Will Supreme Court recognize right for homeless to camp in public?

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In a Supreme Court showdown Monday over whether the homeless have a “right” to camp in public, almost no one mentioned the actual victims of that crazy idea. Homeless advocates, including the American Civil Liberties Union, told the court that living on the streets is a “victimless” crime. Victimless?

Everyone who has to step over needles and human poop and navigate around half-conscious humans while walking to work or taking their kids to school is a victim.

Every store owner whose entrance is blocked by makeshift cardboard shelters is a victim. 

Tents and belongings at a homeless encampment in Toriumi Plaza at 1st St and Judge John Aiso St. in Los Angeles. (Hans Gutknecht/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images)

Every family that wants to use a park and finds it cluttered with sprawling tents is a victim.

ST. LOUIS GOVERNMENT REMOVES ‘SCARY,’ ‘SMELLY’ HOMELESS CAMP AFTER THREE YEARS OF DISTURBING HOMEOWNERS

The homeless are more likely to commit violent crimes than people who aren’t homeless. The public has every reason to be wary.

Municipalities all over the U.S. are watching City of Grants Pass, Oregon v. Johnson, which challenges a 9th Circuit Court of Appeals

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