Finland winter ranges from 23F to -4F
Similar to Northern US states.
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ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 9 hours ago
Have you been to Finland?
6 months of the year, homeless people would freeze to death in short order if they were left outside.
Finland has homeless people, just not on the street.
Finland winter ranges from 23F to -4F
Similar to Northern US states.
So you’re saying homeless people have, um, homes?
Being in a shelter hardly qualifies as having a home. Unless you like shelters maybe…
If you have a room in a shelter every day, you’re not homeless. It’s not nice, but it’s not homeless.
“not nice” is doing some competition level heavy lifting. Getting barely enough food, just that little bit of hygiene, all your things in one bag, surrounded by helpless or crazy people and desperation so great you are constantly paranoid you might get abused or robbed. All of the safety and security you want a home for is hardly available in a homeless shelter.
It’s like saying being in prison is also living. Sure, on a technicality. But in real life no one would agree - prison makes people age faster for all the wrong reasons.
If you don’t have a lease in your name, you’re homeless.
You should learn what a “home” is.
Same is true for much of Canada yet we can’t seem to shelter them either. It isn’t just the weather, the finnish government is far more compassionate towards homeless people than any other government I know of.
My immediate thought too. We have homeless people here in Norway too. Homeless does not mean without housing or shelter.
Buffalox@lemmy.world 9 hours ago
True, but that does surprisingly little to prevent homelessness.
protist@retrofed.com 8 hours ago
Yes, but it does a LOT to keep people experiencing homelessness of the streets and in shelter. In US cities that have harsh winters, they also have many fewer homeless folks visible on the streets than you’d find in California or Texas, where people can pretty much live outside in perpetuity