Failures, drug addicts, lazy, alcoholics, repulsive, ignorant, criminals are some ways some of you might describe homeless people. Would you spare a few dollars to a homeless man, even though you dont know whether it would go to food or a drug dealer? Should you even be responsible for a grown man's well being? You may walk down the street today and look down at a homeless person sitting on the street and decide to save an extra dollar for your fat wallet. I know who I'm loathingly looking down at walking down the street and it's not the homeless. The homeless that are victoms of drug and alcohol abuse are immensely shamed and ridiculed. Do you really think they want to choose drugs or alcohol over a home? These homeless people are ill mentally and physically and should be treated like patients rather than delinquents. Source D demonstrates …show more content…
You may argue that you earn your money and shouldnt have to be responsible for another person. Not everyone has the same experiences in life, some people growing up were not exposed to a positive lifestyle, or guidance into education. You never know the person's story, so dont ever assume. Maybe they did grow up in a positive life style but headed down the wrong path. Or perhaps they lost their job and couldnt afford rent. It doesnt matter how the homeless fell to the bottom, it matters how we are going to pick them up. What makes you feel that it's alright to step over a homeless person with your stilettos and designer bag? Source E indicates how people fear and push away the homeless. “The mother grows impatient and pushes the stroller before her, bearing the dollar like a cross.”(Source E). These acts of “kindness” is what keeps the homeless, homeless. They become so numb and habituated to the lifeless life of being homess, feeling so alone that it is impossible to move forward. Though you still say it is their
Homelessness is basically another form of poverty except more extreme, yet society treats it as if it was on another spectrum of problems. Some in society stigmatize this population by saying things like: they’re homeless because they are drug addicts, alcoholics, they don’t want to work and just live off the government for free. What many forget to think about are the factors that have these people on the street, or the fact that they are not only experiencing personal hardship by being without a permanent residence but emotional ones as well. Add the fact they are sometimes discriminated against and excluded by society, and you will realize you are looking at one of the most vulnerable populations.
A homeless person is an individual without a permanent, stable housing situation who either spends his or her nights on the streets or in temporary facilities, such as shelters and abandoned buildings. Throughout history, society has been “holding the poor, rape or incest victims, minorities, or the handicapped responsible for their misfortunes” (Zur). Society has been blaming the homeless for being in the position they are in. However, upon closer inspection, it must be noted that “children under the age of 18 accounts for 39% of the homeless population…battered women who live in poverty are often forced to choose between abusive relationships and homelessness…[and] 40% of homeless men have served in the armed forces” (Who Is Homeless?). It is clear that those who are homeless are not
After the decion made by Ocean Springs' officals to remove our benches from the library, I took the liberty of talking to a few homeless people. Well, what the officals don't understand is that being homeless means dealing with the fact that no one can or is willing to help you find a means of shelter or food. It is constantly playing with the idea in your head that everyone around you is against you, at every waking moment of the day. It is a very dehumanizing, bleak outlook towards yourself, and at the other people around you. It is honestly no wonder that many turn to alchol or drugs to try and cope with this feeling. With that being said, let us remember that they are our neighbors, whether they have homes or not, and we are called to treat
In the United States the homeless population continues to grow rapidly. Homelessness has been a public health issue for many decades. Often times these individuals feel as though society has turned a blind eye to them. This at risk population is seen by society as lazy or chose to live a life on the streets, but if one would examine this population closely would see that there is more to this at risk population than what society has labeled them as. The forces, which affect homelessness, are multifaceted. Social forces such as family breakdown, addictions, and mental illnesses are in combined with structural forces such as lack of low-cost housing, insufficient health services, and poor economic conditions. Many would
People become homeless for a number of reasons. These reasons are that create the stereotypes against those who have nothing in life. To judge people by what they do is normal. After all, what better way is there to judge a stranger by his words and his actions. The problem is when the homeless get judged wrongly, they are also treated unfairly. These stereotypes prevent the government and the society from giving the homeless the type of assistance that best suits to them. In order to clarify my thinking of homeless I have read three articles by different authors and they have different cases. These three articles discussed below and provide understanding on how the stereotypes of the homeless could be changed.
