183 points
*

This is from the city where it’s illegal to be homeless. One man even collected over $100,000 in fines for being homeless.

Yeah, that’ll help.

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111 points

Man that sounded wild to me, so I dug around a bit and it’s fucking true. Although the amount is closer to $110,000 it’s still insane.

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94 points

Hey, we heard you can’t afford a house, so we’re charging you fines in the amount of what it would have cost to buy a house…we’re so cool! We solved homelessness! Because now if you want to be homeless, it actually costs more to NOT buy a house. So you may as well just buy a house!

We did it guys! We ended the concept of homelessness! High five!

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47 points

I mean why don’t the homeless just buy a house? Are they stupid?

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19 points

we’re charging you fines in the amount of what it would have cost to buy a house

Oh how I wish I could buy a house for that kind of money. You should go look at what housing costs in Canadian cities.

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9 points
*

Yeah, it was from awhile ago. I couldn’t remember if it was one or two hundred thousand. I’ve corrected my comment to be more accurate. Here’s an article on it.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/montreal-homeless-man-100k-fines-1.3473707

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26 points

Aaaah, I love living in a capitalist hellscape

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16 points

What happens if the man does not pay? Will they put him in jail?

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47 points

Canada does not have debtor’s jail. Nothing will really happen except that more fines will keep racking up. No collection agency is going to take on a homeless person’s debt, so eventually those debts will just disappear, assuming he makes no effort to pay them off.

In the meantime, if he tries to escape homelessness, it’s a lot harder nowadays to find an apartment with a landlord that doesn’t check your credit, and 100k+ in unpaid debts looks really bad.

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-8 points
Deleted by creator
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21 points

In the ultimate act of irony… Maybe they’ll put him in a house.

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3 points
*

It’s not “being homeless” that is illegal, though. It’s drinking in public, begging or sleeping in the metro. And it sure is tough not staying in the metro during winter. There are some organisms that can provide shelter, but not enough for everyone, and it usually cost a couple dollars, which not everyone have everyday. And it’s a real problem on both sides, as the metro was not meant to become a shelter for the homeless, and people have been complaining more and more they feel unsafe there.

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31 points

“The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread.” - Anatole France

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20 points

Sure “being homeless” isn’t the crime itself but you’re being naive if you don’t think the laws make homelessness illegal. What are they supposed to do? Go find a piece of land no one has claim to and freeze to death?

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-10 points
*

And what are we supposed to do? Legalize all drugs and being drunk in public just to avoid having to fine them, and install beds everywhere in the Underground City (and in this post’s case, in emergency stairwells at the Complexe Desjardins) with no regard for their regular use?
Sure, let’s work on proposing more accessible legal alternatives. Just take note that these laws weren’t created to punish the homeless, but to have a clean and safe public space - which have been degrading for some time now.

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8 points
*

La Maison du Père costs 1 dollar a night, and they’ll let you in if you explain that you can’t pay the $1.

Some just don’t like shelters. They don’t like the rules, other people, or fear getting their stuff stolen.

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6 points

Which orgasms provide shelter?

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3 points

Organisms, and probably that kind of beast that Luke Skywalker cuts open and uses for a sleeping bag to survive the cold.

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2 points

The Tauntaun beast

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2 points

As someone else said, there is La Maison du Père that provide (almost) free shelter.
Otherwise, there are provincial, municipal and private orgasms that help as they can with some services for reinsertion. Like the “L’Itinéraire” magazine.
The SPVM (police department) are also there to help during interventions with people with mental illness, in crisis, or to give references for some government’s services. During great cold they are often outside to distribute goods and coffee. They don’t just give fines.

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-3 points

Here they made being homeless illegal so they can force people into shelters/mental help/rehab/etc.

Much better than letting them shoot up heroin in parks all day.

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1 point

What a fucked up country.

I mean every country has it’s problems but jeysus wept.

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74 points

Unhoused? Has homeless as a word been banned?

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43 points

Not sure about Canada, but in the US:

Homeless = no permanent residence, which also includes couch surfing, parents and children who just fled an abusive family member and are temporarily ltaying with friends or relatives, and people who are living in their car. All people without a home.

Unhoused = homeless people that don’t have a roof over their heads. Might include living in a car.

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24 points
*

They are synonyms. Please don’t make things up.

Edit: to all the knee-jerk downvoting. This is literally a quote from an article the user himself supplied as proof that there is a difference.

