At least 320,000 homeless people in Britain, says Shelter
At least 320,000 homeless people in Britain, says Shelter yeah im fucking one of them, but id sooner die and take this reality with me, than be forced to live like an animal any more, god help you all should that day ever come, look to the east on the dawn the cloud shall fall, the earth will tremble and skys shall quake be rent and the illusory nature of this reality will be exposed naked for all to see the truth that's been hiding just above their heads' all this time, i know its real I've been there enough, i felt the smoothness of the walls on my hands its coolness on my feet, its glorious i will miss that place should we succeed its like going home i can't explain the feeling, you wouldn't believe me if i told you, i can still feel it, then it will be a case of may god have mercy on all of us, we will need it for the long road ahead on the path of new discovery, cos that when life and humanity really gets interesting, we figure out there's no future in death and war, not for me or you not rich man or poor, and that we shouldn't have to die or be forgotten its wrong and avoidable, why should things be this way and "because it always been this way" is a circular argument relying solely on its own presumption with zero evidence to prove it, and i refuse to accept it, i mean its been proven we can resuscitate people shortly after death and in rare cases up to 36 hours later and thats' medical fact and at one point they said that was impossible and yet its now common place dont let history blind you to the future, join me.lets change the world and the future i ask for nothing of myself. i never do, doing this is just in my nature.you know its not that i dont want to tell you here and now how this is done i really do i want this to happen just as much as you, its just i dont trust the fucking government and nor should you. they are corrupted the whole institution from the top down the queen the parliament the police and judiciary the local levels like councils their scum they illegally evicted me after i won three times in a civil court and they used a dirty trick to get me out of my home and then change my locks i lost everything, trust them not ever they dont care its just a job to these people, trust in good people people you know and people you can count on to do the right thing, but dont blindly trust anyone not ever first rule of da hood innit bro, dta mofo dta especially not the po-po ftp freedooooooom.
you know why they're making it soo fucking terrible dont you?, so that when its totally tits up and the worlds turning to shit they can step in and save us or should i say the sheeple and elites, (from themselves because they cause it) it's so we accept their new world order bullshit and tyranny, tagged like cattle and i for one say fuck you you horrid people in charge trying to bring this about trying to force the prophecy, naaa im afraid the universe was always going to squash you, like a bug, and im here to do it with a xwish and flick of my wrist, i bawl out your dismissed, your done, your out, take your shit, go home, get to fuck, begone, your on your own, they think we are fucking idiots, and if they think for one second there aren't people with good hearts out there, who will always fight against them, then they are very much misinformed or mistaken, either way, its not cricket old boy, fuck the nwo scum, i know who you are out there, i curse the day you came to this world, i curse you from the heights of heaven to the depth of hell bellow, you will find no rest, your names have already been struck from the book, in short your fucked., do your worst shit heads i fucking dare you in fact i triple dare your bitch asses to push your agenda, go on watch see what happens, it would make my millennium, because we the people, will fucking destroy you, all.the way even a cardboard cut out of a fucking army could beat your lot, your shit you hide in the shadows, and no matter how much you sneak about taking people away in the dead of night, because your fucking cowards, other people will always know the truth, and that will burn in their minds like a splinter driving them insane, until one day they have no choice but to rip it out and relive themselves of you and their madness, the truth will always come out in the end, and when it does, those you trust to guard you will gladly end you themselves, for their own sake and the sake of their own blood and heads, it will be utterly poetic, i love irony, uni is ever so good at it for a intangible being, wow she blows my mind, fuck life's been fucking everyone and shes pretty observant so trust me when i tell you when the universe decides to fuck and she will because i told her to, your going to wish you had been a better human being, but it wont matter or change fuck all, your still going to come to a very sticky end your tyoe always does, FTP freeedom wow that went way off the scheduled programming there, better reign myself back into this body and crack on, now thats a prophecy you can fucking count on i dont lie remember not ever, some times i ommit certain truths but i never lie it is beneath me. we have nothing without our honour, compositum jus fasque animi
A Latin motto. Early use of this phrase by Latin poet Horace, in Persii Satira Secunda ("Second Satire of Persius"), 30 BCE. It became a quoted motto by English
compositum jลซs, fฤsque animฤซ
Law and equity combined.
