Tiny home on a bicycle provides shelter for the chronic homeless(tinytinyhomes.ca)
tinytinyhomes.ca
Tiny home on a bicycle provides shelter for the chronic homeless
https://tinytinyhomes.ca/
20 comments
I blame that populous who requires a centralized authority to do things for them.
I volunteer in kitchens and give direct. I befriend my locals and help them pay for their medicine if they ask (unbelievably, the homeless at times still have to cover their prescription costs.)
I don’t prescribe the alienation and hostility I see my fellow jackass American exhibit. You see them as “them” or “those”. You’re (karma critic) the “them” or “those”, these are a collective of individuals bound only by your dissociative contempt.
I don’t prescribe the alienation and hostility I see my fellow jackass American exhibit. You see them as “them” or “those”. You’re (karma critic) the “them” or “those”, these are a collective of individuals bound only by your dissociative contempt.
Good bless Ryan Donais.
I was homeless for five years until four months ago. These thing would have been a xdream for me, and frankly, I could living in one right now. Living in my minivan was fine but these would be a step up.
And if you look around at all the homeless, just know it is not because it is an impossible problem to solve. It is only because we do not have enough compassion in our hearts.
I was homeless for five years until four months ago. These thing would have been a xdream for me, and frankly, I could living in one right now. Living in my minivan was fine but these would be a step up.
And if you look around at all the homeless, just know it is not because it is an impossible problem to solve. It is only because we do not have enough compassion in our hearts.
I hope you're in a better situation now!
And indeed, this is about compassion and empathy.
I've never been homeless but if that was the case I would love it if some guy just came out of nowhere and gave me one of these things.
And indeed, this is about compassion and empathy.
I've never been homeless but if that was the case I would love it if some guy just came out of nowhere and gave me one of these things.
Homelessness is not a technology issue and can't be solved by creating homes on bicycles.
I'm not being snarky, but I did not gather from his efforts that he was trying to solve homelessness. This is a case of someone perceiving a need and attempting to address it in a non-profit way within his skill-set.
It’s worth a try, one bicycle home at a time.
Upon the heap of many issues involved in “homelessness” is wedged the modern lie that conventional housing and lifestyle is natural or working for us all. In addition to drugs and psychosis and devastating circumstance of impoverishment, there are also those who cannot escape living as a part of the open streets of the world.
Upon the heap of many issues involved in “homelessness” is wedged the modern lie that conventional housing and lifestyle is natural or working for us all. In addition to drugs and psychosis and devastating circumstance of impoverishment, there are also those who cannot escape living as a part of the open streets of the world.
Actually yes, Toronto's temperatures hit -20C with a lot of snowfall, this guy is giving people in need a chance.
Not your effort, not your money, not your time. What is your problem with this, exactly? That you didn't get a fee out of it?
Not your effort, not your money, not your time. What is your problem with this, exactly? That you didn't get a fee out of it?
How many lives would this save? Is this the most efficient way to do it? Is it enough? Schools are closed this time of the year and that public infrastructure, including community centres can and should be used to temporarily house and offer help (mental health is a huge issue that goes hand in hand with homelessness) they need.
>How many lives would this save? Is this the most efficient way to do it? Is it enough?
Who cares?
When was the last time you helped a fellow human being? Could you answer that question honestly?
Who cares?
When was the last time you helped a fellow human being? Could you answer that question honestly?
Every time I vote (in three countries) I help select the people who have the proposals to actually solve, or at least mitigate, the problems that affect my society. Every time I pay taxes I help finance those programs. That’s not my speciality though, and I won’t pretend I’m helping when I propose something that’ll have negligible impact in the overall picture.
At a societal level, sure. And we should try to solve homelessness broadly.
But in the meantime, why not ease the suffering of those who need and want a warm, safe bed?
But in the meantime, why not ease the suffering of those who need and want a warm, safe bed?
The best way not to solve a problem is to solve it the wrong way. I don’t wish to criticise the guy, and his actions come from the right place, but this is a distraction, and if we invest on it, we’ll fail to invest in actually solving the problem for good, which is hard, unpalatable, and implies structural changes that’ll upset a lot of people who need to be upset or the problem will never be solved, ever.
Maybe you were never homeless. This is not about "tech", it is about compassion.
Homlessness is a compassion problem.
Homlessness is a compassion problem.
Homelessness is a structural problem. Our society doesn’t automatically give everyone the right to live, and that has to change. A lot.
Sometimes technology can be used as a hack to workaround regulation that makes affordable housing illegal.
Toronto massively expanded shelther programs throughout covid via fairly expensive transitional housing units (i.e. hotels) that cost 300m for ~2000 spaces, or 150k per unit / year. It's structurally not sustainable and the political solution is basically tell homeless they're SOL. The hacky work around is tent cities in parks during summer and an insulated box during winter.
And Australia has managed to get into the same bind.