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by prottog
1172 days ago
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> Homelessness is a problem in nearly every North American cities, from Vancouver to New York. It's an order of magnitude higher in San Francisco at ~2.5% of the population compared to New York at ~0.8% and Vancouver at ~0.3%. SF isn't the only city with homeless people, but it likely has it to the highest degree, with other undesirable traits like open-air drug use, public defecation, and property crimes. > no matter how much you build, not everyone will be able to afford it. That's true, but we should still build more so that more people will be able to afford housing. No policy choice will completely eliminate poverty or homelessness nor reduce it for free without opportunity cost, so as a society we have to make prudent tradeoffs that help the most people for the least cost. > Poverty exists, which leads to homelessness. Are you suggesting that we're capable of totally eliminating poverty? |
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