I hope you and the ones you love are eagerly anticipating a joyful and warm celebration of love and bounty this Thanksgiving. I hope you will all sit down to a table groaning with homemade food and see nothing but faces aglow with health and well-being. I hope that your feast is enlivened with exchanges of good news — increasing success in business, rising income, soon to be earned college degrees, and all the stories signifying upward mobility.
And I hope this all takes place under an intact roof, enclosed by four sturdy wall, in a comfortable air-conditioned environment where everything and everyone is clean, and in a place that is easily affordable to you. I hope that place is your residence.
For millions of Americans there will be no feast. There won’t even be a home for them to eat it in. Much less their own home. They are the thousands and thousands and thousands more without hope for the holidays. They are the homeless of America, our Nation’s shame.
Homelessness in America is nothing short of a disgrace and it should be the major domestic political issue in the 2006 legislative and gubernatorial races as well as the Presidential Election in 2008.
One candidate for Congress(OH16) is Jeff Seemann, who posted his diary on Daily Kos (where this diary is also cross-posted), “Trying to Understand” today, announcing that he intends to spend 100 hours living the homeless experience in order to better know and serve his constituency. I admire and applaud him. It is his diary that inspired this one. [Please read and respond to his diary after you finish this one. Thanks.]
WARNING! Readers, gird yourselves because nothing but bleak facts follow.
* There is no jurisdiction in the United States in which a full-time job at the prevailing minimum wage (either federal or state) provides enough income to allow a household to afford a two-bedroom home at the region’s fair market rent.
* Approximately 35.8 million people lived below the poverty line in 2003. This figure was an increase from the 34.5 million people who lived below the poverty line in 2002.
* The annual homeless population of the United States is 2.3-3.5 million people.
* 40% of the homeless population were made up of families (2003); 63% of the homeless population have at least one child; 84% of the homeless population in families are women.
* 44% of the homeless population are employed.
* 33% of male homeless adults are veterans.
* 55% of homeless individuals are reported as not having medical insurance.
Let’s all take a breath and consider just a little of what those statistics mean.
The minimum wage is not a living wage for American workers. “Minimum wage” is a despicable euphemism for “slave wage.” Such a policy of setting the minimum wage at a level so low is nothing short of the very unchristian message that the laborer is not worthy of his hire. The 44% of the employed homeless in this country can’t afford to buy a turkey and all the trimmings, much less sit down to the table and enjoy it in their merry domicile, surrounded by loving family even once a year.
Single families headed by mothers are the largest and fastest growing demographic of homeless victims in our Nation. I say “victims” because many of these homeless women are driven from the family household by domestic violence. They live in fear and shame, unable to provide a place for their children to grow and thrive. They can’t earn enough to feed themselves and their dependents, let alone treat them to a candle-lit Thanksgiving feast once a year.
Men who volunteered their lives and sacred honor in service to their country now find themselves with no homes to defend even if they wanted to. Some fought, and some were grievously wounded. Many did so on empty stomachs, stomachs filled only with MREs, and some lucky ones on stomachs that growled in chow lines, waiting for a slice of white meat, a blob of mashed potatoes, and a dollop of gravy. Now the only holiday celebration they can hope for will come from a compassionate charity kitchen and their trays of food will be taken in the company of downtrodden strangers.
WARNING! Dear readers who are still with me, a quick and dirty distillation of America’s homeless population from The National Law Center of Homelessness & Poverty:
* 41% are single men.
* 14% are single women.
* 5% are unaccompanied children.
* 40% are families with children.
* 67% are single parent families.
* 23% are mentally disabled.
* 10% are veterans.
* 30% are drug or alcohol dependent.
* 50% are African-American
* 35% are White
* 12% are Hispanic
* 2% are Native American
* 1% are Asian
Homelessness is an equal opportunity affliction. It is a pathogenic social disease that threatens to become an epidemic. It is also curable by:
* instituting a minimum living wage;
* by constructing affordable housing;
* and by creating universal health care for children and universal health insurance for adults.
All we must do is overpower America’s shame by force of will and common legislative good sense. Will you support, campaign, and vote for candidates who demonstrate they have the will and the proposals to end homelessness in America? If you do, perhaps we can all lift our heads and look each other in the eye knowing we stood for real American values. That’s certainly something to be thankful for.
Thanks Limelight
I hope it gets a little more attention here than it got on DKos.
and thanks!
And today they cut millions of dollars for food stamps while we spend billions everyday blowing away another country that never wanted us there. Some priorities. Much needed diary Limelite…thank yo.
Hadn’t heard and I didn’t know just how shameful Congress was getting. Cut food stamps!?!?!? What’s that other than a policy for starvation? Did they vote to cut their own salaries by an equal percentage? Damn! — I’m steamed.
Pretty flipping disgusting. Let me see if I can find the link to that for you. I read it just this morning. It was part of the budget cuts they approved yesterday.
Here you go:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/17/AR2005111700931.html
That wasn’t where I read the original amount but it was in the millions.
Let’s pray that the cuts really do get eliminated in the negotiations with the Senate. With the huge heating bills the working poor will have to pay this winter, they don’t need another big jolt like this.
There is a very good reason why the US prefers not to care for its poor.
And I want to propose that Booman and other folks here who have blogs embed a Cost of War Counter on their blog front pages. We should keep this cause of homelessness and so many other injustices and woes right up front in our attention fields. [Drops it into Suggestion Box]
heartwrenching diary Limelite and the link to the COW counter, I will add it to my blog today.
with a diary and hotlink once you do. I’d like to visit, and I’m sure other BooTribbers would, too.
