How do you know when you are at the bottom of the pile?
Maybe when you are an ex. serviceman suffering from PTSD who has lost his home, or perhaps someone with a mental illness who has no home, or perhaps a young person who has been forced to leave the family home through no fault of their own. People such as these are living and sleeping rough in Blackpool outside good quality hotels that are presently housing illegal migrants, mostly young healthy men, who have crossed the channel illegally, not necessarily fleeing a war-torn country, but merely looking for a better life in the UK.
We now have a two tier system where one person's human rights is placed above another person's human rights.
Some of these people on the streets of Blackpool and similarly other towns, have been evicted from hotel accommodation to house the illegal immigrants. Where is the fairness in that. What happens when the weather gets so cold that it is dangerous for people to sleep on the streets but all available accommodation has been requisitioned by Serco to house immigrants?
One homeless person who was interviewed took the view that the homeless on the streets felt they were invisible and that people walked past them. Who could blame him for coming to that conclusion when others are prioritised and given accommodation whilst they are left to get on with it.