Except I've already argued that the affordable housing tax does patch the hole created by rising rent increases (I linked to a study showing this effect earlier in the thread) on two fronts, by providing cheaper housing, and by slowing growth.PartyOf5 wrote: Sun May 27, 2018 10:20 amNot even a little bit? You said your metric for success has always been the number of homeless off the street and into homes. I simply took that to it's furthest possibility. What does not even a little bit mean?JohnDonne wrote: Sat May 26, 2018 1:51 pmNot even a little bit.PartyOf5 wrote: Sat May 26, 2018 10:16 am
So ultimate success would be everyone becoming homeless and getting homes from the government?
Here’s another bad faith straw man, for example:
“If Seattle decreasing their homeless populations is ultimate success would nuking Seattle be a good thing?”
If you continue to give homeless homes paid for by the government, and yet the homeless population continues to increase, how is that success? Success should be reducing the overall population by addressing the problems that make them homeless in the first place. You're bailing water from the boat as it's sinking, but never patching the hole. The hole keeps getting bigger, but "success!" you bailed another 100 gallons today. Meanwhile 200 entered the boat.
In the spirit of charity in which you've chosen to interpret my argument, I'm going to interpret yours:
So you want to "reduce the population" of the homeless by "addressing the problems that make them homeless in the first place"?Success should be reducing the overall population by addressing the problems that make them homeless in the first place.
Well, being poor is a problem which makes them homeless.
We could reduce the population of the homeless by killing the poor. Therefore ultimate success would be a holocaust of the poor. Is that what you meant?