If these people actually had a little bit of respect for the places that they camp instead of turning nice parks and green spaces into disgusting garbage dumps they would probably find it easier to stay In the spots they pick ! If my yard looked like most of these encampments I would be get fined by the city every day and eventually the city would come and remove it all and charge me so why shouldn’t it be the same for them
The Province caused it. NDP, doing what NDP does best, creating suffering, homelessness, and blaming it on the last guy. Look up how many mental hospitals are in B.C., then look at Hastings.
All these liberists who say how they feel sorry and blah blah blah. Go invite them to set up a camp in your back yard if you feel so genuinely sorry, why not? You only feel sorry when you don’t need to get involved. These people were given enough notice. Grow up.
Easier said than done, especially when you don’t suffer from a physical or a mental disability. Or when you have the support of family and friends. Not everyone is as lucky or capable as you might be. Your selfishness and ignorance is shocking.
@@user-fy7ru4ii1i well that's just not true. They could go into a shelter or seek addiction treatment but they choose not to. What the city should do is setup a call in line and any reported illegal encampments are bulldozed immediately.
Time to clean up the mess these people leave they don’t want housing that would decrease what they can spend on drugs. Clean up, quit the drugs get a job, no more free rides.
1:46 - I agree! They make the city and government look bad. Hey government, maybe considering funding a stronger rehabilitation opportunity. Contributing members of society PAY YOU (in taxes). So, help make these people contributing members of society.
Do you mean some remote northern island where they'd die considering they have no skills, no access to food etc Or do you mean some prime real estate in the city where they'll have easy access to drugs? I'd be on board with the 1st option, we could even make a reality TV show about it.
They are not going away because the NGOs are supporting this horror so that they can get even more money to help the homeless. Instead of pushing for rehab and hospitals, they want tents because there is money to be made.
Ask yourself this, are Canadian’s able to compete with foreign currency exchanged then used within Canada ? That is based on the perpetually ultra low valuation of the Canadian dollar ? The Euro, the British Pound, the American dollar & other currency’s exchange into an awful lot of Canadian dollars, to the point that not even Canadian’s can compete. Homelessness is rampant across the country. Foreign home speculators, international student’s vacuum up all the available apartment’s. University’s over recruit & enrol. Canadian tuition is cheap when you got foreign currency & a dirt cheap Canadian dollar. Yet the best and the brightest know, they all keep quiet . It’s a rigged game . They use terms like mental illness & addiction to place blame on the homeless, like it’s their fault not the government or the bank of Canada’s policy’s. A perpetually and continually dirt cheap Canadian dollar makes imports expensive, near impossible to buy. It encourage’s the inflow of foreign currency but displaces the vulnerable. Stop believing everything your fed by Canadian media & journalist’s . The value of the Canadian dollar is a major part of the domestic disadvantage we live in. It has been that way for a very very long time. At least fifty years or more. 🇨🇦✌🏼🇨🇦✌🏼🇨🇦✌🏼🇨🇦✌🏼🇨🇦✌🏼🇨🇦
agree. for example, in Russia 1 Dollar = 100 Rub and 16% prime rate (and Bank Deposit 12-16%) pension = 12 000 Rub or $120 but in Russia there are no homeless people in such numbers. legacy of the USSR when people were given housing for free. now it is impossible.
Instead of dismantling how about preventing? Prevent homelessness. People don't ask for 5-star hotels dripping with Swarovski crystals and room service - just a safe roof over their heads.
@@JJUnohu So? At least it won't be visible on the street using up police resources. A lot of people drink and do drugs at home plus unfortunately die at home. But at least they don't suffer the physical/emotional/financial/judgemental pain of being homeless.
Well, I saw a well entrenched camp in a rural location yesterday. Everything was burned to the ground. I would suggest these folks are the lucky ones. 😮
This Homeless wants encampments they don’t like shelter, they didn’t like each other in shelters. They want single homes ! No choice but to dismantle so the city will not destroy!
I work hard to pay for my own home, maybe they need to do the same. You can't just give someone with mental health or drug issues a home and expect them to look after it.
@@peachesnmulderWhat?!? It’s happening in Canada too. The Feds just announced yesterday another $143 MILLION dollars to go towards “helping” and “sheltering” migrants/asylum seekers/refugees/illegal border crossers. Citizens tax money is going to non citizens to the tune of billions of dollars every year. That $143 million is just for Toronto……that’s not counting money that goes to many other cities across the country to “help” non citizens.
They already get everything free without any expectation to go into rehab or hospitals. They want to live on their own terms supported by poverty pimps.
How did China alleviate poverty? CGTN The Point-Hub-Heat, Einar Tangan-Martin Jacques-Lijinjing-Tian Wei. Reporterfy Media-Cyrus Janssen. BRF cooperation in Agricultural-STEM Healthcare-Infrastructure Domestic manufacturing...Canada should be on BRI map
There are some homeless people who do have jobs, they just can't afford or find anything to rent anymore. Mind you, a lot of them tend to live more in their cars than in the tent encampments, but still. It is not as easy as "just get a job" when you can work a full week in a lot of places, and still not really cover the cost of living.
@@D3ft0ne At lot of people don't even bother with Vancouver. While Vancouver is the worst, the rest of the GVRD is not much better. Not everyone can move away from the areas with Transit, or away from medical services they might need. It also costs money to move, which a lot of people do not have. The cities rely on people doing the jobs with lower pay, or the jobs that are unpleasant just as much as it requires the people who manage it. Pricing out the former can't be a good thing in the long run.
@@williamterrymasters1934You sound like a translator going from French to Mandarin to Hindi to Urdu to Latin to Aramaic to English. Please try again. You don't make sense.