Unhoused is probably the most popular alternative to the word “homeless.” It’s undoubtedly the one I see most often recommended by advocates. But it doesn’t have a meaningful difference in connotation from the more common term, “homeless.”

It’s literally just a pc synonym of homeless.

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10 points
*

They are not. I work with data collections on students and have had to explain the difference to people who don’t understand that a kid who is kicked out of their home and is staying with friends is homeless even if they are not out on the street for federal reporting.

Homelessness defined in law: https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/42/11302#

A more thorough explanation that contrasts the terms: https://invisiblepeople.tv/homeless-houseless-unhoused-or-unsheltered-which-term-is-right/

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29 points

I think the idea is to put the responsibility for housing onto society/authority as opposed to the victim.

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9 points

Doesn’t homeless imply its society’s fault too?

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1 point

Perhaps to some people, but to me it does sound like a homeless person just happens to be without.

Whereas an unhoused person has been let down by whoever is responsible for ensuring people are housed.

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20 points

Welcome to the euphemism treadmill

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18 points
*

In the US they mean different things, as homeless includes people living in other people’s homes. That can include people whose house just burnt down and are living with friends or family because they lost their permanent residence (home). Unhoused is about where they are staying.

People on the street are homeless and unhoused.

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-4 points

And you really think people use and understand these terms like that?

You may be correct in the academic sense, but completely wrong in all other senses.

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10 points

Language has power. You’ll notice successful effort on the right to get pundits to refer to Oil as Energy. Oil has negative implications, energy has positive. Homeless has negative implications for the person, unhoused has negative implications for the government.

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4 points

There’s also the difference in how the word is used more as an adjective than a noun. In the same way calling someone a disabled is a lot more dehumanizing than saying they are a person with a disability.

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59 points

What about the people who work there? Are they trying to make them quit then become homeless and leave the mall too?

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30 points

According to the article, it plays in the emergency exit stairwells, a place that if you’re using it you should be trying to leave as quickly as possible.

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54 points

If I was escaping a fire, and the stairwell had baby shark playing, I’d walk back into the fire.

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19 points

I really don’t want to die with Baby Shark being the last song I hear

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6 points

Descending the stairwell to escape a fire during the “Run Away” verse could be funny

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18 points

No they are supposedly insane already.

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0 points

Icecream van

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42 points

We can solve homelessness once and for all by making every part of civilization just suck as much as possible. If literally no part of our society is capable of supporting safety and life, then all the homeless people will just move along

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12 points
*

Homelessness? Oh, you mean unhousedness! Many of them are also unreadful and non-jobulated.

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-1 points

What’s the point of your comment?

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9 points

Not to speak for them, but likely that the meteoric rise of the word “unhoused” as used in the title of this post is a ridiculous trend. Homeless people need shelter, not a new and supposedly less offensive word to describe them. Not to mention “unhoused” does not even sound even remotely nicer than “homeless.”

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35 points

What’s with the wording of this title? “Unhoused people” instead of “Homeless”/“Homeless people”

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25 points

It’s like the difference between calling someone wittless and uneducated.

One implies that’s just how the person is, the other implies a failing of society/family.

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24 points

I like the word unhoused, it implies they should just be housed if they are homeless. Everyone should be housed, even if they don’t own a home

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13 points

A home is an abstract thing, a house is a quantifiable object.

Also it kind of implies that society should provide a house for them.

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9 points

Homeless and “actually sleeps on the streets” are different things.

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6 points

If you are crashing on someone’s couch then you are housed but still homeless. It’s a bit of a dilution of the usual meaning of homeless but it also emphasises that housing is very precarious for the homeless.

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4 points

It’s another one of those whack a mole words people are pushing. Once everyone gives in and we start using unhoused, it will suddenly switch to uninhabited because it’s racists to houses or something!

It’s annoying as hell, because instead of fixing the issues we’re mastrubating about words and alienating people that we need to fix the issue.

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1 point

I heard a really good explanation of this on NPR. Homeless is a label put on a person, similar to saying a person is a redhead. The implication of saying that someone is homeless is that it defines who they are, that it cannot be easily changed.

Unhoused is more descriptive of the situation that a person is in. This is a condition that can be changed, it isn’t who the person is.

As I revisit this and think it through though, it seems like another way of pushing the goal. There are absolutely negative connotations with the word homeless, but the same venom will eventually attach to unhoused as well.

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