Finlandia está resolviendo el problema de los sin techo con la iniciativa "vivienda primero": un pequeño departamento y asesoramiento sin condiciones previas. 4 de cada 5 personas regresan a una vida estable y es más barato para el gobierno: scoop.me/housing-first-finland…
in reply to Anxo Fernández Dopico

¿Por qué la BBC eludió que el 88% de la gente que duerme en la calle son hombres? ¿Y qué podemos hacer al respecto?
medium.com/@Carnaina/por-qu%C3…
in reply to Anxo Fernández Dopico

There are so many inconsistencies in this article, it is just totally incongruent. They have to sign a lease agreement and pay rent. Wait, wasn't the reason they are homeless to begin with is the fact that they didn't pay rent? I bet the renters agreement says something like, you can't bring illegal drugs in here, and they do and get kicked out. Where does the money for this come from? Taxes, so everyone else pays more and works harder so some can do nothing? Free stuff sounds great, communism sounds attractive, but history has shown when people lack incentive to produce, they don't, then instead of a handful being homeless and hungry, EVERYBODY ends up homeless and hungry. If you want to genuinely help these people you need to get them off their illicit addictions and clean of mental health issues, and if they don't have any skills, trained or educated enough to function in society, I don't see any indications of that happening here. As the world population ages and the number of people who can't support themselves because of old age health issues, it becomes increasingly important that those who can be productive are to the greatest amount possible, else the entire society is going to go down in one great flaming heap. This means you need to socially incentivize and reward people for being productive, not give them free stuff for sitting on their asses when they are not physically incapacitated.