• Snapz@lemmy.world
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      Seriously… No hyperbole, I’d imagine the majority of people that would enthusiastically vote for trump in this next electron after he led a violent insurrection to try to end American democracy (and had actual discussed plans for the military to shoot American civilians if the overthrow were successful and there was an opposition movement) actively suffer from a listed disorder and are in need of treatment.

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      That’s the whole point of the bill, it gives those definitions. You could read it yourself if you want.

      • Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca
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        I mean, I don’t disagree with the principle (haven’t read it to see if it’s actually feasible though).

        Either a homeless person suffering from addiction and mental health issues seeks help, and gets better, or they can’t get better and go to prison where they are sheltered and fed and kept off the streets where they probably would die in a few years anyways, or commit a crime that may harm someone and go to prison anyways?

        It depends if the state is willing to pay for that help, because if not it’s just a law to shuttle everyone into prison.

    • CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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      Federal courts have already ruled that you can’t throw people in jail for being homeless, so I don’t see that happening. The headline mentions treatment which doesn’t have to be in-patient necessarily.

      I’m definitely on the fence here as I’m no fan of authoritarianism, but on the other hand I’m no fan of homeless meth addicts living in a clapped out RV on the side of the road, stealing catalytic converters by night and standing in the road shouting at cars by day. Something has to give here as people like this have been taking advantage of this messy situation.

      • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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        Federal courts have already ruled that you can’t throw people in jail for being homeless,

        No, that doesnt stop them from making up some bullshit charge though. This is America, afterall.

        • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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          Not really. This is California, which is very different from the rest of America. Especially when it comes to policing the homeless.

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    The new law, which reforms the state’s conservatorship system, expands the definition of “gravely disabled” to include people who are unable to provide themselves basic needs such as food and shelter due to an untreated mental illness or unhealthy drugs and alcohol use. Local governments say current state laws leave their hands tied if a person refuses to receive help.

    The law is designed to make it easier for authorities to provide care to people with untreated mental illness or addictions to alcohol and drugs, many of whom are homeless.

    I work in mental health in another state, and I’ve been wishing for a law like this since I started my career. I don’t believe people who have any sort of mental illness should be forced into treatment, but laws enacted at the behest of rights groups for the mentally ill have gone too far (although it’s certainly better that we have those laws than don’t). Some people are so sick they’re their own insurmountable obstacle to care, and that would be fine if their condition only affected them, but it often doesn’t. For their sakes and that of those around them, I agree some people should be forced to get their issues treated.

    • TransientPunk@lemmy.world
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      I have a nosy neighbor that also happens to be a social worker. She made my life hell last year by getting cops involved in a situation that didn’t necessitate them, and additionally forced me to go through all sorts of hoops and psychological examinations to prove my state of mind. This law, despite it’s good intentions, makes me super nervous after having gone through that BS

        • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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          It is rational to fear that this authority would be abused, based on the long history of abuses of authority in the USA.

          We should react this way anytime any law is passed that gives the govt more authority to restrict our freedom.

        • CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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          But the witches actually exist in this scenario. If you’ve spent any time living on the west coast over the past decade, you’ve surely seen these people with uncontrolled mental illness roaming the streets and causing havoc.

          What sort of solution would you propose for people so deep into mental illness that they can’t or won’t get themselves out if it? Demanding that they continue living on the streets isn’t a very humane solution either.

          • Not_mikey@lemmy.world
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            roaming the streets and causing havoc

            What is havoc to you? I live in San Francisco and the homeless and addicts don’t really bother people outside of them existing , which does seem to bother a lot of people. They do shoplift and car break ins are pretty common but it’s not like they’re running around brandishing knives. Most of them are opiate addicts, and you aren’t aggressive or chaotic on heroine.

            I agree we need more mental health and addiction treatment but you can’t force people into it. If someone is in pain and don’t see a reason to live outside of drugs, locking them up won’t fix that. Either you keep them there forever or they’ll relapse as soon as they get out. We need to address the societal issues causing this instead of the band aid solution of detainment.

            • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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              I live in San Francisco and the homeless and addicts don’t really bother people outside of them existing

              Then you’re a goddamn liar because there is no way in hell you live in the city and don’t see the damage (literal physical damage) they do.

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                This is from a year ago, did you have this saved?

                It’s a city of 10 million people , crazy fucked up shit is bound to happen, homeless people or not. Here in SF a tech CEO stabbed another CEO multiple times and left them in the streets, you don’t see us trying to detain CEOs.

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                  I don’t see the point in arguing about this. You said they mostly keep to themselves, maybe a little pretty crime here and there (as if even that is okay)… That has NOT been my experience and I brought one especially-egregious receipt to make my point. The other poster who mentioned clapped-out RVs and catalytic converter theft must also be from LA.

          • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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            If you’ve spent any time living on the west coast over the past decade

            The majority of people in this thread have not, and it shows.

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      It’s always “I believe that (subordinate group) should get basic rights, but… (and then something about being inconvenienced).”

      It says at the end of the article that there’s already a law that does that for certain diagnoses and at a judge’s discretion. I don’t see why it would ever need to go farther than that. I’ve worked in and been in mental health and addiction facilities and they already use mental health diagnoses and medication to subjugate people living through homelessness and the disease of addiction. Conservatorship is not the answer to someone not being able to pay rent. It will be used to diagnose people who are not mentally ill just to keep them from being an “eyesore.” It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that. You also can’t force someone into addiction treatment and expect it to magically work. It’s their life, they have to want to quit. We’re going to waste so many resources forcing people into addiction treatment and it won’t do anything except to make them resentful of the system. Even worse, if you lock someone away who doesn’t want to quit and their tolerance for drugs goes down, then they get out and use, they will definitely OD. So many people die or nearly die that way after getting out of jails and prisons for victimless crimes like addiction and homelessness.

      The answer is making treatment more available to people. Then giving them a place to live and resources to live on while they find jobs and reintegrate into society. Only having (forced) treatment will accomplish nothing and likely make the problem worse while allowing authoritarianism into California. This law is fucking disgusting, dehumanizing, and scary. We should be ashamed of ourselves as a society that this is how we treat our most vulnerable as a society.

      ETA: This is how available addiction and mental health treatment is to Californians with Medi-Cal: it’s not. Miles of red tape and bureaucracy that people with no resources or transportation are somehow supposed to navigate, just to have an indefinite wait list at the end of it. Ask me how I know. If treatment were made available to meet people where they are, it would be far more effective, if paired with reentry programs that actually treat them like people.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        and then something about being inconvenienced

        Holy privilege. Tell me you’ve never lived in an area with schizophrenic zombies roaming the streets.

        The answer is making treatment more available to people.

        These people do it have the mental capacity to accept treatment. They literally cannot make a decision about anything.

        We’re not talking about someone with depression here, we’re talking about people whose higher brain functions are not working at all.

        You’re looking at this through the limited range of your own mental health experience, not realizing how radically different it is for the level of mental psychosis big-city homeless have.

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      You know the church is going to step in and fuck up the chances of these people ever getting real help, right?

      The people with the least won’t have the resources to get proper treatment and religious groups will get license to, “have God fix them.” Next, religious groups will start seeking ways to expand what is considered mental illness applying their own christian morality. Before you know it the gays will be forced into conversion therapy or some archaic equivalent.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        I am reeeeeeally sick of the way every time an article comes out about a California law, someone from Indiana or Mississippi or whatever hellhole comes out of the woodwork to explain how it will be abused because they think all of America is like their own little hellhole.

  • centof@lemm.ee
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    expands the definition of “gravely disabled” to include people who are unable to provide themselves basic needs such as food and shelter

    So if you can’t afford rent in CA, you are gravely disabled.

    Sounds like a ‘great’ idea. All cops have to do is say you misuse drugs or alcohol or get a someone to diagnose you with a mental illness and BAM your no longer free. I see no possible way for this to be abused. /s

  • xc2215x@lemmy.world
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    It could be good if it gets mentally ill people help more often. The issue that could happen is if it is used to claim people are mentally ill who are not.

