Homeless Families on the Rise, with No End in Sight
AMHERST, Mass. - There is just enough space for Lisa Rivera's family to sleep at Jessie's House homeless shelter.
In one room, she fits the full-sized bed she shares with her 9-year-old daughter, the trundle for her 11-year-old son, a twin bed for her 14-year-old daughter and a playpen for her 1 1/2-year-old son.
"It's comfortable, but it's hard sleeping all together," the 32-year-old woman said. "Oh my God, sometimes it's so hard."
Faced with domestic abuse, high housing costs and unemployment, Rivera's family finds itself among the growing ranks of the homeless in Massachusetts -- and possibly, the country.
About 1,800 homeless families were in Massachusetts shelters last week -- up from 1,400 in June 2006 and just under 1,200 in June 2005, according to state figures. There are more families in shelters now than at any time since the inception of the state's family shelter program in 1983, according to the Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless.
State officials blame a wide range of problems -- from cuts in assistance to the recent housing crisis.
"We're very concerned that this is going to keep going," said Julia Kehoe, commissioner of the state Department of Transitional Assistance.
Massachusetts is one of the few states that keep government records of the number of homeless families in shelters because state law requires the commonwealth to shelter any family that meets income and other guidelines. The state keeps a daily count to show how many beds it needs, said Robyn Frost, executive director of the Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless.
Nationally, the picture is much less clear.
Data from the Department of Housing and Urban Development suggests there about 750,000 homeless in the nation on any given night, with about 40 percent of those members of homeless families, said Philip Mangano, director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness.
Up to 26,500 Washingtonians are without a home or safe place to sleep on any given night, according to recent estimates. Families with children are the fastest-growing segment of the homeless population nationwide and make up nearly half of all people staying in King County homeless shelters.
The overall number of homeless people is up from a few years ago, Mangano said, but nobody can pinpoint an exact number of families because reporting requirements vary widely from state to state.
"Our desire would be to have many more states step up and track the data," Mangano said. "Research and data, that's what should drive the resources that we make available. Instead it's often anecdote, conjecture and hearsay that does that."
Kehoe attributes the increase in Massachusetts to a convergence of low wages, high housing costs, an increase in housing foreclosures and cuts in federal and state housing assistance programs. Two years ago, lawmakers also lowered the financial eligibility requirements to qualify for homeless benefits from the poverty level to those making 130 percent of what would be considered a poverty wage, she said.
"I think what we are seeing here is a perfect storm," she said. "Until we have some investment in affordable housing, and some flexibility in using our resources, we're not going to see a leveling off of these numbers."
Rivera lost her apartment in Springfield in 2005, when a domestic-abuse case involving the father of her youngest child prompted the state to remove all four youngsters from her custody, she said. Without the money she had been receiving in Transitional Aid to Families with Dependent Children, Rivera could not pay her rent.
She moved in with friends, worked at a gas station, went to school to become a medical receptionist and fought in court to get her children back.
A judge eventually restored custody, but without a place to live, the family has moved from one shelter after another.
"It's hard to get an apartment anywhere, especially with the size of apartment I need," she said. "There's none out there, and once one comes available, there are just so many of us out here that need, it gets taken up with the snap of a finger."
The New England Farm Workers Council, a private non-profit agency contracted by the state, is helping Rivera look for permanent housing. She has an income of just over $1,400 a month, all from either TAFDC or Social Security, which she receives for her 9-year-old, who suffers from epilepsy.
The agency requires that families spend no more that 50 percent of their income in rent, a figure designed to make it more likely that families won't get behind on those payments.
But rents for a three-bedroom apartment in the greater Springfield area range from about $800 to $1,300 without utilities, said Tom Salter, the vice president of the agency's shelter and housing division.
"A minimum-wage job for 40 hours a week is just not going to pay the rent in any area," he said. "It just isn't."
There are state programs that help once a homeless family finds a new place to live. Rental assistance, however, often is difficult to get. The state spends about $30 million on rental subsidies, compared with about $120 million 15 years ago, and there also have been no new incremental increases in major federal subsidies in about a decade, Kehoe said.
Commissioner Kehoe and Frost said families also are being squeezed by the recent national lending crisis, as high mortgages that have forced some landlords to sell or face foreclosure.
"Although most of the homeless were not homeowners, many could have been people living in units that had been foreclosed," Frost said.
© 2007 The Associated Press.
