Homeless people can be ticketed for sleeping outside, Supreme Court rules | CNN Politics - eviltoast
  • TruffleStuff@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    I thought this was a pro-conservative community? Mods out here posting excellent reasons to never vote conservative.

  • hapablap@lemmy.sdf.org
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    5 months ago

    This is a great strategy. Let’s see how much blood they can squeeze from those stones. Can’t afford a place to live? Lets charge rent for that park bench!

    But of course the real idea here is to give municipalities the ability to harass people. It’s certainly not about the fines. The less annoying homeless will be driven off by the harassment and then all that will be left is the annoying ones which might be a more manageable number to throw in jail.

    • Amoxtli@thelemmy.club
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      5 months ago

      Homeless people have no money and they need drugs. Where do you think they get their money and other various items?

      • hapablap@lemmy.sdf.org
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        4 months ago

        Homeless people have money, just not enough for housing. People with houses also use drugs. All people get money from different places. Not sure what your point is but your generalizations aren’t useful.

        • Amoxtli@thelemmy.club
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          4 months ago

          Rich people use drugs as well, but they do not decrease the economic quality of the area and generate a lot of crimes and nuisance. For tourism, it is necessary to clean up the encampments, and sleeping homeless to market attractions. Since they are poor and addicted to drugs, probably feel screwed by society, they are more likely to steal. They have not showered in ages, do you enjoy being next to stinky people?

          • hapablap@lemmy.sdf.org
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            4 months ago

            You’re making a lot of spurious assumptions and generalizations. The overwhelming majority of the time the homeless are just minding their own business. Some are certainly more annoying than others, some smell worse than others but that doesn’t justify criminalizing all of them nor does it justify abdicating moral responsibility as a society to care for those that often for no fault of their own fail to integrate into the structures that have evolved. There are other solutions, none of them are going to be perfect. Maybe criminalizing sleeping on the street is fine as long as the city provides places to sleep that are reasonable.

            • Amoxtli@thelemmy.club
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              4 months ago

              Being homeless is not a criminal offense, and how do you know it is not their own fault? How do you know they are just minding their own business? Talk about spurious assumptions and generalizations. Get out of town… Let me guess, you believe the poor, the hobos, and minorities who are the subpar classes deserve your compassion because they are underlings of other classes, that society is structurally unfair, and the underlings need a free pass, while the superior classes need to acknowledge their sin of being better up in class. That is your fallacious assumptions and beliefs. That’s your opinion. You have a fundamentally Marxist brain that stems from religion. Ask the insurance companies, local businesses, and neighborhoods if hobos “just mind their own business”. Portland had your beliefs until they realized they’re making their own quality of life lower. Showing your tolerance and compassion for bad behavior, bad lifestyles, and even bad people do not work. They are much better examples of managed cities in the world than the liberal let-live, mind your own business, crap holes of Western society. You are excrementally wrong.

              • hapablap@lemmy.sdf.org
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                4 months ago

                Now the root of your objections are shown to be just callous indifference to human suffering. That’s fine, just come out and say you don’t care and can’t be bothered. You want to live in a world of machiavellian justice. Be careful what you ask for as maybe that knife will fall on your head or someone you care about if you are capable of that.

                It’s hard to take you seriously when you try to conflate Marxism and religion, the guy that viewed religion as “the soul of soulless conditions” or the “opium of the people”. Or when you intimated that society was structurally fair. In what way is it fair that one person can be born to wealth and privlegde and another to poverty and lack of options? But even beyond the rules of society, there is no fundamental fairness in the universe. Some people get lucky others don’t. Some people are healthy others aren’t. It’s impossible to have any reasonable discussion when the starting point is so fundamentally divorced from reality.

                • Amoxtli@thelemmy.club
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                  4 months ago

                  To the contrary, I want the problems of society fixed. I want the quality of life of people to be improved, not out of compassion, but out of duty, and by the concept of improvement, in the most efficient way. Liberals always virtue signaling they care about the poor, and so on, yet look at the environment they created. Singapore has one of the most expensive properties in the world and high inequality, yet they have no homeless people.

                  Karl Marx was born into a Christian culture, and he was culturally Christian. Did Karl Marx disagree with the Bible in regard to poor versus rich? Christianity is subversive; the poor will prevail over the rich, the downtrodden people will prevail over their oppressors, the fool will win over the wise man. Socialism and communism are as scientific as witchcraft and astrology. They are not economic systems. Life isn’t fair; that is the real world. It is through work, applied knowledge, that you make your state better than before.

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    That is so fucked up. So a homeless person is forced into the shelter system, regardless of whether it’s of good or terrible quality.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    5 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The Supreme Court ruled Friday in favor of an Oregon city that ticketed homeless people for sleeping outside, rejecting arguments that such “anti-camping” ordinances violate the Constitution’s ban on “cruel and unusual” punishment.

    “The Constitution’s Eighth Amendment serves many important functions, but it does not authorize federal judges to wrest those rights and responsibilities from the American people and in their place dictate this Nation’s homelessness policy,” Gorsuch wrote in his majority opinion.

    Nor can a handful of federal judges begin to ‘match’ the collective wisdom the American people possess in deciding ‘how best to handle’ a pressing social question like homelessness.”

    In a move that underscored her discontent with the court’s ruling, Sotomayor took the rare step of reading her dissent from the bench on Friday.

    Grants Pass argued that the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on “cruel and unusual” punishment was aimed at torture or hard labor sentences, not tickets.

    “These are low-level fines and very short jail terms for repeat offenders that are in effect in many other jurisdictions,” the attorney, Theane Evangelis, said during the April 22 oral arguments.


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