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They also live in the woods. There are many homeless camps In suburban areas.
When I lived in Canada I didn’t reall understand tent cities as the climate there would never allow for it year round. But I don’t see how they’re a huge negative impact
When I lived in Canada I didn’t reall understand tent cities as the climate there would never allow for it year round. But I don’t see how they’re a huge negative impact
Florida of course, especially southern Florida, has few cold days. That is why we get a good amount of homeless people. Often, people do not know these camps are even there.
If Reagan didn't close all the mental institutions then these people would have somewhere to go...but they don't
Cute little story. Might want to try reality sometime.
Quote:
In California, for example, the number of patients in state mental hospitals reached a peak of 37,500 in 1959 when Edmund G. Brown was Governor, fell to 22,000 when Ronald Reagan attained that office in 1967, and continued to decline under his administration and that of his successor, Edmund G. Brown Jr. The senior Mr. Brown now expresses regret about the way the policy started and ultimately evolved. ''They've gone far, too far, in letting people out,'' he said in an interview.
Quote:
Dr. Robert H. Felix, who was then director of the National Institute of Mental Health and a major figure in the shift to community centers, says now on reflection: ''Many of those patients who left the state hospitals never should have done so. We psychiatrists saw too much of the old snake pit, saw too many people who shouldn't have been there and we overreacted. The result is not what we intended, and perhaps we didn't ask the questions that should have been asked when developing a new concept, but psychiatrists are human, too, and we tried our damnedest.''
Dr. John A. Talbott, president of the American Psychiatric Association, said, ''The psychiatrists involved in the policy making at that time certainly oversold community treatment, and our credibility today is probably damaged because of it.'' He said the policies ''were based partly on wishful thinking, partly on the enormousness of the problem and the lack of a silver bullet to resolve it, then as now.''
Pretty good article on the history of deinstitutionalization.
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