August 14, 2007
Curious Priorities
Curious Priorities
Julia Vitullo-Martin recognizes that "living on the street inevitably
causes mental and physical deterioration." ("Homeless Hell," New York Post,
August 13, 2007, page 25) Nonetheless she does not see anything irrational about
delivering taxpayer funded medication to persons without homes, but not
providing funding to house them.
If being homeless causes dysfunction it is more profitable to continue
taxpayer funding to medicate those exhibiting the results of being homeless. If
they had a home they may not need medication. That would be bad for business. As
long as the taxpayer funds these irrational counterproductive programs they will
never end.
Roy Bercaw, Editor ENOUGH ROOM
Julia Vitullo-Martin recognizes that "living on the street inevitably
causes mental and physical deterioration." ("Homeless Hell," New York Post,
August 13, 2007, page 25) Nonetheless she does not see anything irrational about
delivering taxpayer funded medication to persons without homes, but not
providing funding to house them.
If being homeless causes dysfunction it is more profitable to continue
taxpayer funding to medicate those exhibiting the results of being homeless. If
they had a home they may not need medication. That would be bad for business. As
long as the taxpayer funds these irrational counterproductive programs they will
never end.
Roy Bercaw, Editor ENOUGH ROOM
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