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Description

In this powerful episode, Philip Lindholm sits down with Ginny Burton—a former addict, felon, and now one of the nation’s most sought-after voices on recovery and homelessness.

Ginny’s life story reads like fiction: introduced to drugs by her mother at just seven years old, she spent decades addicted, homeless, and entangled in crime. By the age of 40, she had committed 17 felonies and was homelessness on the streets of Seattle. But against all odds, she transformed her life—graduating from the University of Washington as a Truman Scholar and dedicating herself to helping others overcome the same cycles she once lived.

Episode Highlights:

A Life Reclaimed:Ginny shares the raw details of her journey from addiction and homelessness to education, activism, and public service. Her story is a testament to human resilience and the power of second chances.

The Reality of Homelessness:Ginny describes what it’s really like to live on the streets—especially as a woman—and why addiction so often leads to homelessness. She challenges common myths, including the idea that homelessness is primarily about lack of affordable housing.

The Flaws in Our System: We explore why current social services often fail the people they are meant to help. Ginny critiques the "harm reduction" model, arguing that we are enabling addiction rather than offering real recovery. She advocates for a system that prioritizes freedom from addiction, not management of it.

Addiction and Relationships: Ginny discusses how addiction destroys trust, erodes love, and isolates individuals from their communities. Her personal reflections provide invaluable insight for anyone with a loved one struggling with substance use.

A New Approach to Treatment:From medication-assisted treatment to the debate over involuntary commitment, Ginny offers a provocative but compassionate roadmap for how to truly help those trapped in addiction—starting with accountability, structure, and real rehabilitation.

Policy and Lived Experience:

Ginny calls for system leaders to include the voices of people with lived experience at the decision-making table—not just as token participants, but as primary leaders shaping policy.

A Call to Action:

At the heart of Ginny’s message is this: compassion is not about making people comfortable in their misery—it’s about helping them build lives worth living.

Takeaways:

This episode is essential listening for policymakers, service providers, and anyone concerned about homelessness, addiction, and recovery. Ginny Burton’s hard-earned wisdom offers a new vision for public policy—one rooted in personal accountability, love, and lasting change.

Listen and subscribe to the podcast:

Spotify: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-informed-citizen

Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-informed-citizen/id1738680188

Connect with us:Website: https://theinformedcitizen.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drphiliplindholm/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drphiliplindholmYouTube Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLdscEVf-gjkiNh9YK-0yYiTZN7usLZ4CR

Credits:

Produced in partnership with Terry Wise & Associates

Music: Sound and Vision, “This Party Bussin”

Editing & Post-Production: Tony Wise at Wise Videography

This podcast is for informational purposes only and not professional advice.