Worse going over a bridge.I bet that would suck pulling that on an open stretch of interstate on a windy day
Worse going over a bridge.I bet that would suck pulling that on an open stretch of interstate on a windy day
Yeah there are all sorts of rules:
http://minimotives.com/2014/06/25/where-can-you-park-a-tiny-house/
Re: homelessness, for sure those two are big issues. But what I am asking is, would you rather treat sick people like stray animals or at least provide them with some sort of reasonable place to live that is inexpensive. Treating it as a medical problem is a step in the right direction, imo. The next part is compassion, and the final part is economic and social.
The real problem isn't the money, it is that most communities don't want these sort of people anywhere near them. Hard to blame them. No easy answer, but it breaks your hear to see people in the streets living under bridges and begging for food
Vets and the elderly are particularly vulnerable, and more and more people are in this state of existence. Imo, unacceptable.
As a trader, I want to see the natural part of the USA like this. But I don't know how practical it is. It looks cool on a picture. Reality might be a very different thing.
There's always a apocryphal story going around Hawaii that the homeless problem is a result of well-meaning people on the mainland buying one-way tickets for the homeless to Hawaii. Easy to believe when you see the scale of the problem there, but haven't found any hard evidence that it's true.
yes those houses are very common in Finland. They are not built to last forever. Cheap to build, easy to heat.
think big when it comes to downsizing.
Now, Hotel Shinjuku 510’s capsules, no larger than 6 1/2 feet long by 5 feet wide, and not tall enough to stand up in...
