The core issue for many on the streets is not a lack of housing but severe addiction. By mislabeling it 'homelessness,' society builds an 'industrial complex' around providing services that enable addictive behavior instead of mandating effective treatment.

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The opioid epidemic is fueled by a lack of things to do, as community hubs like theaters, parks, and libraries have disappeared. Rebuilding this 'social infrastructure' provides purpose and connection, acting as a powerful, non-clinical intervention against drug addiction.

The narrative that personal problems require therapy pathologizes what are often systemic economic issues. You cannot "therapy your way out of material precarity." Structural solutions like higher wages, affordable housing, and a stronger social safety net are often more effective mental health policies than individual introspection.

The "disease model" of addiction is flawed because it removes personal agency. Addiction is more accurately understood as a behavioral coping mechanism to numb the pain of unresolved trauma. Healing requires addressing the root cause of the pain, not just treating the addiction as a brain defect.

A psychologist agrees with Scott Galloway's critique of the therapy industry, highlighting that structural issues like poverty are key drivers of mental distress, and that not all therapy is accessible or ethical. This counters the simplistic social media backlash against his views.

San Francisco's non-profits are often paid based on the number of homeless individuals they serve. This creates a perverse financial incentive to maintain and manage the homeless population like a "flock" rather than pursuing solutions that would permanently reduce their numbers and, consequently, the NGO's funding.

Mayor Daniel Lurie argues the city's primary street-level issue isn't just homelessness but a fentanyl crisis. This diagnostic shift justifies a different response: prioritizing treatment beds and short-term care over simply providing permanent housing without support services for addiction.

Addiction isn't defined by the pursuit of pleasure. It's the point at which a behavior, which may have started for rational reasons, hijacks the brain’s reward pathway and becomes compulsive. The defining characteristic is the inability to stop even when the behavior no longer provides pleasure and begins causing negative consequences.

Upcoming Medicaid cuts pose an "existential threat" to addiction treatment providers. Because their patient populations heavily rely on Medicaid expansion, new work requirements will disqualify many from coverage, effectively gutting the providers' revenue streams and potentially forcing closures.

A $5 million city program provides free beer to homeless alcoholics under the guise of treatment. This illustrates how well-intentioned "harm reduction" policies can devolve into state-funded enablement of addiction, becoming counterproductive and absurd without a clear path to recovery.

The drug crisis may be perpetuated by a system that benefits from its existence, including pharmaceutical companies, bureaucracies, and consultants. The proposed solution of providing more prescribed drugs is framed as ironically profiting the same industry that helped cause the opioid crisis, creating a perverse incentive against recovery.