog to be throw from the car, and caused the whole family to be homeless and fucked up from a brain injury at the same time. It took years of healing to even get to a place close to "normal".

  • @cRustyDavey
    @cRustyDavey22 күн бұрын

    I'm currently homeless. I've worked my whole life and had as much as anybody else. I appreciate what John is doing here and want to say it can happen to you, and it can happen fast.

  • @michalpitowsky
    @michalpitowsky2 жыл бұрын

    When I visited the US a few years ago, and traveled the west coast, it just blew my mind how many homeless people are living like this, and frankly, made me rethink of the US as a first world country. Something about the economical structure is wrong when you let the sick and the weak rot to death on the side of your street every morning as if it is nothing. I say this not coming from a perfect place, every country has it's own crap going on, but man, the US has a deep problem.

  • @vulcanhumor

    @vulcanhumor

    Жыл бұрын

    A huge part of our problem is our broken health care system. If you can't afford to go to the doctor, or you can't afford insurance, you're SOL. A lot of people become homeless due to medical debt, and it's extremely difficult to manage any health conditions while homeless. If you already can't afford your bills, how are you supposed to be able to afford medications, or therapy, or exams that could catch a disease in its early stages? And it feeds into itself, because homelessness itself can lead to health complications. But America just really hates taking care of people for some reason.

  • @markk3453

    @markk3453

    Жыл бұрын

    the US marketing machine is VERY VERY good about lying to people. so much so that they lied them into wars and agreeing to put trump as a leader. people want a easy way out to belive someone so they dont have to stop, think and question. meanwhile everything in usa is for money. people, land u know name it. watch some of the other video on this channel. USA has 1000 problems that are not being talked about. is it better then a 3rd world country? sure but not by too much.

  • @NoraNekos7

    @NoraNekos7

    Жыл бұрын

    There's a reason some people call America a third world country

  • @emilysmith2965

    @emilysmith2965

    Жыл бұрын

    Because it fucking is.

  • @embedded_software

    @embedded_software

    7 ай бұрын

    America is a first world country with a world-class healthcare system. The problem is not in healthcare, but in health INSURANCE. Paying for that healthcare is harder here than in other countries, but the quality of care you receive (if you are insured) is generally pretty damn good.

  • @rowandownstream3539
    @rowandownstream35392 жыл бұрын

    "But despite Tyra's best efforts homelessness is still a huge problem in this country"

  • @bigcity2085

    @bigcity2085

    2 жыл бұрын

    In Boulder, CO., they made camping in the city illegal, which moved the homeless up into the foothills, where unfortunately , their camps started a few forest fires, plus the rich folk up there don't want the homeless living out in the woods. "Pushing them somewhere else" doesn't work.

  • @MorboTheDiddlyDo

    @MorboTheDiddlyDo

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bigcity2085 Look up George Carlin talking about NIMBYs (not in my back yard) and die a little when you realize its from the 90s and still VERY relevant.

  • @Dong_Harvey

    @Dong_Harvey

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bigcity2085 to the rich, homeless people are a sign that order still exists in the hierarchy they pay pigs to enforce

  • @markbahouth2713

    @markbahouth2713

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Dong_Harvey no problem Mega maniac Bezos who owns the earth and desires the " HIGH Ground and does not want to be taxed will give free tickets to Mars to the homeless to experience any down side to Martian life. they must report to Bezos or he will abandon them to perpetual orbit in space debris.

  • @Dong_Harvey

    @Dong_Harvey

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@markbahouth2713 Bezos is his own problem compounding geometrically upon the rest of humanity

  • @kevgmor
    @kevgmor2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this piece. I was chronically homeless since a teen, now 49 and housed for the past 2+ years through the VA; They've helped a great deal with my mental health care. Now I work as a peer/musician; performing at the shelters...it's wonderful!

  • @ashleyshelley9774

    @ashleyshelley9774

    2 жыл бұрын

    Happy for you! 💓❤️💕

  • @lolopop12345

    @lolopop12345

    2 жыл бұрын

    The VA was actually beneficial?

  • @01jbeals

    @01jbeals

    2 жыл бұрын

    ❤️

  • @richardmaclean4519

    @richardmaclean4519

    2 жыл бұрын

    clorox yes thanks for the refi… You paid for it.

  • @sweetums1634

    @sweetums1634

    2 жыл бұрын

    I just subscribed to you ! Keep it up, I Love it !!!

  • @user-sw1wq8lh2w
    @user-sw1wq8lh2w2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for doing this story John. My friend was orphaned as a child, lost his life savings and home twice due to Katrina and Harvey. He died of conjestive heart failure in his encampment 2 weeks before I could get him housing via the nonprofit I was working with. RIP William. My other friend Drew was more fortunate (in a way), he had terminal cancer, but we did find him housing. I made half a dozen multiple mile long treks out to his encampment to help him get out of the encampment and into a hotel. We still had to deal with a hotel kicking him out and move him to another hotel until we could help him get transported to hospice.

  • @nicholaswood821
    @nicholaswood8216 ай бұрын

    seeing that formerly homeless veteran man tell his story of walking around singing to himself comfortably brought actual tears to my eyes! to all the crew at last week tonight god bless you!

  • @Dreska_
    @Dreska_2 жыл бұрын

    'Get these homeless off our streets!' 'Ok, we'll build accomodation & services in the area' 'Not in my backyard!' People like that don't want to see the less-fortunate given opportunities, they just don't want to see them at all.

  • @far2ez539

    @far2ez539

    2 жыл бұрын

    Would be great if people would stop making choices that lead to homelessness. John showed a bunch of people. Know what they largely had in common? Even moreso than skin color or location? Kids. Like that woman who was working as an aide in a mental health shelter (obviously not a high-paying career) and had a stay-at-home husband and was rising two kids, one with autism. Yeah, no shit that you can't afford a life for four people on such a job. I make deep six figures but I won't even buy a dog because it's too much of a potential financial burden. I have health insurance but I injured my back gravely last year and chose not to go to the hospital because I was convinced they wouldn't do anything for me other than toss me some painkillers and a $3k ambulance bill. And I could trivially afford a $3k ambulance bill, but I didn't want to pay it. I'm only ~30, but I've got over $300k saved for retirement. I pre-qualify for a mortgage decently into the 7 figures, but looked at houses with prices no higher than $230k. Being homeless isn't a choice, but people who are homeless often made a SERIES of choices to reach that point. It's like chess: nobody willingly moves their king into a situation where they can be checkmated, but if you are about to get checkmated you definitely made a lot of fucking bad moves earlier on that led to this scenario. Just because your come-uppance from your bad decisions on turns 10-20 isn't coming until turn 40 doesn't mean that you aren't responsible.

  • @BRM2X

    @BRM2X

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@far2ez539 It's mere human nature. Not everyone can be Light Yagami, it shouldn't be the standard of survival.

  • @bryaneverett9850

    @bryaneverett9850

    2 жыл бұрын

    Pretty typical for a Democrat. They are only generous with other people’s resources.

  • @BRM2X

    @BRM2X

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bryaneverett9850 Yes.

  • @justinmadrid8712

    @justinmadrid8712

    2 жыл бұрын

    Why don't you adopt a homeless person then Mr. righteous? Seriously. Go find a homeless person and let them live with you for a while.

  • @TheWiseAss
    @TheWiseAss2 жыл бұрын

    I've been homeless for the better part of 10 years. In all those years, I've never taken a dump on a street, committed a crime (except failing to pay child support), or stolen anything. I smoke weed when I can get it, but do not drink or do any other drugs... I'm exhausted. Each season brings new challenges, whether it be the frigid cold of winter or the blistering heat of summer, and food is ALWAYS hard to come by. There are places that feed, but to be near those places you have to risk sleeping in very violent camps and alleys where even the housed will attack you for no reason. Everyone hates me without knowing anything about me. They scream at me, throw things at me...and I've done nothing to them except share their air space. For someone to say "he chose this life", I say this: Why the fuck would ANYONE want to be hated this much?

  • @eshbena

    @eshbena

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not sure what to say except I'm sorry and I never thought homelessness was a 'choice'.

  • @sunfeatherX3

    @sunfeatherX3

    2 жыл бұрын

    Dumbass question I’m sure, but where do you shit? Like, all bathrooms also have locks on them where you have to buy something to be allowed to shit. Street dumps cost nothing but dignity, and I’d assume dignity is harder to come by than food in some cases

  • @saranghae2808

    @saranghae2808

    2 жыл бұрын

    💔💔💔 I hope things get better for you 🙏 Sending you love from South Africa ❤️

  • @marcod5027

    @marcod5027

    2 жыл бұрын

    So rough. It's incredible to me how so many people on the streets still find the strength to prevail, to keep on going with dignity. It humbles me often. I hope it helps to see that most hate you get is poorly translated fear from people who are afraid that they themselves could not deal with the harsh situations you have to deal with everyday. But hey, all I try to say is, keep up the good work brother, let's change this system into a fairer one!

