Admiral Beez
Superstar
Watching this vid makes me worried for Toronto's future, especially downtown east where I live.
It does, but it will seemingly test your attention span.
You're probably not going to get much traction with that here Admiral; however, I agree with the general thesis. It's the same here but just, in typical Toronto fashion, in more moderation and with the geographic reality that it's too cold here to live outside for much of the year.
You should attend a local meeting about any issue to deal with homelessness or a shelter or whatever. Professional activists who rarely are from the area or have anything to do with the purpose of the meeting flood the room shouting down anyone who wants to discuss the actual agenda of the meeting. They're shouting down the local community members, silencing discussion, intimidating people; people ironically who in my neighbourhood are overwhelming politically left-voting and highly sympathetic and concerned with social justice issues.
@Northern Light I‘ve ignored your posts for so long now that I‘ve forgotten you exist here. I don’t know what you’ve posted above, but I can only assume based on your history that’s it’s to admonish both me and @TrickyRicky for posting something that’s irked you. I expect there’s also your requisite condescending jibes masked as suggestions how we can all improve. @Northern Light, post whatever rubbish you wish, IDC. IMO this forum is a better place without you in my feed.
In 2018 I stayed in Seattle as part of an Alaskan cruise. I was shocked at how the downtown was surrendered to those with addictions and mentally illness. I would watch the Seattle police do nothing as folks defecated on the sidewalk, ran half naked, screaming up the middle of the road, while others injected drugs or begged for money right in front of the transit stations. Then there’s homeless sleeping in parks, on sidewalks, benches, etc... and the smell of urine is pervasive. The solutions in the video seem doable: enforce the laws against public intoxication, drug use and nuisance; provide housing for everyone, including supportive housing and treatment for those with addiction and mental health issues. Washington state and the city of Seattle have a massive tax base, they could afford to do this. The solution is right in front of them, and the above video covers most of the issues and how to solve them. I thought Democrats were about tax and spend, but in Seattle and San Francisco they seem to be more about neglect .You're probably not going to get much traction with that here Admiral; however, I agree with the general thesis. It's the same here but just, in typical Toronto fashion, in more moderation and with the geographic reality that it's too cold here to live outside for much of the year.
I have attended a few, especially the Regent Park redevelopment meetings. I don’t recall anyone shouting down the speakers. Instead I found the meetings informative and a nice way to meet the neighbours. Though I have not attended meetings about homelessness or shelters, and the way you describe them makes me glad.You should attend a local meeting about any issue to deal with homelessness or a shelter or whatever.
In 2018 I stayed in Seattle as part of an Alaskan cruise. I was shocked at how the downtown was surrendered to those with addictions and mentally illness. I would watch the Seattle police do nothing as folks defecated on the sidewalk, ran half naked, screaming up the middle of the road, while others injected drugs or begged for money right in front of the transit stations. Then there’s homeless sleeping in parks, on sidewalks, benches, etc... and the smell of urine is pervasive. The solutions in the video seem doable: enforce the laws against public intoxication, drug use and nuisance; provide housing for everyone, including supportive housing and treatment for those with addiction and mental health issues. Washington state and the city of Seattle have a massive tax base, they could afford to do this. The solution is right in front of them, and the above video covers most of the issues and how to solve them.
Good points. I remember reading about Tori Stafford’s abduction and murder in Woodstock and how the girl was introduced to her killer through her mother’s opioid dealer. I thought to myself, that’s crazy, until I learned that much of the town were opioid addicts.The icing on the cake? These very rural towns in the US (and Canada) are often the loci of opioid and fentanyl abuse.
Seattle’s approach of “talk progressive and still do nothing“ seems equally nefarious. If you‘re going to do nothing, stop the virtue signalling and at least be honest about it.but we all know it is more convenient to talk tough and do nothing
Seattle’s approach of “talk progressive and still do nothing“ seems equally nefarious. If you‘re going to do nothing, at least be honest about it.
I’d accept a 50% property tax increase if it cleaned up our streets in the ways you suggest above. I don’t live in a bubble.
Good points. I remember reading about Tori Stafford’s abduction and murder in Woodstock and how the girl was introduced to her killer through her mother’s opioid dealer. I thought to myself, that’s crazy, until I learned that much of the town were opioid addicts.
Five years ago I hurt my sciatic nerve and crawled into emerg at Toronto General. The doctor looked at me for five minutes and I left with a script for the opioid Percocet. I took one, and said to myself, I feel like dizzy, hazy crap, why do these have any street value? I took them to Shoppers for disposal. But it must give others some sort of high.
I don’t see many obvious addicts in downtown east anymore. In fact Allan Gardens park has become a more pleasant place to walk. People of all sorts are sitting on benches and chatting. Is Toronto doing something Seattle is not, or maybe I’m just seeing my little piece.
That was a good article. The first of three pillars, “that there’s no such thing as a soft or hard drug, only healthy and unhealthy relationships with drugs;” would be a big change for North American thinking. With its legalization and now active participation in its production and distribution, governments at different levels across North America have clearly decided that cannabis is a soft drug. But crack cocaine and opioids will be a big step.Their problem seem to be they can't decide what they want (it's pretty clear there are different camps of "progressives" - and they can't agree on the course of action). Also, and this is an "unpleasant" reality - you will always have a certain percentage of people who will always remain dependent, and will require support in order to stay housed - is the public ready to deal with the cost of this reality as a commitment?
The Portuguese experiment is worth trying:
Portugal’s radical drugs policy is working. Why hasn’t the world copied it?
The long read: Since it decriminalised all drugs in 2001, Portugal has seen dramatic drops in overdoses, HIV infection and drug-related crimewww.theguardian.com
AoD