The escalating homelessness crisis in San Francisco and Los Angeles is drawing attention to government inefficiency and economic factors. San Francisco's homeless families are being termed as an 'invisible population', and capitalism is being blamed for the issue by a wealthy SF Supervisor. Los Angeles, on the other hand, spent $67 million to house just 255 of the 46,000 homeless people, costing about $263k per person. In 2023, nearly 22,000 people experiencing homelessness were moved into temporary housing, highlighting the magnitude of the crisis.
https://t.co/3LHCjN2Uin The SF Supervisor who blames capitalism for homelessness is a capitalist who makes well over six figures a year due to capitalism, is living large in a house worth millions, and can set his children up for generational success. He’s not homeless! Maybe…
https://t.co/3LHCjN2Uin The mayor who blames capitalism for homelessness is a capitalist who makes well over six figures a year due to capitalism, is living large in a house worth millions, and can set his children up for generational success. He’s not homeless! Maybe he…
San Francisco Supervisor Acknowledges Homeless Problem, Blames Capitalism https://t.co/EELmtMVYVq
San Francisco Democrat says homelessness crisis in his district is ‘absolutely the result of capitalism’
Nearly 22,000 people experiencing homelessness moved into temporary housing in 2023. Here's what we found when we analyzed the data https://t.co/YoYK5c5es1
“A large, unsheltered homeless population is not an inevitable part of human or urban life, and there is real harm and risk involved when solutions are not implemented early or are underfunded,” @hannamlove and @lohplaces write. https://t.co/lPzrKdr1i0
‘The invisible population’: How San Francisco is failing its homeless families https://t.co/iA0K0UNxi4
Los Angeles, California spent $67 million on an initiative to house the 46,000 homeless people in the city. One year later, only 255 homeless people have been housed through the program. A rate of $263k per person. Government efficiency in a nutshell.
Los Angeles, California spent $67 million on an initiative to house homeless people. One year later, only 255 homeless people have been housed through the program. There are 46k homeless people in LA. Government efficiency in a nutshell.
How Homelessness is Becoming a Business in San Francisco | @JConrBOrtega | 14-Minute Preview Watch the full episode: https://t.co/1wvztdLkZn https://t.co/q5WBOqnscr