What's new

WHY PEOPLE ARE HOMELESS IN CHINA

Yes, your wife and you are on the title deed, but are your parents, adult offspring and relatives on the deeds as well? Those that you escorted, how many of them are you escorting them back to their husband and wife?
Dude, do you know what is "Family Properties"?? Or did your father, mother, grandfather or grandmother had not leave you any properties? Or do you understand the concept of "Staying with your family?"

Again, it is not about ownership of a properties, it's about choice, If you choose to stay outside and beg, even if you have a home in your name somewhere else, that's homeless, because you counted THAT INSTANT. If you go back home and to your own properties, then you are no longer homeless.

It's the same if you are a 16 year old butt head with your mother, and you run away, you can go back to your home which you don't own, but your mother own, if you wanted, if you do that, YOU NO LONGER HOMELESS, but every minute you don't do that and stay on the street, you are Homeless.

It's the same if you are a Citizen of a country (Australia, Nordic and most welfare state) if the government pay you or put you in public housing, if you go or you use the money to rent a home, then you are not homeless, but if you ignore the social security or use it on booze and drug, which is most people ended up homeless in the west by the way, then you are homeless.

Again, my point is "IT'S ALL ABOUT CHOICE" it is not about what you own.
 
.
Dude, do you know what is "Family Properties"?? Or did your father, mother, grandfather or grandmother had not leave you any properties? Or do you understand the concept of "Staying with your family?"

Again, it is not about ownership of a properties, it's about choice, If you choose to stay outside and beg, even if you have a home in your name somewhere else, that's homeless, because you counted THAT INSTANT. If you go back home and to your own properties, then you are no longer homeless.

It's the same if you are a 16 year old butt head with your mother, and you run away, you can go back to your home which you don't own, but your mother own, if you wanted, if you do that, YOU NO LONGER HOMELESS, but every minute you don't do that and stay on the street, you are Homeless.

It's the same if you are a Citizen of a country (Australia, Nordic and most welfare state) if the government pay you or put you in public housing, if you go or you use the money to rent a home, then you are not homeless, but if you ignore the social security or use it on booze and drug, which is most people ended up homeless in the west by the way, then you are homeless.

Again, my point is "IT'S ALL ABOUT CHOICE" it is not about what you own.

Family property, staying with your family works only in theory, as those outside the nuclear family will soon overstay their welcome without legally binding mechanism.

A 16 year old? You haven't escorted any full grown adult? How many of those homeless are actually minors?
 
.
Family property, staying with your family works only in theory, as those outside the nuclear family will soon overstay their welcome without legally binding mechanism.

But then so did "Hukou" it only work IF YOU CHOOSE TO GO BACK HOME to the address registered on your Hukou. And that's the point. Just because you have Hukou or a legal place to stay does not make you not homeless when you are begging in the street 600 miles away.

A 16 year old? You haven't escorted any full grown adult? How many of those homeless are actually minors?

Dude, do you even know how Police work done?? If you broke the law, we ask for your address, you either ended up in custody (if what you do is serious) but for Drunk and Disorderly or Loitering (which is more homeless people violate) you don't go to jail but by law we need to drop you off to the address you nominated. If you are the family member, you can refuse to take them in, if so you ended up in midway house. But I don't remember anyone I escorted was refuse

It's different when you are underage, by law, your parent CANNOT refuse to take you in, if they do, that's child endangerment.

I did both, more adult, not only adult spend their time on the street you know.
 
.
But then so did "Hukou" it only work IF YOU CHOOSE TO GO BACK HOME to the address registered on your Hukou. And that's the point. Just because you have Hukou or a legal place to stay does not make you not homeless when you are begging in the street 600 miles away.



Dude, do you even know how Police work done?? If you broke the law, we ask for your address, you either ended up in custody (if what you do is serious) but for Drunk and Disorderly or Loitering (which is more homeless people violate) you don't go to jail but by law we need to drop you off to the address you nominated. If you are the family member, you can refuse to take them in, if so you ended up in midway house. But I don't remember anyone I escorted was refuse

It's different when you are underage, by law, your parent CANNOT refuse to take you in, if they do, that's child endangerment.