  • @malcolm2466

    @malcolm2466

    2 жыл бұрын

    If I may ask, how did you post this

  • @F1EvolutionEsports
    @F1EvolutionEsports8 ай бұрын

    I have been homeless 3 times in my past it’s never easy . The hardest part is when people say get a job bump but don’t realize you can’t fill out a job application with no phone number or address for them to contact you for a interview and even if your phone does still have service and you get a interview you’re appearance and hygiene will keep you from moving past the interview process. It’s extremely easy to become homeless and extremely hard to get out of. Thank you for explaining this to people it’s a very big problem that definitely needs fixing #Johnoliverforpresident

  • @cindyjmoss7525
    @cindyjmoss7525 Жыл бұрын

    It’s sobering to think how many people delude themselves into thinking they are a couple weeks from being a billionaire and not a couple weeks from being homeless. It informs their viewpoints.

  • @emilysmith2965

    @emilysmith2965

    Жыл бұрын

    “Temporarily embarrassed millionaires” need to wake up

  • @Simon-nw9bf

    @Simon-nw9bf

    11 ай бұрын

    That's interesting, because if I lost my job tomorrow I'd find a new one the next day like a normal person. I wouldn't shrug my shoulders and give up on life to smoke rock in the street and throw garbage at random people walking past. Ask yourself, these homeless - why do they not have any friends or family willing to shelter them? Or even any of the thousands of highly paid policy makers who have made entire careers out of claiming to care for their well-being? Why don't any of them house the homeless?

  • @TheNinthGenerarion

    @TheNinthGenerarion

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Simon-nw9bfyou can guarantee for a fact that you’d only be jobless for 24 hours? What industry do you work in? For pretty much every job I’ve had there has been at least a week long interview process, some even going for months. As for politicians not giving out excess beds, that would be a temporary and inadequate fix at best, what we need is dedicated housing for homeless people but enough rich politicians don’t want to do that meaning we’re stuck with a fixable problem that will only continue to get worse until we actually start helping and save money in the process.

  • @Gaywatch

    @Gaywatch

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@Simon-nw9bf Ever consider that their family and friends are also strapped for cash and resources? Or even if someone has a couch, they have an attitude like yours and refuse to help on 'principle' and 'not until the person helps themselves' or 'just go to a shwlter it's not that bad.' Having a connection to an open bed or couch like that is luck, pure and simple.

  • @GEM4sta

    @GEM4sta

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Simon-nw9bf Yeah, I saw someone else write this 'you're closer to homeless than a millionaire', absolutely not, lol. Most Americans are closer to being millionaires for sure. Billionaire, sure that's pretty rare.

  • @damnthatwizard1463
    @damnthatwizard14632 жыл бұрын

    This one hit REALLY hard. I just got out of homelessness, living on my friends’ couch for about 5 months, then back in a toxic household. I got lucky in finding a place, with a LOT of help from outside groups (no organizations, just peers and friends) and I’m LUCKY. I HATE that this has to be said, but homeless people are fucking people too.

  • @shaunaburton7136

    @shaunaburton7136

    2 жыл бұрын

    They are. I live in a town with a lot of homeless and the city is always pushing them around. The police call it pushing water.

  • @lynnharris7119

    @lynnharris7119

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm happy you have a safe place, homelessness is not a choice & happens to good people, my god rent is so high it blows my mind, if you own then taxes are just as insane. Too much money wasted on bs, that could help many people. Blessings to you🤗

  • @torturedsoul4397

    @torturedsoul4397

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes we are all human but what happens when someone stops acting human because they're so drug addicted and dangerous?

  • @user-yc8xw8bd5r

    @user-yc8xw8bd5r

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@torturedsoul4397 A lot of homeless people become drug addicted and dangerous because of the harsh conditions they're under. Boredom, hunger, anxiety, and sleeplessness will make the best of people turn to doing drugs, stealing, and whatever they have to to survive. They are still people. They need to be rehabilitated and healed from all that trauma, and they are still people.

  • @taylorbastian9670

    @taylorbastian9670

    2 жыл бұрын

    I wish I could help people in situations like what you were more at my agency. Unfortunately, HUD thought you are not homeless. That really sucks and I'm sorry you had to deal with that.

  • @YuukitheMighty1
    @YuukitheMighty12 жыл бұрын

    "Housing costs are rising faster than wages." Say it louder for the people in the back.

  • @doneestoner9945

    @doneestoner9945

    2 жыл бұрын

    Many people that have jobs cannot afford the astronomical rents around here.

  • @aronchai

    @aronchai

    2 жыл бұрын

    Read 'Progress and Poverty" by Henry George for insight as to why.

  • @theBear89451

    @theBear89451

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@aronchai That's only a very small part of what is going on. The CURRENT growth rate differential is primary caused by simultaneously increasing the money supply while shutting down businesses.

  • @elizabethpalumbo6516

    @elizabethpalumbo6516

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed! I would be house poor with current rents if I lived alone and one paycheck away from the streets myself.

  • @mr.jodaniels4156

    @mr.jodaniels4156

    2 жыл бұрын

    Why do you suppose that is happening?

  • @KurtvonLaven0
    @KurtvonLaven010 ай бұрын

    This is the only reporting I can ever remember willingly rewatching. Flawless coverage of an issue so frequently misunderstood.

  • @tjevans3025
    @tjevans30253 ай бұрын

    We have all seen and heard about homelessness over the years, and in the years subsequent to this video it has become worse - criminalizing homelessness is nationwide. Ironically, and sadly, the cost of incarcerating them (in the already overcrowded county jails) cost Far more than providing basic shelter and even porta toilets. John is an incredible entertainer, and comedian, but at the end of the day he is the Best. Most Professional, Credible, Investigative Journalist - that sheds important insights that are ignored by the so called media. I am educated, and well read, but John delivered this well documented journalism, and it has greatly increased my understanding of this ongoing, and growing, humanitarian crisis.

  • @toryhavoc3152
    @toryhavoc31522 жыл бұрын

    I was homeless at 18 and would have been homeless many times since then if I did not have a support system of loving friends and family. I have no addictions, minimal health issues, and live in a relatively affordable place. I am educated, hard working, and never without a job or 2. Stability is ridiculously fragile and more than half the people I ever met struggling with homelessness have lost their stability due to something 100% out of their control. I hope this mentality catches traction. Be kind💙💚

  • @sixfeetundertheradar6080

    @sixfeetundertheradar6080

    2 жыл бұрын

    With my mental health I can barely work, I have a part time job which I put ALL my energy and effort in but as soon as I clock out I feel like I’ve been hit by a truck and am exhausted and drained from a interaction. By the time I’m feeling better it’s time to clock in again. If it weren’t for my family I’d be homeless

  • @TheDuality0fMan

    @TheDuality0fMan

    2 жыл бұрын

    It shocks me how razor thin the line is between comfort and desolation. I'm lucky enough to currently enjoy relative comfort, and have for most of my life, but the nagging doom in the back of my mind, that I'm one problem, or fuck up, or even piece of bad luck, away from losing that is always there. Society was supposed to get better. Instead it just feels like it's getting worse. I'm glad you're doing well right now, and hope it lasts.

  • @razz1166

    @razz1166

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think I read it in a Malcolm Gladwell book, but something like 80% of the unhoused were not homeless months ago and won’t be homeless a few months from how. There’s no room for error at the bottom of the socioeconomic ladder and no one can reliably survive no room for error for long. An efficient social safety net is an absolute necessity in an advanced society, which we claim to be.

  • @toriless

    @toriless

    2 жыл бұрын

    It used to be only half, now it is more.

  • @kitcoffey7194

    @kitcoffey7194

    2 жыл бұрын

    EVERYONE DESERVES HOUSING.

  • @1yellowbutterfly679
    @1yellowbutterfly6792 жыл бұрын

    I would also like to add that funding libraries can do some serious serious good for unhoused people. When my brother and I were living out of my van we would go to the libraries from the time they opened to the time they closed applying for jobs, charging our stuff, using the bathrooms, filling up on water, etc. Idk where I would be without the libraries and the people who helped us

  • @MarcosIsABaritone

    @MarcosIsABaritone

    2 жыл бұрын

    This part!

  • @brandonkohler9721

    @brandonkohler9721

    2 жыл бұрын

    Libraries are a cornerstone of our civilization in so, so many ways. Pay attention to who tries to defund them.

