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It Is Becoming Illegal To Be Homeless In America As Houston, Dallas And Dozens Of Other Cities Pass Draconian Laws

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Should we make homelessness against the law and simply throw all homeless people into prison so that we don’t have to deal with them?  Incredibly, this is actually starting to happen in dozens of major cities all across the United States.  It may be difficult to believe, but in many large urban areas today, if you are found guilty of “public camping” you can be taken directly to jail.  In some cities, activities such as “blocking a walkway” or creating any sort of “temporary structure for human habitation” are also considered to be serious crimes.  And there are some communities that have even made it illegal to feed the homeless without an official permit.  Unfortunately, as the U.S. economy continues to slow down the number of homeless people will continue to grow, and so this is a crisis that is only going to grow in size and scope.

Of course the goal of many of these laws is to get the homeless to go somewhere else.  But as these laws start to multiply all across the nation, pretty soon there won’t be too many places left where it is actually legal to be homeless.

One city that is being highly criticized for passing extremely draconian laws is Houston.  In that city it is actually illegal for the homeless to use any sort of material to shield themselves from the wind, the rain and the cold

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner is taking a similar approach—his anti-encampment ordinance makes it illegal to use “fabric, metal, cardboard, or other materials as a tent or temporary structure for human habitation.” This ensures that the Houstonian homeless are vulnerable not just to the elements, but also to the constant threat of the police. Officials cite one of the most common justifications for crackdowns on the homeless: neighborhood safety (a more socially acceptable way of talking about the not-in-my-backyard mentality).

With all of the other problems that we are facing as a nation, it stuns me that there are politicians that would spend their time dreaming up such sick and twisted laws.

According to one news report, the homeless in Houston are now officially banned from doing all of the following things…

1. They can’t block a sidewalk, stand in a roadway median or block a building doorway. (AKA they can’t panhandle).

2. They also can’t do any of these things — blocking walkways — under state law that already existed.

3. They can’t sleep in tents, boxes or any other makeshift shelter on public property.

4. They also can’t have heating devices.

5. They can’t carry around belongings that take up space more than three feet long, three feet wide, three feet tall.

6. People can’t spontaneously feed more than five homeless people without a permit.

If I was a homeless person in Houston, I would definitely be looking to get out of there.

But where are they going to go?

Things are almost as bad in Dallas.  In fact, it is being reported that the police in Dallas “issued over 11,000 citations for sleeping in public from January 2012 to November 2015.”

When you break that number down, it comes to 323 citations per month.

Of course some people have tried to challenge these types of laws in court, but most of the challenges have been unsuccessful.  For example, just check out what recently happened in Denver

Three people who were contesting Denver’s urban-camping ban were found guilty on Wednesday, April 5, at the Lindsey-Flanigan courthouse. The defendants — Jerry Burton, Randy Russell and Terese Howard — were determined to have unlawfully camped on November 28, 2016, and to have interfered with police operations at one location. All three were sentenced with court-ordered probation for one year and between twenty and forty hours of community service.

The case challenged Denver’s unauthorized-camping ordinance, which has been divisive ever since Denver City Council approved it in 2012.

Since the courts are generally upholding these laws, this has just emboldened more communities to adopt anti-homelessness ordinances.  According to one report, dozens of major cities have now passed such laws…

City-wide bans on public camping (PDF) have increased by 69 percent throughout the United States. What used to be seen as an annoyance is now prohibited, forcing fines or jail time on those who certainly can’t afford it. The only nationwide nonprofit devoted to studying this, the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, has been tracking these changes since 2006. Their findings? There are a scary number of laws passed that ironically make it costly to be homeless.

For example, in 33 of the 100 U.S. cities they studied, it’s illegal to publicly camp. In 18, it’s illegal to sleep in public. Panhandling is illegal in 27 cities.

In 39 cities, it’s illegal to live in vehicles.

As I have warned repeatedly, we are seeing hearts grow cold all around us.  Instead of doing everything that they can to try to help those in need, communities are trying to make them go some place else, and those that try to feed and help the homeless are being harshly penalized.

Sadly, all of this comes at a time when homelessness is on the rise all over America.  In a previous article I pointed out that in New York City the number of homeless people recently hit a brand new all-time high, and things have gotten so bad in Los Angeles that the L.A. City Council has formally requested that Governor Jerry Brown declare a state of emergency.

We tend to think of the homeless as bearded old men with drinking problems, but the truth is that many of the homeless are children.

In fact, the number of homeless children in the United States has risen by about 60 percent since the end of the last recession.

If this is how we are going to treat some of the most vulnerable members of our society while things are still relatively stable, how are we going to be treating one another when the economy completely collapses?


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The post It Is Becoming Illegal To Be Homeless In America As Houston, Dallas And Dozens Of Other Cities Pass Draconian Laws appeared first on The Sleuth Journal.


Source: http://www.thesleuthjournal.com/illegal-homeless-america-dozens-cities-draconian-laws/


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    Total 4 comments
    • Air Quotes Shill Air Quotes

      Someone beat you to this headline and copy and paste journalism a week ago http://m.beforeitsnews.com/alternative/2017/04/it-is-becoming-illegal-to-be-homeless-in-america-as-houston-dallas-and-dozens-of-other-cities-pass-draconian-laws-3505893.html so I’ll just copy and paste my comment like you copy and pasted this “news”.

      Good!

      Smelly drunk mentally handicapped drug addicts attacking people and each other on the sidewalk. It’s miserable having to deal with them.

      Them and convicted murderers and rapists.

      Grind em into dog food and move on.

      • Rockledge

        You are obviously quite ill informed and have a very narrow view of the situation.

        During reagans depression in the 80s I knew a lot of hard working people who lost their jobs, and there was no work that paid enough to cover the cost of working.
        None of them were rapists , murderers, and they tried to keep up good hygiene when they could.

        Granted there are some homeless who simply won’t get off their asses and work, in reality most of the goldbricks and leeches in our society are provided for by the government and need not fear homelessness.

        Those who do need to fear homelessness are those who have busted their asses all their lives and assume the paycheck is permanent. As often as not those who are homeless are that way because when the work force uses a man up and his body is wore out they toss his ass in the alley and the system will only take care of those who never have worked and have no intention of working.

        Most of the homeless are ex hard workers and ex military who the system no longer has a use for and assumes they will keep finding a way to get by without help.

        Our system creates the homeless by screwing the very people who actually feed the system.

    • Rockledge

      One thing for sure, in a low wage high cost of living ghetto society like ours there are going to be homeless people and laws against them are stupid and pointless.

      What are they going to do, put people in prison for feeding the homeless? What effect will that have?
      The effect will be that those people will leave prison with no job and chances are anything they might have eaten by the system, and they will be homeless as well.

      The laws are only going to create the problem they intend to resolve by causing taxes to skyrocket to provide the law enforcement and prisons to monitor and house the public.

    • Black Humor

      If you convert to Islam and start inbreeding with your cousin(#1), powers to be understand that it is your religious duty and give you handouts from tax payer money. It is very logical after all, your inbred bastards will be living on handouts too. They are too stupid to understand shenanigans of officials and submit to tyranny in the name of medival death cult. Moslims make good serfs if you chop them if they get out of line. :neutral:

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