Currently and throughout history there has been immense poverty, and homelessness due to a a variety of structural causes including a shortage of affordable, health care, housing units in the US, cutting of social services and etc . Common responses to homelessness combine punitive legislation with support for what Lyon Callo calls “normalization” efforts. Why has social inequality been accepted as a normal part of society? He explains how our society is governed a domination model and a hegemonic process. He explains that shelter language and practices produce, and maintain homelessness. Widely accepted discourses include self-help and biomedicalization. Efforts to solve the homelessness problem include a variety of techniques for detecting, diagnosing and treating disorders within individual homeless people. “Self blaming and self-governing people can, scarcely be expected to spend time developing strategies for collectively resisting systemic inequalities.” (Lyon-Callo 154) Not all homeless people give into these self-reform methods, and instead resist all efforts to be treated. People who resist are deemed “difficult” simply because they are not complacent and obedient with their treatment plan. Shelter staff though they may want to end homelessness they are often condition to think it is a individual not structural issue. As a result they respond by functioning within the neoliberal continuum of care discourses. Shelter staff are taught to govern and manage homeless people. Failing to address systemic and discursive inequalities and instead devoting efforts to detecting deviancy and instead training homeless people remains ineffective in decreasing homelessness. He explains that to eliminate poverty, we need social movements aimed at denaturalizing current dominant discourses about the rights of capital and redistributing the nations wealth in a more equitable fashion. We need collective political movements making existing jobs pay living wages, with just workers rights and environmental protection laws.