Palacefinder General
Well-known member
- Apr 5, 2019
- 2,594
It's not Political statement, but a society one. Please don't make it so.
Tory filth! Stone him!!!
It's not Political statement, but a society one. Please don't make it so.
Your opening post is a fine one - things that people need reminding of, constantly - and what you bothered to do for this elderly lady shows you are a man with compassion.
But sorry - The Clamp is sadly quite right. You can’t possibly discuss the rise in poverty and homelessness, without focusing on the role of government. We have a political party in power, who sold off our social housing, slashed benefits, cut police budgets, and most importantly decimated mental health budgets.
And it’s current leadership are more hardline than any that went before. Yet plenty of decent, compassionate people will still vote for them - blind to the link between policy and ultimate effect - some of them, depressingly, based on swallowing right wing media tropes about how ‘dangerous’ the alternative is.
Great post by the OP. My view is that as a country we could pay a little more tax to fund our social services better. Unfortunately we have 10 years of austerity and now Tory and Labour are both promising a spending spree funded by borrowing. This is no way to run society.
So you fund high salaries and a cozy office in central London instead? Charities do not require a Mayfair address plenty do though.My money goes into charity pots. Lots of beggars in Crawley and they fook me right off for one reason or another. I don't give them money anymore. Most buy either drugs or booze and you are only fueling their habit.
The point I was attempting to make was how we see and interact with these people as we go about our day. How long would it be before someone stops and aids a lost dog? Stops and helps an injured animal? Or helps a fellow human being?
Proud to announce that Wrap Up Brighton and Hove will take place between 11th to 13th November
Donate your unwanted Winter coats and jackets to Wrap Up Brighton and Hove. They will be used to help local homeless people. Inspired by Wrap Up London, this great initiative is delivered to you by Rotary and American Express
There are some good thoughtful posts and some abysmal ones on this thread.
What a shame that a worthwhile subject thread is deteriorating into what is an all too familiar scenario on NSC these days, namely a slagging match and blame game.
In my job I have the need to visit many towns and cities, it has recently really hit me the increase in those in need. We see, hear and observe those around us as we go about our daily lives, many less fortunate than us. We look, sometimes with disdain, sometimes pity but nonetheless we see them. We don't know their stories, the reason for their situation, we may help, give them our change, perhaps these days they need a card reader so we can "tap" our guilt. However I'm amazed at the level of homelessness or those in dire need.
I was in Birmingham this week for two days. Firstly I traveled across London , witnessing the scramble for a discarded fag butt, the begging for a "cuppa". Then to Birmingham, the same. A one legged man in a wheelchair barely able to push himself along, a young girl who I noted from my last visit, same place, still weeping. Nationality, English, but does it matter, someones daughter, begging not for money but a beginning, a life, a future, help
I traveled down this evening to Bournemouth, an arduous journey thanks to the railway, some 5 hours crammed in a tube of like minded people, all wanting the end to their "hard" days work. I checked into my hotel, top floor, executive status, free bar. I walked out to find an eatery as the hotel had a function. I happened upon an elderly lady, a local clean well dressed, she asked for money for a coffee. I took the time to talk to her as I delved in my pocket, attempting,as we all do, not to bring too much change into our hand. I gave her £1.70 in change. She was fully conversant, telling me of her hardship. A deceased husband unknown to her with a debt, not to a bank, but though after years of working hard at the docks, he had a gambling debt, to the wrong sort. They still knocked the door of her flat. Demanding money, frightened she gave them her pension, it still goes on to this day. She goes out to stop the knocking, the fear. I ended up paying for a meal for her, a takeaway. did it make me feel good? No, it didn't but on reflection it made me write this.
We have those that are marching for climate change, those on Brexit, but very few on how, what or if we need to change how we want our society to be.
So all I can suggest and as I have done for a number of years, as we march forwards to the festive time, think of others and if you can help them, not to make you feel better but to make them feel better. Underneath that dirty duvet is a person.
There are no posts on this thread slagging each other off, and nobody seeking to blame anybody, but the politicians who are the ones in a position to improve matters, or choose not to.
As long as it is kept civil, it’s a perfectly worthy course for the thread to run.
There are some good thoughtful posts and some abysmal ones on this thread.
What a shame that a worthwhile subject thread is in danger of deteriorating into what is an all too familiar scenario on NSC these days, namely a slagging match and blame game.
The day you take seriously the typed ramblings of a load of middle aged dullards who should know better than to waste their lives on here is the day to quit this place.
Hans, I did not say 'slagging each other off', I said a slagging match and blame game. That is slightly different.
Yes, the Government of the day are in a position to influence matters and I take Clamp's point re 'inextricably linked' but I think the OP was commenting on society's attitude to the problem of homelessness, rather than the failure of successive Governments to solve this complex problem.
It is regrettable that posts such as those made by Palacefinder General and Horses Arse resort to a simplistic slagging off and blame gaming..........just as I said.
Have a read of what they said.
P.S. I don't think we are really disagreeing over a worthy thread though.
It’s not a cheap political point in any way. I work with some of the most vulnerable people in our society. Women with mental health problems, substance abuse issues, DV backgrounds, hostel and street homeless, trafficked women and sex workers. I am well aware of how they find themselves in such straits. I am also acutely aware how ten years of Conservative rule exacerbated the situation.
I spend twelve and a half hours with such women 5 nights a week.
Not point scoring. Just facts. So before you accuse posters of making “cheap” points ask yourself if they may know something about the situation and perhaps have something of import to say about it.
As for your OP, yes, they deserve much more than our contempt.