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18_24_61_b_17_17_4 , to news in Authorities Announce Arrest Of Man In Killings Of 3 Unhoused People Across LA
@18_24_61_b_17_17_4@lemmy.world avatar

Is ‘homeless’ not ok to say anymore? Genuinely asking, not being a shitbird.

prettybunnys ,

There is an effort to change the language used to try to remove some stigma.

Homeless implies they don’t have a home through some fault of theirs whereas unhoused helps inform that it’s a failure of society.

Like saying someone who is addicted to heroin and needs help is “sick” rather than an “addict” because of the stigma around the word.

“Homeless” has stigma and stigma can create barriers where none need exist.

user_2345 ,

Yeah. Good luck with that one.

prettybunnys ,

Thanks, words have meaning and languages are living things so it makes sense to change our words when their meanings no longer reflect their purpose.

feedum_sneedson ,

Having been “unhoused” myself, I can assure you the least important thing about my situation was other people’s choice of vocabulary in describing it.

prettybunnys ,

Having been unhoused myself I can agree but the idea isn’t about you or I directly but about swaying public opinion in an effort to change the narrative.

nkat2112 ,
@nkat2112@sh.itjust.works avatar

This is nice - thank you for sharing this. I’ll be using the term “unhoused” going forward.

EDIT: clarity

prettybunnys ,

For the sake of transparency my explanation isn’t all encompassing and my understanding of the purpose might differ than others.

hystericallymad ,

Unsheltered is acceptable too.

SheeEttin ,
Habahnow ,

expanding on Prettybunnys comment, I don’t feel its derogatory to say homeless, I feel saying unhoused emphasis the main problem for unhoused people.

manucode ,
@manucode@infosec.pub avatar
feedum_sneedson ,

free-range is preferred

ExfilBravo ,

Cage free one could say.

glitches_brew ,

Residentially challenged?

solrize ,

Not joking, not expressing an opinion of it, but noting that some sources now use “person experiencing homelessness” or the like.

bus_go_fast , to news in Authorities Say Devastating LA Freeway Fire Was Likely Arson. No Timeline Yet On Reopening

Imagine if Caltrans spent money on Metrolink and putting down rail down instead of building 10 lane freeways.

LibertyLizard , to news in Authorities Say Devastating LA Freeway Fire Was Likely Arson. No Timeline Yet On Reopening

Good excuse to not rebuild it I think. Urban freeways are a terrible use of space. But it’s LA so that won’t happen. Few places with a deeper car addiction.

j4k3 ,
@j4k3@lemmy.world avatar

Got to rezone everywhere and tell millions of people with single family homes to fuck off. That is a hard thing to do when those people are voters. The entire LA basin is layer after layer after layer of suburbia expansion. Most of it is single family homes, while if it were something like Paris, planned roads and public transit could work. This level of urban sprawl is only possible with these freeways and it is still insufficient. It is a giant stack of problems.

grue , (edited )

…and tell millions of people with single family homes to fuck off.

No, we don’t have to do that. Upzoning their property only increases their options; it doesn’t force them to do anything. If they want to not sell at a lucrative price to a developer who wants to build the property out to its highest and best use, they’re welcome to be the last holdout like the guy from Up.

Enoril ,

Comparing LA with Paris and saying is easier in Paris is quite a statement!

  • LA have large roads, grid configuration and a relative recent age: 250 years. And lot of people around.
  • Paris have 2000+ years of history with layers of people coming around too, no grid configuration but roads created for pedestrian and horses, with some of them existing since thousand of years. And we have a big river in the middle (la Seine), unstable basement with many caves making the creation of any subway a living hell. And on top a lot of historical buildings are protected making demolition for new road impossible.

But despite that, we have good transportation alternatives on top of classic and totally full car roads: trains, subway, bus, cycle. Not perfect, lot of improvements still needed but things change, step by step… And people has been relocated multiple time to allow that. But it easier when the costs are payed by our global taxes and some LONG term plan. we have also the concept of public interest project to relocate people and businesses if they are in a place useful for a future transportation plan.

In LA, i don’t see the change really empowered at the political level, at town level. With large road like yours with no hard turn, you could put so many alternatives transportation:

  • rail track for tram or automatic train
  • dedicated bus line
  • bike protected line with tree separation in the middle and free ticket to encourage the use of public transportation.

Does LA mayor / administrators promote this kind of alternatives? Because it’s what all big towns in France are pushing since decade’s already.

Velociraptor ,
@Velociraptor@lemmy.world avatar

For various reasons, cities in America do not really invest in alternatives to automobile use. It’s not an LA exclusive problem but LA is a good example of why this can’t be the only way for your citizens to get around.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

unstable basement with many caves making the creation of any subway a living hell.

That isn’t a problem in L.A., but there are areas where they had to build trains above ground rather than underground because parts of the city are floating on beds of tar (hence the La Brea Tar Pits). Believe it or not, there are oil wells in Los Angeles. They’re hidden inside building facades.

lamag.com/lahistory/hidden-oil-wells

ringwraithfish , to moviesandtv in Next Time You Watch A Film, Think About The Props

Adam Savage's Tested Youtube channel is doing a series of videos right now on background props (any and all types of paper products, fake money, grocery items, etc). Apparently, up until recently, 1 company - Earl Hayes Press - has been responsible for production of these process for every major film for the past 100 years. The videos are really interesting if you're into that kind of stuff.

Here's the first video in the series: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TS6x8dK2u0

PipedLinkBot ,

Here is an alternative Piped link(s): piped.video/watch?v=0TS6x8dK2u0

piped.video/watch?v=0TS6x8dK2u0

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.

wilberfan OP ,
@wilberfan@lemmy.film avatar

The algorithm threw one of those at me recently! Quite fascinating indeed!

Varyk , to moviesandtv in Next Time You Watch A Film, Think About The Props

I think about them constantly. I like to tinker and builds things, and I’m always wondering how do many props in movies can be so sturdy yet flexible or how someone’s hat stays on their head in a scene.

Seems like a fascinating, fun world

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