How come we get the full post instead of just the image? Is this because of the crosslink method?
Memes
Rules:
- Be civil and nice.
- Try not to excessively repost, as a rule of thumb, wait at least 2 months to do it if you have to.
I would guess so. I pressed "Crosspost" and this is what happened. If someone knows more, let us know.
Housing is a human right.
Western countries have more than enough money to house everyone they just choose not to.
It’s frustrating that this meme is the actual solution to these problems and we still don’t fix it.
Shit we in the US have more vacant homes than we have homeless people.
And that's not just a "oh some places have more homes than other's screwing the average" thing, literally every major city in the US has more vacant homes than their homeless population. Sometimes as much as 3 or 4 to 1.
The big caveat there is that the US is, by design, horrible at counting homeless people. The official number you see the most, 582.000, is based on people going out in the street and counting the number of homeless they actually see that night, and the number of people in shelters. Obviously that's going to miss a LOT of people, so the number is much higher in reality.
That's not to say it's a fucking crime against humanity that there are houses sitting empty for years while people are homeless, of course.
Yeah the counting system is flawed and it would take an extraordinary effort to get a more accurate count but there's still a terrible "fun fact"
In the US there's an estimated [16 million vacant homes.](https://todayshomeowner.com/general/guides/highest-home-vacancy-rates/#:~:text=Roughly%209%25%20of%20homes%20(16,for%20seasonal%20or%20recreational%20use.)
So even if the number is off by a factor of 10, there's still enough vacant homes for every homeless person in the US.
It really is a crime against humanity
And the NIMBYs who fight every attempt at new homeless shelters really only make things worse for everyone
As well as being dense, mixed use housing, can it also be socialized? Privately owned housing is just going to go to the highest bidder, which will leave the truly vulnerable to their own, yet again.
There's no law of the universe that prevents it.
The interest rate's a little airborne. It's still good.