John61CT said:
I have lived in places where almost **everyone** around me was in desperate need. Takes the hubris right out of you, you can only do so much.
Yes, I understand that. I used to live in a place like that, but now am kind of isolated from it here in North Idaho. So it surprised me, I've been approached twice in the last couple of months by people asking me for money. Both times I didn't give them anything, but I came up with the idea of
gift cards. Of course, if I was in an area where there was a lot of mendicancy going on, it would get old very fast. I'm not a bank!
I also am wondering what kind of person would choose begging over finding income from other sources. I happen to know how easy it is to get Foodstamps because I did it last year when my income took a sudden dip and I was having a hard time paying bills, before I found the online transcription job that paid 3 dollars an hour (piecework). I went into the human services office and not only did they immediately grant me a lot more Foodstamps than I ever expected, they also fixed me up with Medicaid right then and there! I'm no longer getting either of those but it was a great help at the time.
Knowing that, I know that anyone we see out there on the streets is able to get food. No problem. And I happen to think that if a person can't afford gas they shouldn't have a car, and I'd go so far as to suggest that to them. I lived here in North Idaho for three and a half years without a car because I couldn't afford one. It wasn't easy, but that's life. We do what we have to do.
So I could be a bit jaded in what I think people really need, and my attitude would be that it is better to cut corners, cut back, and live within your means, than to go out begging on the streets.
Still, there are likely to be circumstances when someone is in emergency need. I wouldn't want to pass up an opportunity to help someone in legitimate need . . . but I don't know if I could determine which ones are needy and which are opportunists, or career beggars.