• Nuke_the_whales@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Honest question, would you live next to one?

    I ask cause I never had an issue with them. They put one up in the plaza near me and now my building has constant break ins, car thefts, property damage, etc. It’s great for the addicts, they’re safer, but now they all hang out in that plaza and surrounding areas all day.

    Anyways why not in a hospital? I don’t get why this has to happen in residential areas?

    • Donkter@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I mean, this is NIMBYism. These break-ins and car thefts were happening anyway and needed something done about them, now it’s just happening in your back yard. The main difference is that the only way you could change it and shove the break-ins back where you dont see them is if you and your neighbors were rich.

    • Victor Villas
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      2 months ago

      would you live next to one?

      I would rather not to, so if one was planned to open next to my house, I’d consider moving out. However, I would not fight against opening one because I know society needs these. Let me put it this way: I’d hate to live next to a fire station or a an emergency hospital, but I know the city needs those so I will fight for them to exist but I’d move away from them whenever necessary to protect my sleep and peace of mind.

      Anyways why not in a hospital? I don’t get why this has to happen in residential areas?

      This is a different question altogether to your first question, and you’ll get a better answer by talking to specialists.

    • Jerkface (any/all)
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      2 months ago

      Because that’s where people use drugs. If you have a neighbourhood where people use these drugs, everyone is better off with a site in proximity, even people who don’t use dangerous drugs. If the site is drawing people into the area, that only speaks to a lack of sites.

      • Auli
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        2 months ago

        Except giving people access to drugs is not helping anything. They come shoot up and since they’re around do shit. Giving them drugs is not the answer to fixing the problem. We need social programs to help people get out of the situation that caused the use in the first place.