  • @jprevatt

    @jprevatt

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well, for a few hours a day. Not much more, or they suspect you of loitering...

  • @1yellowbutterfly679

    @1yellowbutterfly679

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jprevatt I don't know what the library rules are by you, but we were there from the time they opened to the time they closed every day for weeks on end and no one bothered us. And this was across about 5 different libraries, but 90% of our time was split between 2 depending on where we were able to park. Libraries are kind of built for loitering

  • @duncanmchenry3349

    @duncanmchenry3349

    2 жыл бұрын

    They should have homeless case managers at every library in America

  • @andysmith5806
    @andysmith58062 жыл бұрын

    I really agree that being homeless impacts your mental health. I had a mental breakdown that lead me to being homeless. Being alone for hours on end with nothing to do in a tent can send you a little loopy. I started having conversations with myself because at least it was someone to interact with.

  • @MrDeadpool09
    @MrDeadpool092 жыл бұрын

    My heart goes out to all the homeless out there. I wish more people would think logically about this and have more compassion but I think that would force people to look at their wages and living situation and realize they’re about a stones throw away from homeless and that’s an uncomfortable thought.

  • @CivilWarMan
    @CivilWarMan2 жыл бұрын

    When I was a young child, I thought that we could solve homelessness and poverty by just giving homes to the homeless and money to the poor. As I grew up, I learned how the world was more complex than I realized as a child, and that problems like homelessness and poverty don't get solved in spite of our efforts to fix them. Then, as an adult, after learning about the preliminary successes of testing programs like Housing First and UBI, I realized that we could solve homelessness and poverty by just giving homes to the homeless and money to the poor.

  • @rysler

    @rysler

    2 жыл бұрын

    Heheh.

  • @MaidMirawyn

    @MaidMirawyn

    2 жыл бұрын

    TL;DR: Just do the decent thing and help people. It works.

  • @tylerpaulson6689

    @tylerpaulson6689

    2 жыл бұрын

    Couldn't have said it better

  • @Brian-tn4cd

    @Brian-tn4cd

    2 жыл бұрын

    Turns out the simplest solution is sometimes the best (not that the USA will do anything about it, not really conducive to capitalism's whole thing)

  • @spongeintheshoe

    @spongeintheshoe

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Brian-tn4cd And sometimes the complicated part is getting people to do it.

  • @celticwolff5429
    @celticwolff54292 жыл бұрын

    I was hoping John would point out how cruel it is to play a song about all you can eat tacos at homeless people.

  • @skittenskitten

    @skittenskitten

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was thinking that too.. its so hard to fall asleep hungry and then having that song rubbing it in all through your sleep.. its really cruel actually

  • @apuapustaja1958

    @apuapustaja1958

    2 жыл бұрын

    Homeless people can make 200+ dollars to feed their daily heroine habit. Being Homeless in the first world is not a bad life.

  • @brianm7109

    @brianm7109

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@skittenskitten Then they should go sleep somewhere else... Not on a walkway by the front door of a downtown business

  • @everentropy

    @everentropy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@apuapustaja1958 You did not watch this video did you. Yikes.I'd be embarrassed to write that

  • @leadpaintchips9461

    @leadpaintchips9461

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@everentropy People with that opinion, in my experience, don't think it's embarrassing to say that despite the evidence that's laid out in front of them.

  • @RedBeardDaProphet
    @RedBeardDaProphet6 ай бұрын

    As a homeless person watching this 2 years later, it is a shame that nothing was learned from it

  • @youngwang97
    @youngwang97 Жыл бұрын

    It's ironic that people don't want homeless on the streets, but push hard against any solutions to solve that exact issue

  • @chromicapop4595

    @chromicapop4595

    10 күн бұрын

    yes~ and this issue gets put out of context i have relatives whose bigotry claims homelessness is something its NOT

  • @warpossum2174
    @warpossum21742 жыл бұрын

    In regards to the intersection of homelessness, mental illness, and addiction… two decades of EMT and law enforcement experience has shown me that mental illness and addiction occurs EVERYWHERE. On the streets, in the trailer parks, in the suburban bilevels, even in the big fancy McMansions. The big difference is who has adequate support networks and access to evidence-based therapies and treatment.

  • @waywardgoddess7219

    @waywardgoddess7219

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've worked in healthcare for 4yrs now and every patient I've had with mental illness has polysubsance abuse and 110% of the time are homeless. Breaks my heart because they have zero access to adequate healthcare and all they can do is self medicate. The most recent shattered my heart. Lost his wife 6mo ago and she was his world. His depression has destroyed him and he's homeless too. 😔 fk this world sometimes

  • @malum9478

    @malum9478

    2 жыл бұрын

    exactly. it's the most obnoxious and ignorant argument "bUt wHAt If TheYre ViOleNT???" what if your next door neighbor's violent. what if your cousin's violent. what if YOU'RE violent--i don't know you! you could cut people up in their backyard for all i know! for every story of a homeless person being "violent" i can show you ten of a suburban wine mom who did some of the most horrific shit humanly possible. total bs from those people.

  • @StacySalles55

    @StacySalles55

    2 жыл бұрын

    Really good point!

  • @Champigne

    @Champigne

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well said. And just fyi to those who may not know, 12 step meetings are not evidence based.

  • @jamiehoule1583

    @jamiehoule1583

    2 жыл бұрын

    And so much of how addictions are treated is dependent on whether they're seen as "acceptable" addictions. Like the "wine mom" who freely admits to needing alcohol every single day to cope with the stress of her life and it's seen as a fun or quirky personality trait, but any other person who admits (or hides) their need for alcohol as a mechanism of self-medication is an alcoholic and has a problem. Same thing really applies to things like marijuana vs valium. Marijuana as a calming agent is seen as bad/problematic, but somehow valium for the same reason is totally okay. The whole thing is full of double standards.

  • @bobbyewing311
    @bobbyewing3112 жыл бұрын

    I honestly started crying when the guy started talking about randomly singing in his apartment because he is just so happy now. Like....... who could be against helping people like this?

  • @dingusdingus2152

    @dingusdingus2152

    2 жыл бұрын

    Republicans

  • @taylorbastian9670

    @taylorbastian9670

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is the goal for housing first. This does not happen all the time.

  • @RelaxAndSmokeMeth

    @RelaxAndSmokeMeth

    2 жыл бұрын

    me.

  • @prestonnicodemus9336

    @prestonnicodemus9336

    2 жыл бұрын

    Very unhappy people...

  • @samwindmill8264

    @samwindmill8264

    2 жыл бұрын

    Super rich arseholes who whine about the idea of paying a reasonable tax

  • @chrismanuel9768
    @chrismanuel97683 ай бұрын

    You know the difference between me and a homeless person? I have a home. That's it. Homeless people are people. They deserve love and respect. They deserve homes.

  • @johanngomez4044
    @johanngomez40442 жыл бұрын

    I lost my job because my work permit expired and my Lawyers fucked me with my money and didn’t begin processing my renewal in time and I lost my job and home and am currently looking for any way of sustenance in LA. I was a fulltime student working fulltime when I suddenly lost everything. Still haven’t used a day in my life but everyday that goes on and I wonder why I cant have a home despite me wanting to work and study in the country I have resided on since I was 6 months old. Being treated as an outcast while doing nothing wrong but being born too far south has surely changed my perspective on homelessness.

  • @johanngomez4044

    @johanngomez4044

    2 жыл бұрын

    All i have left is my hope in people like John Oliver.

  • @cordelia8031

    @cordelia8031

    7 ай бұрын

    hey hope you’re doing better now man, that sounds fucking awful :(

  • @michaelpara8582
    @michaelpara85822 жыл бұрын

    I'm always kind to the homeless because I'm acutely aware that in this country I'm only 1 or 2 bad choices or circumstances away from being right there with them.

  • @FrayedSanity1981

    @FrayedSanity1981

    2 жыл бұрын

    That is one of the things that I find so infuriating with your country. Almost no form of support system (that actually works). In Norway (where I live), you cannot end up homeless. (Well, you can, but it`s almost as if you need to make an effort to get there. Those that are, are usually people with severe drug issues, that have more or less given up on life. And even they have a bed and meal at local shelteres every night.) The support network is vast. No matter how hard you screw up, everybody deserves a second chance. Its sad to me that so many people are one step from endig up on the streets.

  • @arielgaede3673

    @arielgaede3673

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not even a bad choice, just 1 or 2 instances of bad luck can do it

  • @havelock285

    @havelock285

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@FrayedSanity1981 there are so many social programs similar to what you’ve mentioned here in the US. There are government systems and independent charities/non-profits that help. In my small(tourist) town we have a homeless shelter that houses and feeds people and also helps them get jobs.