Oops! Stupid me, just saw the link below your tag line.
I’m not sure I buy this, Ductape. First, I don’t think we did a whole lot for the poor before the war. Long before we were in this insane conflict, we’d been heavily brainwashed to believe that the poor are over-funded, live lives free of stress (e.g. the “lucky ducks” remarks in the WSJ), or are getting only a tiny portion of what our taxes were intended to provide. Thus, helping people through the government is perfectly wrong (so goes this line of thinking).
But (as I intended to say, I hit the post button by accident) I agree that it is certainly a matter of priorities. And we are fed a constant died of “gratify yourself above all” rather than “support the common good”.
Spending a dollar to kill someone else’s child instead of a dime to care for their own is a longstanding and cherished American value.
Something else obscene is the so called guidelines for poverty. One person=$9,570, 2people-$12,830.00….so if you make over that you’re not counted as living in poverty?..what a crock of bs. those guidelines are.
It’s really a healthcare issue.
We, as a country, have to stop blaming the victims of mental health concerns.
I didn’t pull out the following citation from references, but it may especially interest you:
Among Homeless Adults – Alcohol, Drug, and Mental Health Problems (ADM) Often Lead to Homelessness
How can we ignore the need for universal healthcare for children and universal health insurance for adults in the face of such extensive wretchedness?
Basically there are thousands of people who will be added to the homeless roles, if FEMA continues its plan to cut off support to people staying in hotels.
I was in a Catholic community center for a meeting the other day in New Orleans. The center has been converted to a homeless shelter, post-Katrina. A man walked in, an out of towner, looking for shelter. This is a new kind of homelessness: workers who have come to rebuild the Gulf coast have no where to lay their heads at night.
He said there were “50,000 homeless people in this city.”
Maybe he was exaggerating. Maybe not.
We are working in New Orleans to put affordable housing and emergency shelter at the forefront of social justice demands. We were working on this pre-Katrina, and its become “the” issue with other groups now as well.
I challenge each of you to go out in your community and visit with the homeless. Find out who they are, where are they staying, what are the resources, and what is it that is needed to help people find affordable housing.
I have come to believe that if housing were at the forefront of social justice issues, conditions for the working poor in this country would begin to turn around, and other social justice issues would begin to be addressed as well.
Please, don’t wait for Congress to set the issues. We have to do this from a grass roots level to really turn things around in this country.
http://www.c3nola.org
http://www.no-heat.org
Initial estimates of the number of homeless in the immediate aftermath of Katrina were 1 million. Yes, I agree a figure just a little too neat, but I’m willing to grant it’s an estimate.
Suppose 1 million is only nearly accurate, suppose only half that number belongs to NOLA, the most densely populated area of destrucion in Katrina’s path. Then if a “mere” 50,000 people are currently homeless, well then, that’s astonishingly efficient “problem-solving.”
[Of course, I don’t for a minute believe any of what I just posted.]
Great diary. Just wanted to add this. As chance would have it, our local homeless shelter is about to go out of business. They need to raise $75,000 by February, or there doors will be shutting, in February, a very cold month in Michigan. I believe they are the largest shelter serving a metro area with a population of about 500,000. They’ve got a grant for $35,000 of that, but are $40,000 short. They had an art show yesterday on our capital. Poetry readings. Selling some of my donated novels to try to raise cash. The art was by the homeless themselves. Men, women and children. Children decorating boxes like the houses they wish they had. Pretty fucking painful to watch. War protesting in the cold was far preferable then looking at the work, let alone the faces, of those who are about to be turned out. While our Congress tries desperately to pass a $50 million budgetary cut to poverty programs, and maintain a $75 million tax break to the wealthiest people in our oligarchy, and we’re spending more than $5 billion a month bombing and killing innocent children in a foreign country.
Now I can completely understand how those on the right can look at all of us who want some fucking sanity in the economic distribution system, and say to us, “You liberal, Commie fuckers are ruining this country,” the way many of them seemed to do as they called the Republican call-in line on last nights prime time CSPAN sweeps week special nuttery.
Here in Miami, the homeless have organized and publish a weekly newspaper that they hawk at intersections for donations ($1 suggested). It’s a remarkably good paper of its special kind, and while targeting other homeless readers, I (who own my own home) buy it ocasionally and find myself fascinated by it in an un-self-flattering way.
Especially poignant to me are the obituaries that include extensive biographies of the dead, photos of the wake and funeral, and descriptions of the funeral service, often quoting portions of the eulogy.
Naturally, one of the purposes of the paper is to raise money to help fund homeless shelters. In short, they’ve arrived at an entrepreneural solution to keeping a roof over their heads in a time of decreased public funding, even if it’s a communal one.
http://tinyurl.com/8r9b2 link to article about Congress giving themselves a $3,100 dollar pay raise…have they no sense of irony at all…so they cut food stamps, medicaid, student loans etc but heaven help them if they don’t get their yearly raise.
I was reading this morning that in Montana almost 50% of working people in Montana do not get a livable wage. This includes people with college degrees working in service industries. Another headline says that the overall average drop in yearly wages in Illinois since 1999 has dropped by 6 thousand dollars. Add to that the almost complete meltdown of the auto manufacturing industry which is wiping out the middle class and pretty soon everyone will be homeless or close to it.
That legislators and senators did not cut their salaries by the same percentage that they cut programs, no?