Justice, uprightness and nobility of the soul.and dont you fucking forget it ๐๐๐๐๐๐☮️
Charity says figure for England, Scotland and Wales is likely to be underestimate
Patrick Butler Social policy editor
Homeless people’s tents in Milton Keynes. Figures show homelessness and housing insecurity is spreading across the country. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian
At least 320,000 people are homeless in Britain, according to research by the housing charity Shelter.
This amounts to a year-on-year increase of 13,000, a 4% rise, despite government pledges to tackle the crisis. The estimate suggests that nationally one in 200 people are homeless.
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Shelter says its figures, which include rough sleepers and people in temporary accommodation, are likely to be an underestimate of the problem as they do not capture people who experience “hidden” homelessness, such as sofa-surfers, and others living insecurely in sheds or cars, for example.
Newham in east London is ranked as England’s number one homelessness hotspot, with at least one in every 24 people in housing insecurity. More than 14,500 people were in temporary accommodation in the borough, and 76 were sleeping rough.
In the capital as a whole, 170,000 people – equivalent to one in 52 – have no home. Westminster had the most rough sleepers, 217, followed by Camden, with 127. In Kensington and Chelsea, the UK’s richest borough, there were over 5,000 homeless people – equivalent to one in every 29 residents.
The figures indicate how homelessness and housing insecurity is spreading beyond its traditional heartland of London into the wider south-east and Midlands, and the impact of high rents and welfare cuts ripples outwards.
Outside the capital, high homelessness rates were recorded in Birmingham, Luton, Brighton & Hove, Slough, Dartford, Milton Keynes, Harlow, Watford, Epsom, Reading, Broxbourne, Basildon, Peterborough and Coventry.
Regionally, homelessness grew fastest in the West Midlands and Yorkshire and Humberside, which saw 12% increases, followed by the north-west with an 11% rise. Homelessness fell in the north-east and south-west regions of England by 8%.
The 320,000 figure for England, Wales and Scotland was reached by combining government homelessness and rough-sleeping statistics at July 2018 with data on homeless hostel bed spaces and social services provision of temporary accommodation for families in crisis.
The bulk of those affected, 295,000, are in forms of temporary accommodation after being accepted as homeless by their local authority.
It is Shelter’s third annual analysis of homelessness. In 2016, it estimated there were 255,000 homeless people in England alone, a figure it subsequently adjusted to 294,000 for Britain. This rose to 307,000 in 2017.
Polly Neate, Shelter’s chief executive, said: “Due to the perfect storm of spiralling rents, welfare cuts and a total lack of social housing, record numbers of people are sleeping out on the streets or stuck in the cramped confines of a hostel room. We desperately need action now to change tomorrow for the hundreds of thousands whose lives will be blighted by homelessness this winter.”
The housing and communities secretary, James Brokenshire, said the government was determined to end homelessness but conceded more could be done. “No one should be left without a roof over their head, which is why we are determined to end rough sleeping and respond to the causes of homelessness.”
He added: “Our rough-sleeping strategy, support for councils and those working on the frontline are helping to get people off the street and into accommodation as we enter the colder winter months. But we know that there is more that we need to do and we’re committed to working with Shelter and others to make a positive difference.”
The government’s Homelessness Reduction Act came into force in May with the aim of forcing local authorities to take steps to prevent households at risk from falling into homelessness. It has also aims to eliminate rough sleepingby 2027.
Melanie Onn, the shadow housing minister, said: “It is appalling that enough people to fill a city the size of Newcastle will wake up this Christmas without a home. This is the outcome of eight years of austerity that even the United Nations say was designed to hurt the poor.”