  • @xzonia1

    @xzonia1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Technically speaking, I've been homeless many times in my adult life but am fortunate to come from a large family, so I've always had a roof over my head (just not one I paid for). We would have so many more noticeably homeless people in the US if they didn't have family / friends take them in when something unfortunate happens to them. I really do wish the US would prioritize making home ownership an affordable option for all Americans. The way our country runs right now is ridiculous.

  • @ianbattles7290

    @ianbattles7290

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@arielgaede3673 Exactly, I'm one broken leg away from no income, which means no rent, which means no home.

  • @billiegrimm-stone3866
    @billiegrimm-stone38662 жыл бұрын

    Throwing bottles, taking pictures, one group of young men physically attacked my wife and I unprovoked... being homeless is really fucking dehumanizing to the point where I found myself crying every time someone made eye contact and said hello being so overwhelmed by their kindness. The car we lived in got impounded so we're just sleeping outside now. Anyone who thinks we are out here by choice is woefully mistaken

  • @far2ez539

    @far2ez539

    2 жыл бұрын

    Meanwhile you can watch videos on the internet and comment online. You're either full of bullshit or have bad priorities mate, likely both.

  • @cottage-core_

    @cottage-core_

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ignore the heartless egghead comment above mine. I'm so sorry you're going through this.

  • @JacobP81

    @JacobP81

    2 жыл бұрын

    @far2ez All it takes to watch videos and comment online is a cheep cell phone and cell phone service. It's not like it was years ago when internet was in it's infancy.

  • @theeccentric7263

    @theeccentric7263

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@far2ez539 so what if they used to be homeless and now are not and have access to the internet? What if they're accessing free public wifi? What if cell phones are necessary for life and someone taking a 20 minute break to watch a youtube video doesn't mean they're not working hard enough? Or will you just come up with another excuse to not listen to homeless people?

  • @mE-zx7pt

    @mE-zx7pt

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@far2ez539 computers are available at libraries.

  • @samrey1803
    @samrey1803 Жыл бұрын

    I am struggling with homelessness. This segment is on point in every way it did raise the underlining issues. Appreciate from the bottom of my heart to the team and everyone else who can understand these issues to raise them as policy remedies in future that are very much a solution in this masterpiece as always behind the facade of stigma ❤️✌️

  • @FizzleBurger
    @FizzleBurger6 ай бұрын

    That gag about Ellen aged way better than we could have expected.

  • @daggerthedragon1582
    @daggerthedragon15822 жыл бұрын

    "It's raining tacos," is an absolutely vile song to play specifically to taunt hungry people... I almost cried, and was just as shocked that this fact was never mentioned.

  • @danieldaniels7571

    @danieldaniels7571

    2 жыл бұрын

    If I was homeless, it wouldn’t hurt my feelings any. I love that song.

  • @undefinederror40404

    @undefinederror40404

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@danieldaniels7571 *If* you were homeless, I don't think there's much reason for you to comment that.. Because we have no idea what it's really like to be homeless (on the longterm).

  • @davidrule1335

    @davidrule1335

    2 жыл бұрын

    If they played the Shags philosophy of the world, they would leave.

  • @nogoodlib

    @nogoodlib

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@undefinederror40404 oh I thought you meant because he would have to have internet to comment. Its a harmless joke, get off your high horse, we all know this to be true. If your going to try and help the homeless defending their honor on a comment on youtube isn't the way lol

  • @danieldaniels7571

    @danieldaniels7571

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@undefinederror40404 I’m 51. I’ve spent nearly 5 years of my life homeless.

  • @amila_
    @amila_2 жыл бұрын

    I could never imagine hating on the homeless. Most of us are so close to homelessness and I don't understand how people can't realize it!!

  • @toriless

    @toriless

    2 жыл бұрын

    Much more now that covid-19 shutdown businesses, some forever.

  • @Julia-lk8jn

    @Julia-lk8jn

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. I'm lucky to live in a country where it's pretty difficult to get rid of a tenant, and it's shocking to me how quickly that can be done in the US. Combine that with low wages, rising and yes, there are probably millions of US citizens who are living one accident, one expensive emergency room visit, one lay-off away from homelesness. I've read a quote years ago that US Americans have no sense of empathy with the poor because being poor is such a stigma that nobody considers themselves as "one of them", not even the poor themselves who rather view themselves as millionaires experiencing a bit of tough luck. It sounded over the top then. I wonder whether maybe the knowledge of being close to homelessness oneself get's repressed and turns into aggression against the people who remind you of that possibility.

  • @BriannaBanana1

    @BriannaBanana1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Julia-lk8jn Speaking as an American, I'm guessing that that's exactly what happens in a lot of cases. At least on the more conservative side of things where being poor seems to get stigmatized as laziness.

  • @darkriku12

    @darkriku12

    2 жыл бұрын

    People aren't realizing that - as the middle class is deteriorating, wages are stagnating, and everything (especially housing) is getting more expensive - the middle class is functionally becoming poor and the poor are becoming homeless. You can have two jobs and still be homeless as rental properties are rejecting everyone they can and those jobs require completely irregular schedules. Then people complain the minimum wage jobs arent finding people.

  • @darkriku12

    @darkriku12

    2 жыл бұрын

    @PT and yet if you contribute to improving the lives of those homeless people, suddenly you have less homeless problems.

  • @MonsterPrincessLala
    @MonsterPrincessLala2 жыл бұрын

    It's wild that people feel like people don't have a right to exist while being homeless but we still don't pay a living wage like anywhere. Proportional minimum wage should be $25.00 and we had to fight to get it to half the amount.

  • @evannibbe9375

    @evannibbe9375

    24 күн бұрын

    As wages double, generally the price of housing quadruples, so you do need more general policy changes like building more housing.

  • @frankiebelle
    @frankiebelle Жыл бұрын

    I was made homeless by an ex in the summer of 2020. Thankfully I have friends who's couches I could crash on to help get back on my feet. It was scary to be suffering at the beginning of a pandemic with no defenses and find myself without a home. It can happen to anyone

  • @bosnianlady10
    @bosnianlady102 жыл бұрын

    I will always remember when my mom was kicked out of Starbucks because someone thought she was homeless and the sight of her was bothering them. My mom was low income older landy. She was always frugal and so was her clothing. She worked long hours and would wait for my father to pick her up from work because she rather wait then spend money on a car or even public transportation. Everything she did was for us. Anyways, while she waited for my father to get off work , she would often go to Starbucks or some other place buy coffee and read. Well one day she was very tired and dosed off. Someone complained and she was asked to leave. They even threatened to call the cops. She felt humiliated and hurt. This is what homeless people deal with on the daily basis.

  • @tovanto3971

    @tovanto3971

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/k6uovNSTgM_XqJc.html

  • @conky221

    @conky221

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m sorry

  • @IzzyBizzyBooBoo

    @IzzyBizzyBooBoo

    2 жыл бұрын

    On the other hand, imagine all the workers forced to clean up after homeless people who are often mentally unwell and abusive themselves.

  • @MrJimheeren

    @MrJimheeren

    2 жыл бұрын

    If someone falls asleep in a the place I work at I would also ask them to leave. No matter what you look like. I’m sorry to say this but a Starbucks or any other restaurant or coffee place for that matter is not a public space. You can’t just doze off and except to be left alone

  • @bosnianlady10

    @bosnianlady10

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@IzzyBizzyBooBoo Imagine you watching this video and making that kind of comment. You want me to focus on one symptom of an issue while you ignore the root of them. Imagine if you actually considered why in this powerful nation we have such high number of people homeless and mentally ill ( the video clearly said mental illness is not the leading cause , but often the result, but let’s go with your focus), without thinking how hard it is to deal with the symptoms. Imagine if you consider both the mentally ill and the underpaid that take care of them, and make it all nice so you don’t have to see reality. Imagine if you actually consider that mental illness is not a choice and anyone is susceptible to it. Imagine if you could see all the factors instead on focusing on the one that you feel is most concerning to you. By the way my mom was not only working at the time, never left any mess but was living with a mental illness. Imagine raising kids, battling mental illness, working long hours and having some person judge you for inconveniencing them when you can’t hold it together.

  • @mcbeezie
    @mcbeezie2 жыл бұрын

    i was homeless as a kid with drug addicted parents, nothing made me feel more alone. the hateful way people look at you. To this day, that time affects my life and decisions more than any other thing in my life growing up.

  • @johannakalytera9574

    @johannakalytera9574

    2 жыл бұрын

    So sorry to read that. That's awful. I hope you're okay now. 🌺

  • @mcbeezie

    @mcbeezie

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johannakalytera9574 thank you, I am. but it really instilled that "if you're not first than you're last" mentality that capitalism is known for.

