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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(108,192 posts)
Wed Apr 24, 2024, 08:14 PM Apr 24

Seattle rallies as Supreme Court weighs criminalizing homelessness

For Gina Owens, the parallels between herself and Gloria Johnson — one of the plaintiffs in a case before the U.S. Supreme Court about criminalizing homelessness — are all too striking.

Owens used to be a nurse, but a car crash in the year 2000 disabled her spinal cord and left her unable to work. Without a steady income, she fell behind on her rent and was evicted into several years of homelessness.

Johnson, the lead plaintiff in Grants Pass v. Johnson, was also a career nurse who retired, but was unable to find housing she could afford on Social Security and became homeless, living in her minivan on the edge of town. On Monday, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in the class action lawsuit against Grants Pass, Oregon’s anti-public sleeping laws.

Owens, a leader with Washington Community Action Network and prominent homelessness activist in Seattle, spoke to a crowd of 60-70 people that afternoon outside the Nakamura Federal Courthouse in Downtown Seattle at a rally organized by the Services Not Sweeps Coalition.

https://crosscut.com/news/2024/04/seattle-rallies-supreme-court-weighs-criminalizing-homelessness

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Seattle rallies as Supreme Court weighs criminalizing homelessness (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Apr 24 OP
Why can't we just bring back debtor's prisons? It would be a great boon to the private prison industry while giving Chainfire Apr 24 #1

Chainfire

(17,636 posts)
1. Why can't we just bring back debtor's prisons? It would be a great boon to the private prison industry while giving
Wed Apr 24, 2024, 08:39 PM
Apr 24

inmates a place to stay. When they earned enough from their prison wages, they could be released if they could prove that they could get a mortgage. See, it is simple...

Instead of trying to help the homeless they want to make criminals out of them. Such a damn shame.

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