Every homeless person has their own story for why they don’t have a home or income whether it is they immigrated to a new country, a disability, or they lost their job. Whatever the situation is, they all have their unique story. We shouldn’t be quick to judge or assume it was their decision. Sometimes we aren’t able to control a situation and for some people they are forced to
According to the National Alliance to End Homelessness (2016), in January 2015 there were approximately 564,708 individuals living in emergency shelters or outdoors. With the baby boomer population aging, the rate of homelessness among this population has also increased.
Here in America there is a high percentage of homeless people. People often label homeless people as lazy, not willing to work, or they believe they are just looking for hand out. But that is just other people 's views on the homeless. My point of view is that maybe they had a rough start in life, or something happened to them or maybe they didn’t have a mother or father figure in their lives to tell them right from wrong. Other might of grown up in broken homes which might of caused them to be the way they are. Lastly, since they didn 't have anyone there for them they might of not known how to keep a job, known right from wrong and that is why they are put in a position that they are now. Although there is people who are actually suffering due to the fact that they are homeless there are people who pretend to be homeless just so they can get an extra couple bucks. That 's probably why some people actually believe that people are just lazy.
Mark Cuic director of love and care mistrice says, “I think a lot of people think homeless people are nothing, they’re febal, they are not all there. I think people take that opportunity to take what they have or be him.”
How do people view homeless people in public places like the park? Do they run away? Do they stare? Do they walk up to them and offer them a hot meal or money? What faces do they give them? Is it a frown or a smile? Unfortunately, there are millions who go without a proper place to sleep every night (1 pg 5). You will find these people sleeping in abandon cars, on the street, on park beaches, and even in hallway buildings. Anywhere they are able to find a place to sleep they will. I decided to do my observation study on how people react when they see homeless people in public places like the park. Why are they looked down on so negatively? These people that we are throwing to the side like yesterday trash is someone’s mother, father, brother, sister, or friend. We are simply ignoring them.
The homeless are the epitome of vulnerable. Alone, defenseless, and exposed. A person being alone and on the streets can begin to develop mental issues. They have no friends/family to talk to and confide in. A person who is already weak from the homeless lifestyle can be attacked by anyone; other homeless people fighting for their life or the unjust people of this world. This could leave them injured without aid. The world can be a harsh place, and being exposed to the weather can be the worst factor. The summers can be boiling hot and the winters cold as
There are millions of homeless people out on the street. When you walk down the street, you may not know if a person passing you by has a place to sleep tonight. Homeless people could look like people you could go to school or work with. Some of them are ashamed by the fact that they are or were homeless, and they carry that shame with them for the rest of their lives. In Text 3, the book starts of with the main character finding her mother looking through the garbage on the street.
The word “homeless” is used to describe many different kinds of people with a variety of problems; the “homeless” includes veterans, the mentally ill, the physically disabled or chronically ill, the elderly on fixed incomes, men, women, and families that have lost their source of income, single parents, runaway children who’ve been abused, alcoholics and drug addicts, immigrants, and traditional tramps, hobos, and transients (Martin, 1999). In “Helping and Hating the Homeless”, Peter Martin claims that although these people all have different backgrounds, histories, and reasons for not having a “home”, they are categorized and stereotyped by society and all looked down upon for being “homeless”. He addresses his readers, those that pass by
People are very ignorant towards homeless people, just how the prisoners are in Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” to the outside world. Society seems to view the homeless as nasty, dirty people who are drug addicts when in reality a lot of them are just in very unfortunate situations that they can't get themselves out of. Just like the rich may view the poor and the educated may view the uneducated, people are quick to judge things that they are ignorant of. I know this based on first hand knowledge and experience about how it to be
In the article “Should You Give Money to Homeless People”, it is stated that six out of ten homeless respondents admitted problems with alcohol or drugs. Which has lead them to analyze and make the statement that the money they receive from people they misuse it by buying narcotics. But I believe that not all homeless people dedicate themselves to drugs or alcohol. Many of them try to find a better future for themselves or family