• regdog@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Great passive voice: “Bulldozer did a bad thing”. Someone should hold that Bulldozer accountable.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    my thoughts and prayers to the family of the deceased

    So you’re saying nothing really to cover your ass against the impending lawsuit

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 months ago

        Or you could be like the IDF and just run the bulldozers over already dead bodies so that they’re unrecognizable to their relatives.

        Edit: live bodies too… I wasn’t sure and didn’t want to make the claim. I should have known. When it comes to the IDF, the cruelty knows no bounds.

  • tymon@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    I don’t even know what to do with myself, reading this. It’s so fucking nightmarish. Why do we allow this hell to continue? That man should have been in a warm, safe bed. And he could have been if we didn’t hate our own people so much.

    • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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      2 months ago

      I agree, but, I don’t think you read the whole article? They were helping them move to shelters, and had relocated many. The social workers were familiar with the man who was killed, and we can probably assume they didn’t know he was there when the bulldozers came through.

    • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      They had been trying to get them to shelter

      Historically, the city sends social workers and outreach teams to encampments over a period of months before issuing a final order to evacuate. Those teams work to place people in shelters and, ultimately, permanently housing.

      The city had been working with people at the encampment since April and had placed many into shelters, said Cathryn Vassell, CEO of the city’s homelessness organization Partners for Home. Atlanta announced an investment of $60m in new public funding – the largest amount in city history – to address homelessness last year.

  • orcrist@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Of course nobody has been arrested or charged. Manslaughter? Murder? Come on, at least reckless endangerment? Not if the victim is homeless and the perp is the state, fuck no.

  • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    I swear bro, we’re going to fix homelessness, just give me one more dozer sweep, bro, I swear it’ll work this time, bro I promise we won’t kill someone again, please, just one more dozer sweep it’s got to work this time

  • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Here’s a couple ideas for dealing with the housing crisis situation, one of the primary causes of the homeless issues in the first place. Since all we ever seem to do is fail at handling symptoms instead of of causes.

    1. Foreign companies cannot own private housing.
    2. Domestic companies cannot own more than say 2-3 private homes, this includes any companies that can be connected through another business or individual. This allows individuals to have second homes or a rental property but means rental businesses are dead, they handle larger condos and apartments. Separate homes are meant for families and individual households.
    3. Tax vacant housing at high rates to facilitate homes actually being loved in. We have largely enough housing for everyone to have a place, but a lot of it sits unused as bullshit real estate holdings.
    4. For larger cities, tax vacant retail and office space at a high rate and give incentives to remodel it for more housing. Have maximum vacancy time-frames to incentivize utilizing the spaces instead of just setting bullshit pricing no one will ever pay while “looking” for tenants year after year.

    But none of this will happen. Because the oligarchs have their money invested in real estate holdings that don’t move or get and use, so they require little to no maintenance. It’s a large reason why half of NYC looks like a shit hole with boarded up retail spots for decades while a cupboard under the stars costs $1800/mo to rent.

    • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      Abolishing parking minimums, and, in fact, establishing parking maximums, would be a great, easy, and inexpensive step for most cities in the US. You literally can’t build dense walkable places like old main streets anymore because of zoning codes and (chiefly) parking minimums. If you’re like me, you probably assumed that these codes had their feet in good reasons for existing, but they actually don’t. Parking minimums are often based on numbers that are essentially snatched out of thin air and not evidence-based, and many other cities simply copy what other cities are doing. Aggressive exclusionary zoning often has its feet in racism, and it’s a big reason why only US cities seem to experience urban decay. This is something you can change! Go to your city council meetings, network with people there! Go to your city planning board meetings, read your city’s zoning laws, and go give them very specific shit about it! These offices are infinitely more accessible and responsive than state and federal legislators, and you might be surprised to find that some of them even agree with you! It doesn’t take much effort, it’s pretty much free, and the cops can’t stop you!

      • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 months ago

        “Just build” only helps the developers who get to build and thus profit more. They’ll just build luxury condos and “investment properties” since that’s the most profitable.

        There’s more expensive housing units sitting empty than there are unhoused people. The problem isn’t a lack of housing, it’s a lack of AFFORDABLE housing. That and it’s WAY too easy for landlords to evict people.

          • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            Yep, but still need new protections such as rent control and better enforcement of the ones currently in place.

            “Just build public housing” is better than “just build housing”, but stil woefully inadequate to tackle a problem much more complex and insidious than simple supply and demand.