I did both, more adult, not only adult spend their time on the street you know.

No, you don't' choose to go back home. The government will escort you back 600 miles away or not, and no one there can refuse or kick you back out. Of course, you can choose to leave again, but if you end up sleeping on the street again, the government will escort you back again as they are not regarded as truly homeless. That's one of the functions of the homeless shelters there, to send vagabond that actually do have a home back where their Hukou is. Understand the difference?
 
Last edited:
.
No, you don't' choose to go back home. The government will escort you back 600 miles away or not, and no one there can refuse or kick you back out. Of course, you can choose to leave again, but if you end up sleeping on the street again, the government will escort you back again as they are not regarded as truly homeless. That's one of the functions of the homeless shelters there, to send vagabond that actually do have a home back where their Hukou is. Understand the difference?
That's the same definition of people who got kick out and go "home" and then leave again.

Or you think every US Homeless are "truly" homeless like they don't have anybody or place to go?? How many Homeless you think are orphan or absolutely have no one to rely upon?? I mean, maybe you know more than I do, but as far as my 11 years of being a cop and arrested countless of panhandlers and bum for loitering, EVERYONE have a place to go, just that they won't want to be there, so they are out on the street.

If that's your definition of being "Homeless" then nobody is truly "Homeless"
 
.

WHY PEOPLE ARE HOMELESS IN CHINA?​

simply they have no homes that is why they are homeless
 
. .
Find some random famer photo in market and metal ill kids to prove China have homeless problem...what a pathetic guy.
Nothing comparing to using a 13 years old video to make a point in his OP post. This is truly pathetic.

_20230103222215-png.909230
 
.

Homelessness is seldom a choice. Oftentimes, homelessness reflects the systemic failures that can result from social issues being dismissed or disregarded.
1
Globally, approximately 1.6 billion people lack adequate housing, with 15 million more individuals being evicted on an annual basis.
2
This situation is often profoundly worse in low- and middle-income countries like China. It is estimated that 300 million people in the country—home to 1.4 billion Chinese—are homeless.
3
However, despite the scale of this issue, China does not have a robust health and social infrastructure—preventive and proactive systems that could ensure people have stable and sustainable access to opportunities that are essential to their survival (e.g., food and shelter) and growth (e.g., training, education, and employment programs)—for homeless people. Research shows that, for instance, rather than relying on services provided by the local government, homeless people in Shanghai, one of the most advanced metropolitan areas in China, often have to address basic needs such as food and shelter on their own,
4
let alone illnesses that demand structured mental or physical health services.
Although this lack of care is a threat to every member of society, especially disadvantaged homeless people, it disproportionately impacts those with mental health challenges. Accumulated evidence shows that homeless people often suffer from mental illness. In a study conducted in Hong Kong, researchers found that rates of depressive disorders amongst homeless people are four times greater than those in the general population.
5
While conditions are already alarming, the pandemic could further compound the situation. To control COVID-19, China is substantially reliant on measures such as partial or full lockdowns.
6
Though necessary to curb virus spread,
7
these strategies could nonetheless cause unintended consequences such as the loss of homeless people's access to food, shelter, and essential health services. In a study conducted in 2020, researchers found that homeless people in Guangzhou have faced atypical discriminatory treatment amid the pandemic.
8
Specifically, in the name of pandemic control, local officials have been observed to not only reduce or remove essential services, like rescue stations and shelters, but also intensify efforts to evict homeless people away from urban areas,
8
often to their birthplaces located in less developed rural regions. This could subject homeless people to further hardship, as they often rely on social opportunities that only large cities provide, such as the availability of well-equipped shelters, accessible food waste and salvageable materials, as well as donations and voluntary aid from members of the community.
View related content for this article
Just as homelessness is seldom a choice, so are the circumstances that homeless people are subjected to. The lack of humane care seen in the evictions reported from cities like Guangzhou,
8
even in times of crises like COVID-19 that demand social unity to address, can and should be eliminated and eradicated. First, society should ensure homeless people are treated with proper respect, dignity, and care. Rather than closing rescue stations and shelters, officials could develop creative solutions, such as the “Pandemic Bubbles” seen amid the 2022 Beijing Olympic Games—COVID-free environments that are equipped with tailored services to protect participants’ mental and physical health, to ensure homeless people have secure and stable access to essentials like food, shelter, and health services even amid pandemic-induced lockdowns. Second, society should make mental health protection a priority in the treatment of homeless people. Timely and effective mental health screening and services could ensure homeless people are sufficiently cared for, and in turn, have a greater chance of being reintegrated into society as more productive members. Third, China should invest greater resources in developing critical social infrastructures, such as stigma-free and accessible mental health services and disaster psychiatry protocols,
9
to prevent people with mental illness from becoming homeless.
Although strategies are present, as illustrated by China's national action plan on depression,
7
fair and equitable access to mental health services has clearly yet to be achieved. Furthermore, though mental illnesses are a potent contributing factor,
10
they seldom directly result in homelessness. Rather, a combination of factors, such as poor mental health, substandard psychiatric services, and insufficient social infrastructures (e.g., insecure social safety nets), are often at play in perpetuating the homeless epidemic. The multifactorial nature of homelessness means that policymakers should develop strategic, evidence-based and sustainable solutions that could ensure that, in otherwise normal times, vulnerable populations, especially those with mental illness, receive timely and quality care so that they do not become at risk of homelessness; and during turbulent times like COVID-19, conflicts, and climate disasters, officials are able to mobilize mental health professionals and targeted resources proactively and preventively to reduce the adverse impacts of these events on society as a whole. Homelessness does not and should not equate to learned helplessness and hopelessness. As a member of the international community, China has an irrefutable duty and a responsibility to protect and promote the betterment of humanity, starting with rendering help to and rekindling hope in homeless people, regardless of their current health or housing status. The time to act is now.