  • @johannakalytera9574

    @johannakalytera9574

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mcbeezie i'm glad to hear that. You are perfectly right... All in all, when we pull the thread, the source of the problem is almost always capitalism. Homelessness is the one undeniable fact that capitalism is not working anymore. I hope that the US as well as all capitalist countries see this through. I live in a middle sized city in France and I am just so sad to see more and more ppl on the streets. I feel very helpless and angry at the system. Buying food and hot beverages for them is not going to fix their situation. Sorry I'm ranting. This piece was the piece we all needed. Warm regards from France, where the sitch is similar... The pb is global.

  • @mariee.5912

    @mariee.5912

    2 жыл бұрын

    Alexander, I worked with homeless families and before they came to us the children were mistreated. It was vere sad to hear that.

  • @mcbeezie

    @mcbeezie

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mariee.5912thankfully my family loved me so much it got them to go straight, sometimes the best thing about me being born I thnk.

  • @anjelitamalik9763
    @anjelitamalik97634 ай бұрын

    It's so good of you to bring this up and advocate for the homeless.

  • @ShawnHodgkin-zd3xc
    @ShawnHodgkin-zd3xcАй бұрын

    I don't always agree with John Oliver but as a homeless man I couldn't appreciate trying to get this message out there more

  • @cynthiaclark6721
    @cynthiaclark67212 жыл бұрын

    The definition of pure evil is playing "It's raining tacos" in a park where homeless people who have no money to eat are just trying to sleep. I am sure they would love to have a taco or anything to eat.

  • @deniseengle4269

    @deniseengle4269

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. That was my first thought. They play classical music in Portland OR to deter us. Thankfully I dont mind classical music.

  • @Fire_of756

    @Fire_of756

    2 жыл бұрын

    I would not feel bad if they decided to eat those assholes.

  • @chrisitinabobinski3798

    @chrisitinabobinski3798

    2 жыл бұрын

    Cynthia thanks for being that up I would definitely rather go hungry than hear that song that’s is pure evil.

  • @XxNoMErcY99xX

    @XxNoMErcY99xX

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dr-tse I know you didn't mean that in a bad way, but think about what you just said from a homeless' perspective...

  • @avamasquerade

    @avamasquerade

    2 жыл бұрын

    *Sadism is the point* Idk when or if the general population will ever get over their blind naivete.

  • @phungdao4660
    @phungdao46602 жыл бұрын

    "Far too often, stories focusing on homelessness are presented solely through the lens of how it affects those with homes when in reality it is obviously the people without them who need the real help." -- quite sobering. I've always felt a strong compassion towards the homeless community in our current houseless epidemic in Hawai'i and this sentence has made me realize that every policing policy or legislation proposal that has come out of our elected officials is literally to appease the loud homeowners and hardly anything to address the actual problem.

  • @willythemailboy2

    @willythemailboy2

    2 жыл бұрын

    Because a government who does not "appease" those homeowners won't be the government for very long. Any approach that ignores that obvious fact is going to fail.

  • @overdose8329

    @overdose8329

    2 жыл бұрын

    Taxpayers shouldn’t have to endure parks being turned into shitholes with shit, needles, urine, and severely mentally ill criminals. Also housing homeless people and providing all these services for free while lower class and lower middle class people suffer and have to pay for everything just squeezes the true middle class via taxes to pay for these people

  • @nickandres7829

    @nickandres7829

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Overdose​ In Canada we pay higher taxes, have a much more robust welfare system, and our middle class gets by just fine. Social housing here isn't "free" except in extreme circumstances (ie housing for women fleeing domestic violence and the like), but it is subsidized by the government and by taxes. Social housing is always a better option than tent cities, and homeless people who get housing become much more employable and are very likely to reenter the work force.

  • @JRCP144

    @JRCP144

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@overdose8329 You don't want "them" befouling your public spaces but ALSO don't want to provide "them" any services. What's your solution? Just shoot the entire homeless population? I do notice that taxing the rich doesn't seem to be something you've thought of.

  • @lubintasevski5985

    @lubintasevski5985

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@overdose8329 I can't help laugh at the irony of your user name and your statement. Clearly, you choose to be ignorant. What if you job was taken away, as your whole industry became obsolete? What if your child or spouse had a major accident, disease, or disability that cost you all your savings and home? What if you became homeless due to a successful scam/arson/natural disaster/identity theft/bad investments/etc? Are you ok knowing there's nothing to help you get back on your feet? Are you happy being looked at and treated as a criminal? If you think insurance will help you 100% of the time? They have lawyers not to help you, but to find ways to not help you? There are just too many ways for good people to get screwed over and yet you feel nothing should be done to help them as you assume they'll all become drug addicted criminals. Truly you are naïve. Parks don't have to be shitholes if social services were to be sufficient to address the needs of those disenfranchised. Also the "true middle class" is vanishing as the 1% eliminate your very existence through automation and devaluing your wages by firing those that have had wages increased for too long that they eliminate your job for someone that is willing to do it for less (except this doesn't happen in unions, but those are also becoming rare).

  • @McButtsTheCrimeDog
    @McButtsTheCrimeDog8 ай бұрын

    I was homeless for about 2 years. Trying to exist in areas that I used to as a homeless person is now impossible because people assume I'm still homeless and will try to chase me off.

  • @larryjames8617
    @larryjames86177 ай бұрын

    Good show, John. I hope that you continue to advocate for the homeless by supporting housing for the homeless in YOUR neighborhood. That would be a great example.

  • @ZOMBIEGUNPOWDER
    @ZOMBIEGUNPOWDER2 жыл бұрын

    this hits hard for me. I'm currently 24, and have been homeless since 2019 on and off again. recently I was arrested for "prowling", which is basically using an abandoned building for purposes than what it was intended for use. I've worked all kinds of jobs, and slept multiple places just to lay my head. I have no criminal record, or bad background. shit fucking sucks.

  • @kathleenba9639

    @kathleenba9639

    2 жыл бұрын

    🙏

  • @jetskiwillywilly7970

    @jetskiwillywilly7970

    2 жыл бұрын

    but you got enough time to watch youtube videos on....a phone? or computer? maybe keep digging......get off your phone...stack money and become unhomeless.

  • @omayrasanchez2877

    @omayrasanchez2877

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jetskiwillywilly7970 Yes most homeless people have smartphones, and they should. What's the problem? And watching/commenting on a yt video doesn't tell anything about someone. you can literally do that during the 15 min at night before you fall asleep or whatever. Your attitude is disgusting, I pity you.

  • @johi367

    @johi367

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jetskiwillywilly7970 You're a bad person. Hope you find a cure

  • @g.d.graham2446

    @g.d.graham2446

    2 жыл бұрын

    I can only imagine

  • @cmrdgeral
    @cmrdgeral2 жыл бұрын

    one thing i appreciate so much about john oliver is how he brings the humanity of individuals who are struggling into every topic. Saying "people who experience homelessness" instead of "homeless people" might seem so small but phrasing it that way removes "homeless" from being a person's entire identity. he instead shows that these are people who are just as deep and complex as everyone else who also happen to be experiencing homelessness and need help living like any human should be able to

  • @rahulkorde2258

    @rahulkorde2258

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is an underrated comment. Thank you for pointing it out.

  • @dougdarman2503

    @dougdarman2503

    2 жыл бұрын

    Very good comment, and something I did not notice. Thank you for bringing it up.