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88 Comments so far
Show AllIn Massachussets about 3000 teens are homeless and lack proper shelter,foster homes and appropriate services.These youth face various problems like sexual abuse,drug abuse,family violence,mental health and school problems.Homelessness is a complex problem that is associated with our social and psychological roots.It is imperative that skilled clinical services must be available to such people when appropriate along with educational,medical and other facilities.
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janeashley
massachusetts drug rehab
Buminfl, lillulu, and Preregister- Thank you. While it may appear heartless to bring this topic up AFTER 4 children are born, it is essential to talk about. Unfortunately, the fear of coming off as a facsist prevents this nation, and the world from having the discussion. There is NOTHING more important in this world today than population growth, specifically the growth of those populations unable to care just fiscally for their children (let alone those that lack in other areas). We all know poverty is cyclical- Why then do we do NOTHING to thwart it? Education is the key. Telling kids, specifically young girls that procreating is NOT an accomplishment- that their lives are essenitally over for the next 18+ years? Giving them tools and options to not repeat their parents lives is essential. How do we do this?
It is a shame that there is always money and time for war- yet the vital issues surrounding our world- the truth, is never talked about.
I'm wondering why the right-wingers keep crowing about America --- where housing is unaffordable for many and wages are kept low --- being the "greatest country on earth."
If only the retired among us would ALL get off their asses and take to the streets to protest Shrub & gang we could create some real problems and not lose our jobs. I have been getting out there more and more and we should all do it. Get off your asses and protest everything and anything to do with the neocon plans to destroy us.
Why did Ms. Rivera have so many kids? Personal Responsibility? I understand the gut reaction that causes that kind of statement, but think about it! First, they are here now, should we let them suffer? If those 4 kids don't have a good education and opportunities, then they will probably fall into the same trap as their mother. You live what you learn. These problems go from generation to generation. If we had the educational opportunities and support for these families and their children, we could change the future for their descendents. I would venture to say that Ms. Rivera came from a similar background, poverty and lack of education. When will we ever learn that what happens to one, happens to all.
"Yeah right, for those who are advocating a national strike. After we participate, we will join the ranks of the unemployed and the homeless. Smart, real smart.
#
lillulu October 9th, 2007 4:01 pm
Hmmm. bet it all falls apart before most of us are jobless and homeless.
I don't think a "consumer based economy" can last too long without consumers, do you?
yeah it's call the New World Order, first announced by GHW Bush on September 11, 1991.
the plan? Banks will turn the world into a large plantation with its population the slaves, working not even for minimum wage, but for mere survival... 3 bowls of rice and a hut...all provided at the company's expense...but not to worry, you can pay it off, for the rest of your life.
Oh they have a plan for us, alright.
Not that my opinion matters, but about 15 or so years ago, I was in a conversation with a friend who was a psychologist, well educated. I got into a discussion regarding then how minimum wage jobs are there but folks can't afford to both house and feed themselves. If your single you really can't find anything as far a assistance. He started telling me how the 6 or 8 wealthiest millionares rule the world and politics. He told me nightmare stories of enslaving the population and the wealthly with the Govt. blessing would seize peoples homes, and people being left with very low wage jobs and the other half would be those with alot of money at the top. I thought he was kind of "Goofy", but maybe this is what he was talking about. He told me then to keep my debts to a minimum and careful with easy credit and credit cards. So far I have been pretty successful. Any comments on this?
buminfl, I agree 100%. For the life of me, I cannot figure out why poor people have children, and lots of them at that. To me, four children is a big family. It must boil down to lack of education and lack of intelligence.
I once spoke to an illegal alien from Central America. He was around 29 years old, and he was childless and never wanted to have children. He said the reason he didn't was because he wanted to be able to give the child everything. He realized that since he was poor, he couldn't (give the child advantages he never had).
I think Americans are dumb (sorry, I had to say it).
Yeah right, for those who are advocating a national strike. After we participate, we will join the ranks of the unemployed and the homeless. Smart, real smart.
Judi - Bloofer - don't be so naive. I know families who have farmed for generations (in Nebraska) and even with their paid off land, farmhouses and expensive equipment (not to mention the incredible KNOWLEDGE of the land and farming that they have), they can no longer make a go of it. Farms are selling off at a high rate. And you think putting the inexperienced homeless people on these farms, that THEY can make it work? You are setting people up for failure by even suggesting it.