Nothing comparing to using a 13 years old video to make a point in his OP post. This is truly pathetic.

_20230103222215-png.909230
You WILL NOT HAVE ANOTHER WARNING.

The article is written in 2022, if you want to doubt the authenticity of the article, go write to the person who wrote that and ask him why he use a video from 2009.

And I WILL NOT TOLERATE the insult to me or any member, ANY FURTHER INSULT WILL RESULT IN NEGATIVE RATING AND REPORT. Do it at your own risk.
 
.
_20230103222215-png.909230


Lol, negative rating again? you did something stupid and try to stop people from talking about that stupidity?
 
.
Liberalism needs homeless to incentive people work.

When China was more communist and less liberal, it wasn't homeless.

In North Korea there is no homeless, people has useless jobs instead, like cleaning highways.
 
.
Liberalism needs homeless to incentive people work.

When China was more communist and less liberal, it wasn't homeless.

In North Korea there is no homeless, people has useless jobs instead, like cleaning highways.
Not true, China used to have many homeless people, I saw them with my own eyes. Now China is more liberal, people can hardly find any homeless people anywhere in China.
 
.
Not true, China used to have many homeless people, I saw them with my own eyes. Now China is more liberal, people can't hardly find any homeless people anywhere in China.
Maybe I'm wrong, my source to know that was Western, and Western sources are plenty of lies about China.

I prefer to read Chinese sources when it's possible, but obviously they hide their own faults.
 
.
@waz @LeGenD Can you come here and take a look at @beijingwalker behavior, I have already put in a full report on the Mod threat, please clear the report. Thanks
 
.
@waz @LeGenD Can you come here and take a look at @beijingwalker behavior, I have already put in a full report on the Mod threat, please clear the report. Thanks
You used a 13 years old video in your OP post and this whole thread is for trolling China , homelessness now is not an issue in China. I pointed it out, why you call mod to take action against me but not this troll thread of yours?
 
.
Back
Top Bottom