  • @Bisquick

    @Bisquick

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sure I guess, but you know, might be good to mention the core structural organization of material reality that not only leads to this as an obvious inevitable outcome from its emergent antagonistic classes, but like...basically every obviously insane/bad outcome only compounding in severity and existential threat at every waking moment, which is *capitalism.* Maybe houses shouldn't be treated as commodities and should be like, you know, houses? For people to live in. And not _not_ live in. This is "efficiency", maximization of capital accumulation, as if markets are some sort of "objective" arbiter of value inherently, on its face a pretty obvious "is/ought" conflation ideologically accepted without question. There's _far more_ empty homes than homeless, and of course there are, being utilized solely to maximize profits through rent extraction/store of value/speculation/unproductive bullshit essentially, "unproductive" in the sense that such "market exchange" literally produces nothing, land obviously being a natural monopoly, and of course sacrifices the possibility of material reality being organized where people can like...get this... _live in the homes_ ... Seriously though, this show might as well be called Looking At The Symptoms Of Capitalism Weekly While Avoiding The Underlying Structural Problem...Tonight. Like why would any of these potential solutions mentioned materialize when they are directly in opposition to the same tidal material influence/interest of finance capital hedge funds that if we recall not only literally caused the GFC of '08 through insanely unnecessary financial abstractions to disguise insanely risky assets being packaged together and thrown around like a hot potato to pump up the price...like a bubble one might say...these very -demons- "people", what a coincidence now, _they_ were the ones bailed out, pumped full of liquidity with the conception of QE ie "printing" a shitload of money, something like 40% of the _entirety_ of the money supply printed in for that "stimulus" in 2020 _alone_ ...gee, sounds a bit...inflated...like a...bubble. But the point is that _that_ , that right there, was a _political choice_ , not done for the necessity to maintain the "integrity" of the system for everyone's benefit as is of course rhetorically projected, no no no obviously little to nothing to corroborate that, the answer to the _only_ political question of "cui bono?", is it was done for the necessity to maintain the system for the capitalist class's benefit, perpetuating this unsustainable bourgeoisie dictatorship at quite literally all other costs, ie their material interests. As it turns out, the material interests of the capitalist class are _descriptively_ ie _not normatively_ oppositional to those of the working class, hence the clusterfuck (technical term) we're in/have been in continuously, Taft-Hartley and the red scare(s) gutting the heart and soul of the labor movement created with the New Deal when we had a class traitor president, last time they allow that to happen (related: "business plot") . Just like the optimates of the late Roman empire (but with guns and nukes, oh and climate change, coooool stuff), suppressing the populares movement of the Gracchi bros and later Caesar, famously of course by straight up murdering them all in the senate when the _actual_ rubicon of debt cancellation and land redistribution, ie _actually restructuring society_ via property relations that functions to refresh entrenched social bondage/power for the benefit of all, was crossed (can't have that), a senate which was payed explicit homage with our own (to this point, initially completely unaccountable to any democratic mechanism and nominated purely by state legislatures as written into the constitution). A thread of class struggle uncoincidentally visible throughout history, the modern age being carried forth in the fervent working class radicalism of the sans-culottes, their principled idealism of course slowly falling out of favor with the bourgeoisie in the National Convention in the French revolution as their egalitarian project encroached on this newly cemented middle-class material power, despite of course riding this momentum to overthrow the Ancien régime. Anyone that goes through even a few of the federalist papers will come to the realization that contrary to our culturally hegemonic mythology/historiography, "democracy" couldn't have been further from the goal of the constitution (see like Federalist 10 by Madison for instance, pretty explicit). These people wrote this stuff so far up their own asses they knew at some level that "factions" would be a problem (like, no shit right? lol...), denouncing them as some avoidable flaw in undignified individuals of a certain stripe, but assumed their personal "virtue" 'noblesse oblige', self-evident by their property ownership and dominion over black, poor, and indigenous people, would transcend it. Turns out that isn't a thing. Oops. Now, and as opposed to like a parliamentary proportional representation system with, you know, multiple parties, we have these two-load bearing "too big to fail" political parties keeping this whole charade going, their disagreements almost entirely aesthetic and can similarly be traced to the -counterrevolution- "founding" the constitution really a political brokerage between the interests of the Hamiltonian eastern banker finance capital federalists v. the Jeffersonian land-owning slave-holding yeoman farmer antifederalists, leading of course to that whole civil war thing, oops again. Really their aesthetic disagreements/divisions can be thought of as emerging from how close they operate to the material machinery of capitalist exploitation, the one side leaning into the base of this callous immiseration "justifying" its arbitrary hierarchy with essentially "divine right", while the other goes the opposite route and embraces the abstractions/obfuscations of the superstructure that cover up that transparently grotesque base behind the thin blood-soaked curtain of US neoliberal capitalist empire imposed globally. Anyway, sorry got lost in a stream of consciousness screed (screed of consciousness) there lol, the point is this is zero sum race to the bottom and my god let's be real, everyone knows it to some degree, the "common ruin of the contending classes". The only choice for humanity that remains, just as true as when Rosa Luxemburg espoused its political reality in the sailor revolts and consequent uprisings of 1918 Germany that lead to the establishment of Weimar, the SPD giving a hard no to her proposition and using the freikorps paramilitary to execute her and her socialist/communist/anarchist comrades holding the line: *_socialism or barbarism_* I mean, much as this and every other insulated social issue demonstrates, clearly barbarism has been selected _for_ us at this point, but upon realizing the giant hole we dug for ourselves, maybe digging more furiously than ever isn't the _best_ path forward, inevitably hollowing out social meaning/trust to be sold for profit catalyzed by endless systemic expansionary pressures and the tendency of the rate of profit to fall (noted by Adam Smith himself), ironically contrar to all the rhetoric of "freedom" used to justify it, entirely enslaved to the soulless mechanised "logic" of infinite growth/capital accumulation at quite literally all other costs ("externalities" to put on the neoliberal/neoclassical econ ideological blindfold, my god climate change _alone_ ). _"The bourgeoisie cannot exist without constantly revolutionizing the instruments of production, and thereby the relations of production, and with them the whole relations of society. Conservation of the old modes of production in unaltered form, was, on the contrary, the first condition of existence for all earlier industrial classes. Constant revolutionizing of production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions, everlasting uncertainty and agitation distinguish the bourgeois epoch from all earlier ones. All fixed, fast-frozen relations, with their train of ancient and venerable prejudices and opinions, are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned, and man is at last compelled to face with sober senses his real conditions of life, and his relations with his kind."_ - some guy _“No-one knew what was required; instead, individuals could only guess what particular gestures or directives meant. What happens in late capitalism, when there is no possibility of appealing, even in principle, to a final authority which can offer the definitive official version, is a massive intensification of that ambiguity.”_ - obligatory Mark Fisher _"The ultimate hidden truth of the world is that it is something we make and could just as easily make differently."_ - the late great David Graeber _"lol why did i write this, no one's going to read this shit, also i'm gay"_ - me

  • @Bisquick

    @Bisquick

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Fun" fact, using liberal capitulation to slowly accumulate institutional power over time until passing a threshold in which institutional power cannot threaten a full takeover as it in fact is part of that political alignment in a Reichstag fire -> Enabling Act template, was literally Carl Schmitt's (actual nazi) political strategy for the nazi party, derived from his "concept of the political" in being a foundational friend/enemy distinction, and that the only "principle" of liberalism (undergirded by capitalism) is precisely to _avoid_ "the political", embracing conflict avoidance and compromise for its own sake, a fundamental _denial_ that 'the political' even exists. Something Trump has intuited pretty well simply by being a resentful narcissistic dipshit and thus calling out (often correctly sadly) the media etc. as "enemies" which masses of people inevitably relate to as their material conditions are inevitably stripped out and auctioned off to the highest bidder like inconsequential copper pipe, through "fiscally responsible" austerity bullshit purely to exert structural power over labor along with the privatization of fucking everything as if people are all insulated isolated "potatoes in a sack" that can only interact through market exchanges and don't, say, form the _very basis_ of our own individual thinking through social interaction itself?! Lol When Descartes said, "cogito ergo sum" he clearly forgot to interrogate how he was able to "cogito" to begin with, which I would say emerges through maintaining a universal solidarity and authentic social cooperation and trust. Conversely, as "all that is solid melts into air", it would seem our ability to "cogito" would then necessarily too start evaporating, likely without our even noticing, as consciousness is inherently self-conscious (I think Sartre noted this idk I forget), but as we "evolve" into a creature shaped by permanent reaction (and perpetual farce in that "first as tragedy, then as farce" process of history), a pathology/ontological existence of increasingly constricted long term memory as all semiotic signs and their signifiers merge into flattened shallow immediately useful shells to assist our survival as we transition further into purely reactionary animalistic impulses with no social artifice to even speak of (...obviously, cuz no use in speaking lol at least not speaking to understand more deeply...). If that seems like hyperbole, might I suggest it's already pretty ubiquitous in many ways and well expressed in a sense in our "feedbrain" business ontologies, hell what are any of our "social media" platforms but for endless scrolls meant solely to implant -mind viruses- advertising into brain for as long as "humanly" possible to catalyze perpetual consumption, as you are not a worker in America certainly no one seems to feel themselves as such, you are solely a consumer at this point, consuming brand A or brand B in the media bread and circus spectacle of "politics", of course _entirely_ disconnected from any actual material outcomes, ie fucking _actual politics_ lol... Started ranting again, sorry, anyway, Trump is basically Nixon minus all the intelligence, and I do mean all of it obviously lol, which makes him all the more appealing to that authentic rustic dumbass archetype (and honestly to me, solely because it's fucking hilarious and I could care less about the stupid manners and fetishization of process liberals embrace, like...that's the shit that got us here dummies, but alas capital-L Liberalism sees history as being driven by ideas unbounded to material conditions, which is, quite frankly, stupid lol...) that makes up the Jeffersonian anti-federalist core understanding of most people within the south, his personal "ressentiment" of the liberal establishment and every unfiltered reaction forming an often hilarious and legitimately the only _authentic_ personality in the spectacle (authentically an absolute scumbag obviously, but still authentic, thus appeal, "charisma", god-tongue in etymology). What the fuck am I doing lol, idk here's that guy again on history being bounded by more than the possibility/potential of ideas, rather restricted by contingent material reality: _"Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past. The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living."_ - Michael Scott

  • @stevenclark5173

    @stevenclark5173

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Bisquick You can't just dump socialist literature out on liberals and expect them to take it all in at once, process it, and decide to give it a go. As frustrating as the incrementalism approach is, which I think is what people like John are doing with this show, it's probably the most pragmatic way to achieve the end goal. Point out the individual failings of capitalism and then propose appropriate, workable, social solutions. We've seen from the Nordic model that capitalism can be made "better" with appropriate regulation and social consciousness.

