▲ | prisenco 3 days ago | |||||||||||||
Is it bleeding hearts preventing this or the unwillingness to properly fund it? | ||||||||||||||
▲ | stackskipton 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Little of Column A and Little of Column B. I have family member suffering from extreme mental illness. He is likely on the streets somewhere, we don't know where because we had no choice but to abandon him to save ourselves. United States makes it extremely difficult to force treatment for someone who can't be making these decisions on their own ever. He ended up in this cycle. Mental Health Episode, Drugs, Law Enforcement interactions trying to get drugs (Robbing people), some minor help, slightly better, stops medications because side effects, repeat. Funding it is always crazy expensive and in United States with crappy social safety net, it's really hard to find funding and politically, people don't want to fund it because "I'm barely affording rent and you want to raise my taxes to pay for them? Hell no." | ||||||||||||||
▲ | AlexandrB 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
I'm guessing both. I think a lot of people get the ick about forcibly incarcerating people who are addicts or suffering from severe mental health issues[1]. I know I did when I was younger. We've moved to a more voluntary model of "mental health outreach" and the like. But this requires folks with compromised thought processes to regularly make a rational decision to seek help. | ||||||||||||||
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