He is identified as Jerrid Joseph Powell. The 33-year old is linked to another homicide and robbery that took place in San Dimas. No motive has been identified.
Having been unhoused myself I can agree but the idea isn’t about you or I directly but about swaying public opinion in an effort to change the narrative.
Is ‘homeless’ not ok to say anymore? Genuinely asking, not being a shitbird.
expanding on Prettybunnys comment, I don’t feel its derogatory to say homeless, I feel saying unhoused emphasis the main problem for unhoused people.
There is an effort to change the language used to try to remove some stigma.
Homeless implies they don’t have a home through some fault of theirs whereas unhoused helps inform that it’s a failure of society.
Like saying someone who is addicted to heroin and needs help is “sick” rather than an “addict” because of the stigma around the word.
“Homeless” has stigma and stigma can create barriers where none need exist.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euphemism#Euphemism_treadmill
This is nice - thank you for sharing this. I’ll be using the term “unhoused” going forward.
EDIT: clarity
Unsheltered is acceptable too.
For the sake of transparency my explanation isn’t all encompassing and my understanding of the purpose might differ than others.
Yeah. Good luck with that one.
Thanks, words have meaning and languages are living things so it makes sense to change our words when their meanings no longer reflect their purpose.
Having been “unhoused” myself, I can assure you the least important thing about my situation was other people’s choice of vocabulary in describing it.
Having been unhoused myself I can agree but the idea isn’t about you or I directly but about swaying public opinion in an effort to change the narrative.
free-range is preferred
Cage free one could say.
Not joking, not expressing an opinion of it, but noting that some sources now use “person experiencing homelessness” or the like.
I could find this Guardian article on the issue.
Residentially challenged?