        • TotallynotJessica@lemmy.world
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          The issue is that being rendered homeless could cause people to develop mental illness. There is a strong correlation between rates of mental illness, and income inequality. As income inequality increases, the percentage of the population with mental health issues increases.

          People who don’t want to fix income inequality and economic hardships are motivated to view mental health issues as the cause of people having economic troubles. They think that if they treat people’s mental illnesses, they’ll be to get a job, stable housing, and economic stability.

          However, the idea of increased mental health issues causing economic hardship begs the question, why are people in certain areas more mentally ill than others? Every individual is unique, and people certainly experience economic ruin from mental illness, but why are the rates higher in certain areas? Researchers could study numerous different variables, seeing if different things explain the correlation between inequality and illness, but it’s still impossible to definitively prove causation.

          The only way to determine causation is through experiments. Simulating economic hardship to see if it causes increased rates of mental disorders would be extremely unethical, and probably expensive. Quasi-experimental studies could test how well mentally ill people do on tests that try to measure ability to work a job, but the measure would need to be perfected over numerous studies, and could have major problems with validity. It’d be a huge undertaking.

          Truthfully, nobody knows for certain if treating mental illness instead of fixing our unequal system will be successful, or more akin to treating the symptoms rather than the disease. I personally think we could fix homelessness by improving the broken housing market, making housing a human right, reducing inequality, and providing mental healthcare treatment all at once. We also need to improve other variables that might be the cause of both inequality and illness. That way we will have the best chances of addressing the cause.

          • iegod@lemm.ee
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            This is a very popular perception. I don’t want to feel unsafe in my own back yard. During COVID the number of tents and encampments with high amounts of problems in Toronto public parks made certain ones more or less inaccessible by the public. There was some outcry when they were forcibly removed but overwhelmingly that move was applauded by Torontonians. We got to use our spaces again.

            I really wish we’d bring back institutional supports for the mentally unwell

  • tegs_terry@feddit.uk
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    Maybe if you hadn’t axed mental health services in the 80s this paradox wouldn’t have arisen.

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    Forcing people is always the best way to get good results. 🙄

    *** EDIT - Too many here seem to have forgotten that asylums were shut down in the 70’s and mental health patients shunted onto the streets to live without support networks in place.

    Stop trying to recreate those monstrosities.

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      There is a not unreasonable argument that allowing the mentally ill to “choose” to become addicted junkies living on the street in an extremely hostile and dangerous environment is not exactly the epitome of merciful empathy.

    • MelonYellow@lemmy.ca
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      As a Californian who also works in the ED, there are levels to mental illness. Clearly you haven’t seen the worst of it.

      • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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        I have lived on the streets, lived in rooming houses and been a social worker. I have seen the worst, and most often that’s happened when people are forced into compliance … ie: jump through these 20 hoops to be “free”.

        • Shazbot@lemmy.world
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          Given your experience what do you believe would be a good starting point towards caring for these individuals? What issues and solutions do you see that aren’t addressed? I understand I’m an outsider looking in on this issue, avoiding the mentality ill homeless like many others. But if my vote can go towards a better solutions I’d like to learn about them.

          • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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            Given your experience what do you believe would be a good starting point towards caring for these individuals?

            Housing first, then a guaranteed income. Right along side of those you have mental health workers and health workers visiting daily to assess the individual’s wants and needs. People have to be involved in their own lives, not just told what to do to “cure” themselves.

            What issues and solutions do you see that aren’t addressed?

            As a society we must stop condemning those who who are different, who don’t operate under the same rules as the gen pop. We have to start understanding that not everyone starts off with the same abilities and benefits, ie: an intact family structure, enough wealth to eat 3 times a day or go on a holiday.

            We have to see everyone as valuable simply because they are a human being, and entitled to our respect and care for the same reason.

            And we MUST immediately stop believing that money is in any way, shape or form more important than any person’s basic fundamental needs. Money is a tool to be used. People are not.

    • Fredselfish@lemmy.world
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      Also who paying for the help? If state then fine but your telling these people to get help our else and not paying for it then fuck you.