Conservatives have a solution to the homeless problem: Make money off them. Deprive and drive them to desperation, substance abuse and crime, then put them in private prisons to provide cheap corporate labor at taxpayer expense. Making birth control unacceptable or difficult provides more child labor, adoptees and organ donors for the upper classes. Meanwhile the Fed cranks out more money than usual, devaluing the dollar to "raise" wages. Is everybody happy?
BTW, the homeless on the other side of Hawaii live in tents on the beach--the neo-liberal solution.
Ah Compassionate conservatism in action.
Your speculation is unfounded and unsupported by any facts. Often fathers skip out on their child support obligations. Many state attorneys lack the financial resources to track them down.
Most people are not "to blame" for their economic circumstances, particularly not in an economy that is wholly based on low pay service jobs for 96% of its workforce, whilst 1% at the top receive obscenely inflated salaries and the remaining 3% of "professionals" receive enough compensation to allow them to feel "comfortable." In fact, MOST, not just some, Americans struggle to make ends meet.
Just remember,
People didn't build neighborhoods, communities, villages, towns, cities, states and this nation, which by the way, was founded SPECIFICALLY for the purpose of furthering the Common Good and the General Welfare, so that the inhabitants of the aforesaid neighborhoods, etc. could tell each other "you're on your own."
Wanna live by the law of the jungle? Go live in the fucking jungle.
But wages keep going up!
Just curious but why would the judge award custody back to the mom. I thought you had to prove you could care for the children and you had a residence.
I guess the dad may have called in and lied about the welfare. He may have kept the kids for a while and decided it was too much like work.
Sounds like the system was too concerned about making money then in the welfare of the family. This is a liberal state too.
Also,why doesn't dad have to pay child support. A lot of people do this to themselvses.
"I wonder if this is the real purpose behind all those concentration camps that Halliburton has been building here in the U.S.—to house the people who are being driven out of their homes by BushCo's domestic policies?
#
mr. charlie October 8th, 2007 3:42 pm"
you WONDER if there is a potential or planned use for the Rex-84 concentration camps built by Helliburton?
I would laugh but it's not funny.
When the American economy crashes, (coming soon) it will be the culmination of Prescott Bush's dream: an America that can finally be overtly taken over by banks. After all, Bush's bank financed Hitler during WWII. Bush, along with several other of America's obscenely wealthy families, decided the best end to the Depression was to destroy the republic and replace it with fascism. (http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/document/document_20070723.shtml)
Americans are one tiny event, excuse, whim away from a total fascist takeover by the Bush cabal...and IF there is an election in 2008 and that franky, is a HUGE "IF" ... Billary has already signed on to the M.I. complex's wet dream of endless war.
The American economy already has devolved into a third world economy. When you have people with advanced degrees waiting tables, you KNOW you're in trouble. American companies don't "make" anything anymore. Hence, there is literally nothing to sell but "people."
The so-called "global economy" is global only in one sense: it allows CORPORATIONS to run amok. A "global" economy without a global minimum wage and benefits is a standing invitation to drive wages not only down, but AWAY.
The foreclosures by the banking community on homes once owned by American families; the inability of contractors to sell new homes; all represent signs of the coming return of blatant feudalism. Soon only the landed gentry will own anything; your own stay on any land beneath you will be at the pleasure of its lord; you will eat, sleep, live and die on company time and be paid nothing but your three bowls of rice a day and meager hut and rags. Oh healthcare? Fuggedaboutit. You won't need it. When you die, you will simply be replaced by another worker. We make sure there are plenty of those because you can't have abortions, ladies. Needed as factory/pipeline slaves or cannon fodder, sorry.
Oh, and where will all of these happy American campers (i.e., you and I) be housed? Yep. Right again mister. Right in those concentration camps you "wonder" about.
The individuals in charge of America are its worst enemies. Traitors, mass murderers, committers of genocide; thieves of the worst order; the most egregious breachers of the public trust imaginable.
Those of who who still believe in the democrats need to have your heads examined. They are part of it, folks. They are the ponys in the dog and pony show known as the U.S. Congress. CLEAN SWEEP 2008.
Here is another thought: If shelter is provided for those who do not have any, it could be constructed in a manner that is ecologically aware and environmentally responsible, and probably 100 times or so less costly than what is the norm today in the US of stinking A. It obviously won't be a mansion, but it will be a roof overhead.
Heck, i could build a hut in my backyard with scrap wood pallets and other readily available material. It could be equipped with batteries connected to an inverter so that the occupant could have light, a fan, and perhaps a coffee machine and a few other low-energy conveniences. For folks used to living on the streets this would be such an improvement.
