Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑August 19th, 2021, 10:16 am This is a matter of perspective. You seem to consider the homeless to be a lesser species, and helping them out to be an imposition on ordinary, decent, people. Homelessness is closer to all of us than we think. The world we have built is based on profit, not care, so those who become homeless (and other unfortunates) pay the price. It could be you or me, one day. Perhaps that, if nothing else, makes it worth considering others in a more caring way?In my opinion it is absurd to suggest that mental health problems, in all but the most severe cases, are an excuse, in any first world country, to be homeless. A person can get free healthcare at the taxpayer's expense, free money at the taxpayer's expense and free food at the taxpayer's expense, with almost no effort.
P.S. I have "mental health problems", as many do, but I am not "insane", as you describe it. [Almost] no-one is. Your reasoning just looks like a precursor to rejection; an excuse. We have a choice. We can care for ourselves and each other, or we can just care for ourselves, and f**k everyone else. In political terms, this is a simple choice between socialism and libertarianism/fascism/capitalism. In social terms, it's a choice between caring and selfishness. What do we choose?
If a person is so completely disabled by their mental health problems that they cannot make a small effort to apply for said benefits, I would argue that they are incapable of caring for themselves and should therefore be remanded to a facility that can care for them - at the taxpayer's expense.
As for folks that just do not want to contribute to the society they are demanding accommodate and care for them - they can go jump in quicksand as far as I am concerned. I care nothing for their predicament.
Stoicism is the wisdom of madness, and cynicism the madness of wisdom - Bergen Evans