Institutionalizing sounds convenient and can make us feel like we are caring....Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Fri May 18, 2018 8:39 amI am neither progressive nor a conservative.
I care about what works and I actually care that people don't die on the streets. If this thread hasn't convinced you yet that both conservatives and progressives (both being liberals) are perfectly willing to allow drug addicts to die on the streets, then I don't know what else to tell you.
Liberalism is not synonymous with government solutions. That's a ridiculous canard presented by conservatives (who I might add are liberals too, but applied to economics) to differentiate themselves from their cousins, the progressives. This whole government or no-government discussion is just silly.
But if you don't want the government to deal with it, then allow the churches to run it, and empower the prosecutors to institutionalize people in those facilities.
Just stop enabling it and maybe give a shit about your fellow humans. Throwing heroin and free needles at drug addicts is evil. Walking on by while drug addicts die on the streets is also evil. Fuck liberalism.
But institutionalizing is technically locking people up.... out of sight out of mind...
What happens in those institutions is what matters.
Institutions are super expensive and very often lead to hostile dependence just as much as any other "welfare" system.
Lock 'em up in institutions is not a recipe for anything good, all on it's own...
We want to bring in the natural communities that these addicts spring from... their families most of all to participate in the solutions... and institutions alienate people from these communities.... replacing them with "civil servants" that have no attachment to the outcome. This has been the key downfall of liberalism... something you should be aware of. (See daycares, schools, old age "facilities" etc)