Check out this website for more details: http://journeytoforever.org/at_house.html
Plus let me add, this topic "hits home" for me (pun intended) because in the neighborhood my family lives in and all around the city we live in (Charlotte, NC) developers have been beating themselves over the head to build as if there was no tomorrow (it is not a coincidence that Charlotte is a big banking city). Anyhow, this is incredibly wasteful and i'd even say shameful.
In my own neighborhood, they have now torn down three perfectly fine stout houses. This practically makes my blood boil because these developers don't even care how wasteful it is -- its all about the quick money (duh). When I walk my dogs around the block today, i am going to have to look at a huge pile of rubbish from the most recently torn down home of just a few days ago. This rubbish is only going to be taken to the landfill, even though it could have provided the supplies to build 10-15 pleasant abodes for the less fortunate.
Will the US of stinking A ever realize that if we continue on with capitalistic cannibalism along with utter dismissal of folk's basic needs, it will spell the end of the country? So far all i sense is continued "business as usual" and a defiant stubborness to learn or even acknowledge the reality. All the while day after day we keep getting closer and closer to the abyss. I will not go there peacefully.
Peace,
Ken Hausle
I so feel for these people. It could be any one of us really. Imagine only a certain set of circumstances and poof goes your world. I was in Berkeley, CA recently and saw them with their designated street corners. In Costa Rica I went and bought some food and coffee for one guy who had his carboard box and said he had been living in LA until his house of cards fell. He asked for food because if we gave him money the crackheads would have jumped him after we left.
There but for the grace of god go I
hellodarling,thanks for the recipe !
"Poor Man's Soup"
1 cup hot water
3 pkgs. ketchup
salt
serve with side of crackers
distibuting tents,is a good idea.anyone who didnt buy a home,while clinton was still in office..may never be able to buy one.the late great middle-class has been herded into subdivisions, that casts a camera's eye on every treeless corner and land will no longer be sold to the'common'man,only empty boxes of air called condominiums,where you will be at the mercy of the'association'and these are the'fortunate'ones....
judi-- I think your idea of providing people with land is the best answer. If charitable institutions or private philanthropists actually wanted to do some good in this world (which they mostly don't, but that's another story), they purchase a farm with a few hundred acres of land and an existing large farmhouse. Then they would invite poor or homeless people to live in the farmhouse, and provide them with basic necessities until they were able to begin growing their own food and building their own homes, so as to establish a self-sufficient community.
Obviously, it would take an ongoing financial commitment to get such a community up and running: financial help with tools, materials, and infrastructure costs, for example--and also help with knowledge and skills.
Ms Rivera should have stopped having children while she had the chance. What about personal responsibility as a way to prevent homelessness?
Homeless - no the new term is 'urban campers', they choose to live at no fixed address.
And unemployed are 'low wealth leisure class'. People working multiple jobs in a hopeless effort to support their family are 'under compensated workaholics'.
Remember, the manipulation of figures for the homeless and poor probably works much like labor statistics. You get laid off, you get unemployment for something like 26 weeks. If nothing turns up, your unemployment is terminated. You are no longer counted amongst the unemployed. You fell off the back steps and are an unperson. You join the hundreds of thousands who are no longer statistics and therefore not "unemployed."
Same thing on war casualties. Five grunts in a Humvee, which takes an RPG through the driver's window. Driver is killed, Humvee swerves and flips into a drainage ditch and the other four drown. That gives you one war casualty and four victims of a traffic accident. Looks better on the Pentagon's rolls. One KIA rather than five. Gotta watch that Iraqi traffic, those roads are dangerous. Also, four widows get smaller compensation.
Statistics will do whatever the clever statistician wants them too.
What many homeless families need is LAND where they can farm, and build up their own businesses . Millions of acres of land is in the hands of a few. Parcel out the land for every family in America who needs a home, give out loans for building houses, and help these families get business loans that don't require collateral. So many families, especially woman with children, don't stand a chance and need a helping hand. Other leaders in some countries have been known to give out land to their poor. Time to divide up the land for the benefit of the many poor and homeless who would be willing to till the land, etc.
powerful post,pac...
I do believe there was a key article in last months "Harpers" magazine calling for a National Strike this Election Day, which is Tuesday, November 6th.
We have to make it peaceful though.......we have to make this actually work and stick, rebelnow!
