Darth Crater wrote:imaim wrote:Essentially, it shifts the cost from the gov't to us (grants/programs at one level of help to a much higher level of help coming from higher taxes). Same [poo], different source. I do not want higher taxes to go to programs that help people who don't want to help themselves.
I'm for helping the homeless if the program forces them to help themselves.
The cost to the government is the cost to you - you fund it with your taxes. You are already paying for the homeless in the form of a bunch of less visible costs. Giving out homes reduces the cost to the government, so it reduces the cost to you. I keep hearing that you guys want to reduce government spending - here's a handy way to do it! Sure, it's a bit counter-intuitive, but it's already been proven to work.
Putting restrictions on the housing is apparently less effective than just giving them housing, and then working on their other issues. Again, it's not obvious, but the math is there.
OK Crater, let's say you have us sold on the idea. So what you propose to do is take what we already pay in taxes and spend that money by buying/building homes for the homeless. When that's paid for how much does my taxes get cut because we've saved all kinds of money with your plan?...Right, cause the savings notion is [poo]. You don't REALLY want the people who work hard to stop working for others. You want us to work harder and pay more to those who don't. "Spend more money making their lives easier NOW and they'll be less of a burden down the road, I promise," is the empty lie told by those who think they are being good and doing right but aren't fundamentally bright enough to wake up and smell what they're shoveling.
Whats been PROVEN is when you give someone something for free it has no value. The REAL solution is give people opportunities to do real work and those that can and will, will. Those that can't and won't, won't. They will always be a burden. Carry them, don't carry them...it actually doesn't er.