  • @paulawilder8368
    @paulawilder8368 Жыл бұрын

    How did you get to be this caring?

  • @SjSOdJ
    @SjSOdJ Жыл бұрын

    I'm watching and rewatching a bunch of these. So good! Glad he's saying what some of us have been for *so long* !! Some of these things are basic common sense.

  • @phylum8975
    @phylum89752 жыл бұрын

    I was once "blind" & ill-informed asking the same question "Why can't they get a job?" Then I met someone who allowed me to join them on their 2 year journey and my eyes were truly opened. It completely changed my way of thinking after knowing the truth about how "the system" is largely just checking a box vs actually trying to support and lift people up. That isn't to say that there are no good programs out there, because there absolutely are. I was at an event and a friend introduced me to someone who had missed their ride home and asked if I could help. I cheerfully volunteered and we were off. On the drive they asked me to drop them off at the nearest metro/subway station but I told them I wouldn't mind taking them home or their ultimate destination. They told me the general area they were going so I headed that way passing several metro/subway stations along the way. Our banter continued and they asked me to drop them off at one of the larger stations & again I told them I'd be happy to take them home. That's when they said "I don't have a home" and I was stunned because the person in my car didn't match my persona or stereotype of a homeless person. Over the next few weeks we saw each other fairly regularly, each time they would share more about their story. I'll be honest, I was a bit skeptical about some of the things they shared with me but as time went on their words & actions confirmed their earnest desire to get out of the awful gyre they were stuck in through no fault of their own but the way "the system" was designed. As fall & winter approached their search for a stable shelter increased significantly and I tagged along driving through various counties in the area. We went to a few shelters in difficult parts of town and they candidly told me to stay back because it wasn't safe. My flesh wanted to think "Then why are you staying here?" but the sad reality was they had no other option. The choices were incredibly slim because the need was so great and the shelters' capacity so low. According to my new friend, these places could be incredibly dangerous with cliques forming and people bullying others. Fights were common and people's things "went missing" all the time. Because my friend knew anything they left in the shelter wasn't safe, they always had to bring things with them. I joined my friend on several outings and meetings with shelter personnel to discuss options and it was absolutely nonsensical especially one shelter in particular: - Everyone was required to work in order to have a bed. - I believe their earnings were placed in a special shared account that forced them to save a certain amount. - The shelter would use their funds to pay for certain consumables & services. (Unsure on cost but it at the time seemed somewhat reasonable.) - Everyone had to be out of shelter by 6 or 7 am. - The shelter lined started at 3pm. - Beds were not guaranteed. I couldn't believe what I was witnessing firsthand. I jumped in re-explaining what I thought I understood to the shelter director (or whatever their title was) and they confirmed. I then asked them if they felt it was a little nonsensical: You require people to remain employed in exchange for a place to shower & rest comfortably, but if they can't get in line early enough then they won't have a bed, even though they are meeting your requirements of maintaining employment. So for someone without a car and relying on public transportation, it means they have to find a job starts really early in the morning so they can get out of the shelter even earlier in order to hopefully get off earlier in the day in order to get back in time to jump in line before all the beds are taken. They again confirmed. As we left that place, which was in a fairly affluent county, I was genuinely sad for my friend and so incredibly angry at the hypocrisy I had witnessed: Having visited anywhere from 6-12 shelters in the area (excluding ones that were really quite far) it was clear that these services were here merely to 'check a box'. And I was angry because I felt like I had contributed to this by thinking "This is someone else problem." I was completely unaware and thus not vocal and certainly not pushing my local government to do something. I really appreciated the time I spent with my friend. I learned a lot about them as a person and over the years I got a better picture of who the regulars were in their life and how limited they were. While they had a fairly large family, no one really had any interest in associating with them, due to a falling out years' prior and reconciliation is be nearly impossible. There was one 'friend' they spent a lot of time with but they were on a super power trip that really hindered their advancement. The good news here is that my friend is doing well and has been doing well for several years now. They found a great job where they can counsel others who are battling addiction, homelessness, depression & so on. I'm very proud of the hard work they put into getting back on track, despite all of the challenges they faced.

  • @naqueeldiva7693

    @naqueeldiva7693

    2 жыл бұрын

    I hesitated looking at the length, but this was a good read!

  • @phylum8975

    @phylum8975

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@naqueeldiva7693 thanks for taking the time to read. I was worried about it too honestly! It's a beautiful story but as I like to say, one cannot truly appreciate the sweet if they don't understand the bitter. I'm so glad that LWT put a piece like this together. There are so many great comments here with amazing stories and experiences. Take care and be safe!

  • @jennifergarza7766

    @jennifergarza7766

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your compassion

  • @ericaschmidt4506
    @ericaschmidt45062 жыл бұрын

    I find myself judging homeless people as lazy, especially since I see so many people begging in front of stores that have help wanted signs… but I never really thought about how hard it would be to get a job or even start to get of homelessness without a home, or address, much less with mental health problems on top. This was a good eye opener for me.

  • @brycejordan8987

    @brycejordan8987

    2 жыл бұрын

    Just to toss in. Imagine if every day you slept in a car or a tent and these were more prestigious choices over having to sleep on the ground of in a bench. Think about how people look at you. With guilt, embarrassment, disgust, and derision. They look at you more like vermin than people and often treat you accordingly. And where can you to use a restroom or address hygiene concerns? There are not that many public restrooms and so you have to be able to not get thrown out when going to the restroom. Everything is humiliating and strips away your humanity.

  • @jdwinks40

    @jdwinks40

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have had this conversation over and over and over again, in person and through social media, and with both friends and strangers. I hear folks say, time and again, "Well I think instead of giving beggars money, we should just give them job applications to places hiring." Then I have to explain to them that most places won't actually hire a homeless person because they don't have access to a bathroom or laundry so they may smell bad. They also likely don't have nice enough clothing, reliable transportation, or even an alarm clock to help ensure arrival on time for work. So handing them a job application for a job they are 99.99% likely to not get is incredibly privileged and unhelpful even if it makes you feel like patting yourself on the back.

  • @randymilam1965

    @randymilam1965

    2 жыл бұрын

    The most vulnerable segment of all society.

  • @zephpekrul2760

    @zephpekrul2760

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for having an open mind.

  • @sandata

    @sandata

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks for keeping an open mind. its very easy for people to fall into preconceived notions if they havent experienced it themselves. the fact is no one wants to stay hungry, to stay unhoused or to go to sleep with your heart pounding in your chest because you don't know what could happen while you just want to rest. i hope you keep that compassion in your heart always.

  • @dotech4128
    @dotech4128Ай бұрын

    I am homeless. I have been told to just get a job. Then I’ve explained that in order to obtain and maintain employment, you need a place to sleep, to wash your clothes, to shower, and food to eat. And in order to get any of those things, you need a job. It’s a catch 22, an endless cycle. But SO many people just can’t comprehend that.

  • @Oblvious

    @Oblvious

    Ай бұрын

    I got fired from a job within 3 weeks because I couldn't maintainl personal hygiene or wash my clothes due to being homeless. It's ridiculous. And even then you still have to give them a mailing address in the application process..

  • @crow578
    @crow578 Жыл бұрын

    I've spent about ten years homeless since getting hurt in the Army. It's almost impossible to climb upwards in the "Land of Opportunity".