Daniel Shays,
Repeating my comment "Long Live Shays Rebellion" made under the Chomsky article earlier is really not "off topic" in this forum. As you probably know the rebellion was a result of farmers in Massachusetts losing their land due to excessive debt incurred during the revolution, high state taxes, and overly expensive court costs for petitioning against their foreclosures. Also the government refused to pay back wages to those who fought in the revolution, compounding their indebtedness. It was a battle of simple farmers wanting to be left alone and the capitalist interests of the eastern merchant class.
It was the first serious rebellion of the newly formed nation and frightened many leaders like John Adams. It did, however, please Jefferson to a certain extent, prompting his famous comment about a rebellion every 20 years being a good thing.
I think we are way overdue!
Homeless Families on the Rise, with No End in Sight
It is understood that LA has had a homeless population that exceeded 50,000 ten years ago.
So it seems that the number of homeless people is much higher than this article leads us to believe.
Even so the number of constituents homeless if they were assembled together would resemble a major American city without homes.
If this is the best Americans can do, it is pathetic.
You are correct about that pacplyer. I was doing some research in the registry of deeds. Four houses were built across the street from me in the year 2000. So far they have been sold three times. There is someone trying to sell one of them now. The rest keep on filling Homestead Act. They can't afford the loans, insurance and pay taxes too. I don't think I have ever seen things this bad.
Massachusetts bought 8000 acres from the Nipmuc Indians and put their money in a trust in a bank of Boston......they were slaughtered before they ever saw any of their money. This stuff just keeps on going on and on.....and on.
lilulu wrote: "the more "well-to-do" street tenants have camping tents"
If you can afford it, buying a tent for even one homeless person/family appears to be something useful people could do.
workreno,
I'm not aware of a strike set for Nov 7th. Could somebody provide me a link?
Thanks,
pac
I'm sorry; I didn't format it for link. Here is the link... Click here:
http://www.anotherfuckedborrower.com
We have real leverage with this. Let's use it.
Kristina40, Rebel, others
I understand the fear of negatively impacting one's credit rating. But right now, so many Americans have poor credit that it is not likely to deny you access to it, even if you go into forclosure (which in Florida, takes about six months or longer.)
Right now, many Americans are already months behind in their mortgage payments, see: anotherfuckedborrower.com (read the archived comments by this banker; they are amazing; he warned everybody back in 2003 this was going to happen.) The banks have financed both the war machine and the housing bubble. We all know wall street is worried about a meltdown if these forclosures continue or increase. We can get congress's attention if their bosses are not happy (CEO's) because we pulled the plug on them.
The fear of homelessness is how CEO's control your behavior. Falling Three months behind, and hoarding the money is not likely to get you thrown out. You can renegotiate the loan for lower payments even at that late stage. (don't ask how I know.)
I'm aware of only these three non-violent tools to topple this administration: impacting their earnings by boycott, starving their banks by default, and shunning their consumer slavery by withholding your services.
Accomplished together, on the demands of restoring the bill of rights and holding special re elections has a chance of working.
If we are unwilling to risk our economic security to protect our constitutional liberties, than we deserve neither.
pac
I spoke to an old friend who lives in Los Angeles, and he said there are thousands of homeless people living on the streets of downtown L.A. They use cardboard boxes for their "homes," tarps, and the more "well-to-do" street tenants have camping tents.
This in the "richest country in the world." You think the government would build subsidized housing of some sort for all of these people? Or keep jobs in this country instead of sending them to Mexico, China, India, and God knows where else, on top of allowing illegal Mexicans to enter and take work away from U.S. citizens and keep wages and standards of everything low.
The U.S. government doesn't care about its people.
Is the National Strike still set for Nov.7th ?
mary lou October 8th, 2007 4:34 pm
Some good news?
I unpluged my television to save power 24/7. :->
I live close enough to Canada to listen to CBC-2 on my radio. :->
I put my retirement savinge in Loonies. :->
Happiness is a state of mind - ask any Buddahist or Huichol. :->
Marcus Aurelius wrote that there will be creatures like Bush/Cheney. Hemorrhoids are also part of the Devine. :->
Jesus said that the Kingdom of Heaven is here on the earth - rich men and their fat camels will never find it - I wish them a long life, a very long life. :->
I have to go with Rebel on this one. I don't think not paying my mortgage is going to solve much except adding myself to the homeless roll count. I can't do much good living in a drainage ditch.
pac: You have the right idea. I also think that not paying your mortgage is a really bad idea at this point. I strongly suggest that everyone start a "run" on the banks by moving ALL their funds, including IRA's, to a local credit union. Get all your friends to do the same. Credit unions are cooperatives and are not involved with the FED. It's one way of starving the beast. Not to mention the fact that your money, if you have any, is safer in a local institution and circulates only in your local community.