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      No one wants to recreate that.

      People were invisible, subjected to random unfounded experiments, abused, etc.

      There’s an opportunity to keep the program in the light, and get people serious help.

      • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        No one wants to recreate that.

        Well we the people don’t but I’d be rich if I bet that the police and the governments involved do. Maybe even the healthcare institutions that would be receiving them.

        Keep the program in the light

        This is it. The modern day ability to record and hold accountable could be used to prevent a return to Institutionalization ala pre-70s America.

    • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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      Which monstrosity? The one where people with mental health issues but choose not to treat them are left homeless because the state can’t do anything to compel treatment?

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    While this might be an important tool to help many who need it, I can’t help but wonder if this essentially criminalizes opting out of capitalism. Anyone that is homeless and uses drugs or has a mental illness can now be involuntarily committed, denying them the right to decide on that sort of life.

    • AnonTwo@kbin.social
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      How many people are going homeless while giving themselves a plethora of other issues all in the name of sticking it to capitalism??

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        I have no idea. I’m not suggesting people often become homeless because of ideological reasons, however many do opt out of the rat race and choose not to work and participate economically, which is functionally equivalent.

        • petong@lemmy.world
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          there is a difference between opting out of the rat race and screaming obscenities at people, defecating on the street, while strewing garbage everywhere.

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            I believe one need not exhibit such behaviors to be involuntarily committed under this law.

      • Not_mikey@lemmy.world
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        Maybe not capitalism in name but some vague idea of “the system”. The system that raised rents and lowered their wages and forced them into homelessness, and continually punishes them for being so. Addiction and other anti-social behaviors could be an act of rebellion against the pressures of this system. Not all of those pressures are capitalistic, some are just basic requirements for any society, but a large chunk of them are.

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      Opting out of capitalism does not give you the right to set up shanty towns in public spaces, or leave needles and feces all over the place. This law is necessary to give our public spaces back to everyone.

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        • We’ve criminalized merely existing in public spaces for too long, and I’m not aware of viable and accessible alternatives if one cannot afford shelter.
        • One need not leave needles and feces about to be committed under this law.
        • I’m troubled by the stereotypes regarding homeless people being promoted in this thread.
      • FontMasterFlex@lemmy.world
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        I mean it’s implied that they are going to make the mentally unstable pay for their own forced ‘help’.

          • RedAggroBest@lemmy.world
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            Literally how US healthcare works. If you pass out on a street and some kind soul calls you an ambulance, where the hospital has to perform life saving surgery, you’re on the hook for every penny despite all of this happening without your consent. Of course there’s recourse to have most of that debt forgiven because you didn’t choose this, whereas fuck that poor shmuck who elected to have their cancer treated.

            In other countries they’re just happy you’re alive and able to walk out in one piece.

  • jerome@kbin.social
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    IS THIS THE EPISODE OF TREE HOUSE OF HORRORS WHERE FLANDERS IS SUPREME LEADER AND LOBOTOMIZES THE TOWN

  • protovack@lemmy.world
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    the part where smarmy lemmy posters recoil but people with actual drug addiction experience think “hey, yea thats a good idea”. did you guys know there’s a reason you aren’t in charge?

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    It’s what needs to happen.

    People who can not abide by the social contract (whether by mental illness, addiction, or otherwise) can not be given the same freedom as people who can. They will likely abuse it for their own destructive aims. They need to be forced into rehabilitation, or, if they can’t be rehabilitated, a separate housing place.

    But…

    Those services they need are either overwhelmed or don’t really exist in many places, because none of us taxpayers want to spend the money to actually build them, or allow them next to our house. Which is fucked up. And it’s clear that nobody is going to willingly increase their taxes to do something about it. So, what then?

    I think it needs to be declared like wartime. Set aside a certain area, get as many help people as possible, and move these people over to basically a modified refugee camp, with what basically amounts to martial law to keep the peace as much as they can. Yes, it’ll be tents and sleeping bags, which is not good, but they need something. Don’t be like the NYC hospital law that sends them in for three days and lets them go back out to the street, because that helps nobody.