shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
- 43,731
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Canada has one of the worst homeless problems in the West, far worse than America by comparative terms.
As politicians and fake do-gooders jaw, jaw, this man walked the walk.
There can be no happy place for you in the next life if you don't do good to others in this one.
Canadas East German model has not only been exposed, it is going to lead to the collapse of the nation.
The man behind micro-shelters once placed in Toronto's St. James Park is continuing his work even after the city removed them — and for one unhoused man, it's made all the difference.
"It saved my life," Paul Corbett Greer Jewell, 65, said of his new home, one of four new micro-shelters set up on a Leslieville property.
"It's a safe, warm place for me with locks and everything else, and security that I can go out and look for jobs and get myself back in order. It's a really great transitional thing," he added.
"It's a home base."
After years sleeping on streets and in shelters, last week, Jewel moved into the tiny shelter located in the backyard of Lazarus House, emergency transitional housing operated by Seeds of Hope Foundation, a charitable organization. Lazarus House provides housing for people unable to access shelter spaces and who are at risk of living outside.
As politicians and fake do-gooders jaw, jaw, this man walked the walk.
There can be no happy place for you in the next life if you don't do good to others in this one.
Canadas East German model has not only been exposed, it is going to lead to the collapse of the nation.
The man behind micro-shelters once placed in Toronto's St. James Park is continuing his work even after the city removed them — and for one unhoused man, it's made all the difference.
"It saved my life," Paul Corbett Greer Jewell, 65, said of his new home, one of four new micro-shelters set up on a Leslieville property.
"It's a safe, warm place for me with locks and everything else, and security that I can go out and look for jobs and get myself back in order. It's a really great transitional thing," he added.
"It's a home base."
After years sleeping on streets and in shelters, last week, Jewel moved into the tiny shelter located in the backyard of Lazarus House, emergency transitional housing operated by Seeds of Hope Foundation, a charitable organization. Lazarus House provides housing for people unable to access shelter spaces and who are at risk of living outside.