Рет қаралды 2,913
When I asked Carlos what it was like on Skid Row he said it was a "terrible feeling" and that you feel like a failure. Carlos says that homelessness "dehumanizes" you.
Carlos has been on the streets of Skid Row for a year and a half, ever since he got out of prison. It a sad fact about today's society, that after a person has paid the price for their mistakes, we continue to punish them. Once you have a felony it's nearly impossible to find a job. In most States, you cannot get food stamps or other support. Homelessness or committing more crimes to survive are often the only two choices!
Carlos said something true that I hope haunts you as well as it haunts me. He said, "at least in prison you have everything you need. Out here you don't"!
I am not sure if you are aware that the use of private prisons are growing, and that private prisons are public companies with their stock traded on Wall Street. Their business model to investors is to keep jails full. There is zero incentive to help people get back into society. Add to that 60% of people in jail today are nonviolent drug offenders! Does anyone but me see how horrible this is?
I have a lot of respect for Carlos. It's not easy fighting to get your life back, but that is just what he is doing. As Carlos points out and you'll hear me say - we do not make it easy for people to get out of homelessness.
Before we'll ever come close to ending homelessness we need to fix how people from jails and prison reenter society. It's really a slap on all of our faces that so many men and women go from being incarcerated to homelessness!
Special thanks Los Angeles Mission
________________________________________________
Subscribe here: kzfaq.info...
Invisible People’s website:
invisiblepeople.tv
Support Invisible People:
invisiblepeople.tv/donate
On Patreon: / invisiblepeople
Invisible People’s Social Media:
/ invisiblepeople
/ invisiblepeople
/ invisiblepeople
/ invisiblepeopletv
Mark Horvath’s Twitter:
/ hardlynormal
About Invisible People:
Since its launch in November 2008, Invisible People has leveraged the power of video and the massive reach of social media to share the compelling, gritty, and unfiltered stories of homeless people from Los Angeles to Washington, D.C. The vlog (video blog) gets up close and personal with veterans, mothers, children, layoff victims and others who have been forced onto the streets by a variety of circumstances. Each week, they’re on InvisiblePeople.tv, and high traffic sites such as KZfaq, Twitter and Facebook, proving to a global audience that while they may often be ignored, they are far from invisible.
Invisible People goes beyond the rhetoric, statistics, political debates, and limitations of social services to examine poverty in America via a medium that audiences of all ages can understand, and can’t ignore. The vlog puts into context one of our nation’s most troubling and prevalent issues through personal stories captured by the lens of Mark Horvath - its founder - and brings into focus the pain, hardship and hopelessness that millions face each day. One story at a time, videos posted on InvisiblePeople.tv shatter the stereotypes of America’s homeless, force shifts in perception and deliver a call to action that is being answered by national brands, nonprofit organizations and everyday citizens now committed to opening their eyes and their hearts to those too often forgotten.
Invisible People is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to changing the way we think about people experiencing homelessness.