| I find it really nasty. I visited Los Angeles a couple of years back, one of the first places we went was a McDonalds. Some guy was dozing sat at a table (with a coffee in front of him). A cop came up to him and told him he'd be reprimanded if he caught him napping like that again. In all my life living in the UK I've honestly never witnessed something like that. It may seem minor, but seeing an armed cop come up to someone and reprimand them for dozing off? I have no idea why a waiter couldn't have dealt with that. It's not like the McDonalds was even full or anything. On top of this, the advertising boards saying stuff like "No homeless shelter in our community, keep it safe!" was just completely lacking in compassion. I think a lot of people out there just don't see homeless people as deserving of empathy. At least, that's the impression I get. I also find it profoundly ironic that America is supposedly the "land of the free", but you can get arrested/in trouble for: - Drinking in public (even in parks or at the beach)
- Sleeping in public (apparently)
- Jaywalking
- Eating on public transport I just don't understand all these weird and arbitrary rules they have out there. |
But you live in the nation that invented the ASBO.
> - Drinking in public (even in parks or at the beach) - Sleeping in public (apparently) - Jaywalking - Eating on public transport
These are local laws, not federal, so not universal across the US. And in all of the places around the US that I have lived, these sorts of laws are rarely enforced (at least not as a primary offense).