  • @BurdieFromHell
    @BurdieFromHell2 жыл бұрын

    I'm so glad John Oliver did this segment. I use to work in a gas station, and while I was fortunate enough to only have held that job as a stepping stone for a career that can fund my living needs, many of the people I worked with held that job as a final safety net from destitution. One man who became a close friend of mine had a tent in the woods behind the store, he was fired when a privileged college kid asshole had an argument with him over an ID and reported his tent to the police. He was in his 70's, and was very clearly homosexual. I have no doubt that this is a large part of why his life never gave him solid footing. Athough it is true he had a drinking problem, I had learned quite a bit about him and how he ended up in that situation, and his story breaks my heart. His husband was the money maker. He told me his husband passed as a straight man better than he could, and had a really nice uppermanagement job. My friend, however, was into art, and attempted to do that as a living, which failed. Unfortunately, his husband also passed away in the 90's due to AIDS (He was cheating on my friend, but they reconciled). Ever since his husband passed. My friend had been homeless. He went from having a house, to loosing everything. It's easy to see a homeless man and deside he brought it upon himself, but doing so is just a convenient way of dismissing giving the basic empathy any other human would get.

  • @BurdieFromHell

    @BurdieFromHell

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thundafundamentalist Nope, which I guess is cool because this guy wasn't those things so I'm not sure why you ask...

  • @Vanilla.coke1234

    @Vanilla.coke1234

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thundafundamentalist you seem like a bad person

  • @jaegrant6441

    @jaegrant6441

    2 жыл бұрын

    At first I thought, why couldn't he just stay at the same house he lived with his husband. Then I remembered that gay rights regarding even civil unions wasn't a thing and so he wouldn't have been recognised as a dependent and beneficiary. Man that sucks so bad. And you know, often I've not had enough money to help, but I do have a smile and kind word to say which is free. That often means more than money.

  • @steviewanderer

    @steviewanderer

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jaegrant6441 it doesn't really mean more than money. it's a nice gesture and better than nothing, but it's not going to feed and house them.

  • @wsrtwetr

    @wsrtwetr

    2 жыл бұрын

    Giving someone empathy and my hard earn cash is 2 different things. As you have stated, he has a dri king problem. If he got that under control, many things in his life would change. No doubt he would still face discrimination that is not going to stop because he stopped dri king. But I bet it would be easier to hold down a job. So if you wanted compassion so much, why didn't you give him a place to stay, buy him all the alcohol he wants, and let him mess up your house? No one is stopping you from being 'compassionate'. Personal choice, some of us choose not to spend our hard earned cash on people down on their luck, because we've all been there and got ourselves out. And if you didn't invite him home and financially support him, why are you expecting others to do so? Oh you have a life and can only do so much? Yeah so does everyone else. Compete or miss out. Such is the way of life. The kumbaya we can all do this together mentality gets us no where and only serve to hold back the capable and support the weak.

  • @josephinethornton3823
    @josephinethornton38232 жыл бұрын

    My best friend has been homeless for 3 years now. (I have also experienced repeated homelessness about 20 years ago.) What blows my mind is how people don't take her situation seriously, because she's thirty and good-looking and female. Tiffany Haddish spoke about this exact issue in one of her comedy specials, because Kevin Hart noticed she was living out of her car and asked why since she was a good-looking woman. She was very taken aback and said she didn't want to trade her sexuality for a roof over her head, and pointed out what a fucked up thing it was to suggest she do so. And that's what my friend faces all the time, even from the various support organizations that are meant to help her! So many have vaguely hinted at or outright stated disbelief that she could possibly be homeless because she's pretty and young and therefore "any man would want to take her in", as if women don't deserve a roof over their heads unless they are willing to engage in sex. It's SO FUCKED UP. And yes, that's an option that no one should judge if someone does choose to do so, but not one that should be FORCED onto women any more than men should be expected to sell their sexuality no matter how uncomfortable it might make them simply to live indoors. This mindset is so horribly common that it's stunning. Many people on the street have been assaulted repeatedly, be it physically, mentally, sexually, or all of the above, and suggesting they put themselves into a tenuous arrangement of sexual barter for life indoors is repugnant and wildly irresponsible of their well being. Please. Please don't ever suggest this to someone on the streets, you have no idea what they've already gone through and no one deserves to hear that their homelessness is due to an unwillingness to barter sexual favors for a safe place to live. That isn't how anyone should reasonably define safety. After years on the street, she's going to need a long time to simply calm down from living with an endless sense of extreme vigilance for her physical body before she can even get into a good enough mental space to withstand unpacking all of the trauma she's experienced in therapy. Please. Please confront this idea whenever you hear it said by anyone, because it's fucked up and no one deserves to be treated this way.

  • @davidcooke8005

    @davidcooke8005

    2 жыл бұрын

    3 years is a long time. Is there some reason she is still homeless?

  • @evillittlemcnuggets

    @evillittlemcnuggets

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@davidcooke8005 it’s next to impossible to get enough resources to get housing. even if you’re able to get a job (which is near impossible by itself), payment is almost never enough to even save up for a down payment

  • @davidcooke8005

    @davidcooke8005

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@evillittlemcnuggets I'm retired now, so a bit out of the loop, but they keep saying there is a labor shortage. How can it be tough to find a job when some McDonalds are offering $21 to start? That's $42K a year, full time.

  • @evillittlemcnuggets

    @evillittlemcnuggets

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@davidcooke8005 The labor shortage isn’t real. Companies are feigning shortages in order to blame the unemployed for their poor treatment of staff. It’s easier to keep a skeleton crew on hand, not hire anyone, and then say “oh well these kids just don’t wanna work” than to actually address poor quality environments and low payment. On top of that, $42k a year isn’t a lot. For this one woman, it may be enough to get by but many homeless people have families. On top of this, most American households are a single medical emergency away from homelessness themselves, and that’s with two income sources.

  • @valsanderson2370

    @valsanderson2370

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@evillittlemcnuggets yes. People are so ignorant. Deposits on everything. And now credit checks. So if you lost your apartment due to getting evicted due to losing a job. Then you’re screwed. Many 3xpensive rent by week. Or hotels. It’s awful. We need some serious compassion.

  • @glenn6583
    @glenn6583 Жыл бұрын

    Keep speaking the truth, Mr Oliver. We need it badly.

  • @user-yd3jd2em8e
    @user-yd3jd2em8e3 ай бұрын

    great points made John ! Homeless people should NOT be criminalized! ❤ 🇨🇦

  • @plagiats
    @plagiats2 жыл бұрын

    It is so incredibly cruel to blast "it's raining tacos in the streets" to tired hungry homeless PEOPLE

  • @iloveplasticbottles

    @iloveplasticbottles

    2 жыл бұрын

    Someone should go over and short the circuit of whichever speakers are playing that.

  • @roostercogburn3272

    @roostercogburn3272

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Got any change?"

  • @maxpower8549

    @maxpower8549

    2 жыл бұрын

    if there was a war, it would be a war crime to torture people

  • @sarahoshea9603

    @sarahoshea9603

    2 жыл бұрын

    I thought it was strange he didn't address the fact that singing abt FOOD to ppl who were trying to sleep HUNGRY would be considered a war crime under the "No Torture" bit.

  • @JessHart006
    @JessHart0062 жыл бұрын

    I work at a convenience store down the block from a newly-designated homeless housing unit in a very liberal Seattle suburb. The residents all try to complain about the unhoused people without sounding judgmental or bigoted (I never let them get away with it). The unhoused folks, on the other hand, make a point of being courteous, friendly, and paying for their purchases even when they have very little money or I offer to let them have food or coffee for free. You need to treat people like people if you want them to get back on their feet.

  • @krysti2

    @krysti2

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thankyou! Just someone smiling at you or saying Hi! goes a long way in making you feel human & not just a piece of trash that everyone would gladly make disappear (if they could) rather than just be polite & friendly- just treat ppl like you would like to be treated....

  • @dingusdingus2152

    @dingusdingus2152

    2 жыл бұрын

    Homeless people are human beings? Who would have thought?

  • @supplyanddistributions6418

    @supplyanddistributions6418

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for doing that!

  • @dustymccrusty8545

    @dustymccrusty8545

    2 жыл бұрын

    Your gonna get fired for giving out free food n coffee and end up homeless and it'll be your choice due to your addiction of being nice to others which with then also be considered mental illness.

  • @JessHart006

    @JessHart006

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dustymccrusty8545 Cool. You are very wise.

  • @thereilway
    @thereilway2 ай бұрын

    The idea that having a roof over your head, food in your belly, an clothes on your back, are "luxuries" you must earn, is absolute insanity.

  • @BunkerSquirrel
    @BunkerSquirrel Жыл бұрын

    I live across the street from a homeless encampment and they’re some of my better neighbors. They actually do a better job keeping their camp clean than our law keepers do most of the time. Now that I’ve said that, there’s this one dude who lives across the overpass who has scattered so much junk about it legit is starting to look like a landfill. Now i haven’t talked to any of these guys but I feel like there’s a reason this dude’s not in the camp with everyone else.

Келесі