• gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    I mean, I would add on not sticking her with a criminal charge as an important thing they didn’t do here, because the whole story of “oh you missed a court date because we sent the notice to an address you haven’t lived at in years, so now we’re fining you on top of the original criminal charge that brought you in here, [soon] wow, you’ve got a lot of missed court dates and unpaid fines, you look like a career criminal who needs the book thrown at them” happens a lot,

    And there’s a very real chance that the contractors looked the other way and then this woman’s residence got discovered they could have lost their licenses or otherwise gotten in trouble

    Like, I think what you’re pointing out is a really important perspective and we shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that a woman with a home was made homeless here, but I think a lot of relatively powerless people here tried to be as humane as an inhumane system would let them be, and I think that’s important too. I think the way this world gets less shitty is when more people start making these little steps towards revolutionary kindness and then those little steps start getting bigger and bigger.

    • Sentient Loom@sh.itjust.works
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      8 months ago

      Again, it’s not praiseworthy that they merely declined to abuse her. I’m not scorning them, but they get zero credit for declining to abuse her (beyond the abuse of kicking her out with no help).

      there’s a very real chance that the contractors looked the other way

      Without evidence, there’s no point in this speculation unless you’re hired by their PR to praise them (which seems unlikely).

      the way this world gets less shitty is when more people start making these little steps towards revolutionary kindness and then those little steps start getting bigger and bigger

      Sorry, but this is absolute nonsense. It’s meaningless. She is homeless.

      a woman with a home was made homeless

      This is the only story. Let’s not waste time praising the heroic saints who kicked her out.

      • dot0@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        mate it’s ok and good to acknowledge a small measure of good that may exist in a very terrible situation.

        humans are not meant to focus on only the doom, gloom, and cynicism of it all 100% of the time.

          • dot0@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            nature. our brains get fucked up when stuck in the doom and gloom for too long.

            pedantry is an ugly quality btw.

        • Sentient Loom@sh.itjust.works
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          8 months ago

          a small measure of good

          There was no measure of good whatsoever. Her situation was made objectively worse, and we’re presuming to praise those responsible merely for not making it even more worse. I’m not the one who created any doom or gloom. I didn’t kick her out. And it’s not cynical to sympathize with the homeless woman instead of with the people who kicked her out. Mate.

          • InternetUser2012@midwest.social
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            8 months ago

            So you’re saying it would have been better for her if she was charged with crimes? She would be stuck with fines and probably jail time. You do realize SHE was breaking multiple laws by being there right? So yeah, it is a small measure of good because they looked the other way rather than filing charges.

          • LustyArgonian@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            And she’s also a homeless woman. Women need private spaces when they are homeless, they can’t just be on the street as safely as men are. They space was probably VERY safe for her compared to a shelter.