The organization, which has been ticketed 90 times over the last year for providing free meals to the homeless near City Hall, has declared victory after a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction.
You clearly didn't stop to think that the reason they made those shitty little ordinances in the first place was to stop people like FNB from highlighting the city of Houston's embarrassing failure to take care of their own people.
This isn't a "both sides have valid points" issue. One side is unquestionably in the wrong here, and in this case it's the city who keeps throwing up arbitrary roadblocks against people who are just trying to feed the hungry.
"Both sides have points"
[...a few moments later]
"Crime comitted: poor in front of library"
You clearly haven't been around a bunch of homeless people. It's not a super safe place to be.
Like I said, it's a nuanced issue, but it seems you lack the capacity for it.
Homeless people: Just trying to get some food so they can survive.
Cops: Doing every petty, bullshit thing they can do to prevent homeless people from getting food.
You, the true understander of everything: It's the homeless people who are the bad guys.
You clearly didn't read my first comment.
You clearly didn't stop to think that the reason they made those shitty little ordinances in the first place was to stop people like FNB from highlighting the city of Houston's embarrassing failure to take care of their own people.
This isn't a "both sides have valid points" issue. One side is unquestionably in the wrong here, and in this case it's the city who keeps throwing up arbitrary roadblocks against people who are just trying to feed the hungry.
I have. I've had more guns stuck in my face by suburbanite psychopaths than I've had homeless people try to rob or attack me.