Just a suggestion.
This time of the year just moves me to no end. It is as if a veil is lifted and I can see and feel everything. A great of it is very painful but along with it is the hope for restoration. This earth is magical place and it has so much to offer each and every living creation in it. It needs to be restored. I hope I am part of that restoration so that when I pass I will be able to rest in peace.
pistonbroke, I HATE the national anthem, I HATE the Soluting the flag. It is if no one has a right to exist in the world. It makes me sick, even more since I am half Native American.
Faith seems to be a central theme to commondreams posts. And hope and charity of course.
The 750,000 number doesn't count the people sleeping under bridges and squatting all through the country. It doesn't count either the emigrant labor that lives way below the poverty line in desperate straights.
But the other deception is the unemployment figures. To say that unemployment is low in America is a blatant lie. Unemployment figures only reflect those drawing unemployment checks from the government! It doesn't include the millions without jobs that have exhausted their unemployment benefits! That unemployment check only lasts for about three weeks in most cases. After that, the poor SOB who can't find a job falls off the unemployment radar into never-never land. He is no longer part of the unemployment total. Remember, "there are lies, damned lies, and [gov] statistics." - Mark Twain
So I understand what's going on now. Neo-cons are intentionally bankrupting the U.S. treasury so that they won't have to pay any entitlements to poor people. Instead the money went to "privatize" everything, and it went to no-bid contracts to their buddies. The debt and deficit (you do know the difference don't you) will soar to new perilous levels because the Treasury will keep printing worthless money to pay foreign countries back with for all the crap we Americans buy. Kind of like if you went on a spending spree and started paying your bills with Monopoly game board money.
If the dollar crashes, it will crash the banks of Great Britain and China (which is why this month panicked runs were made on a number of English banks due to uncertainties about the level of U.S mortgage exposure.) Dollar pegged to oil means Huge corporations will never let congress or shrub out of their newly defined job of keeping oil prices high. Any nation that dumps cheap oil on the world market, and who will not take worthless dollars for it can expect an Aircraft Carrier to anchor off shore with ill intent and CIA guys with dark sunglasses to start infesting the population (followed by special ops forces)
This is the New World Order, that three generations of Shrub nazi's have been cooking up for you.
Do you like it? I don't. Then:
KNOW YOUR ENEMY
American CEO's are the highest paid in the history of the world. They have hijacked the U.S. government and looted the treasury.
Solution? NATIONAL BOYCOTT, NATIONAL STRIKE
save money by canceling everything except food. Be prepared to impact wall street by staying home with the "blue flu". Default on your mortgage to give the american taxpayer leverage against these unelected titans of wall street who have contaminated congress and put puppets in the white house.
These steps are legal, and the consequences are not criminal, merely civil, financial.
Remember, my fellow taxpayers, there can be no restoration of your constitution without some personal financial risk.
pac
When I drive around Florida it is obvious there are millions existing in broken down shacks. It's a disgrace but a good avert. for capitalism or to give it a better word " Dog eat Dog " a system so stupid and unhealthy for the majority of people because the dogs at the top just devour all the food and the rest scramble for crumbs.
The system existed in Europe for centuries but the top dogs saw better and bigger piles of gold in the new world. I'll give the masters credit they have most Americans eating out of their hands with the religious crap and flag waving, Oh! and don't forget to sing the national anthem at every opportunity they love you to do that, it shows you are patriotic and there's nothing like patriotism as a substitute for a good home and food on the table.
I am sitting here in tears thinking about it all. I too am in a crisis. My son just totalled his vehicle last week, since I don't have wheels at the moment I can't get up to see him. Life is too damn short for people to make it a living hell.
People have been oppressed for so long, I pray to God they find the strength within to stand up and honor their gift of life.
I am not religious either, I am spiritual. I used to be religious until I got very sick and couldn't get the help I needed from neither the conventional medicine or my church. My life changed..so drastically, I no longer believe, I KNOW! I know the goodness of Divinity, no one would even believe it if I was to tell what I have experienced in the last past 10 years. God is so good!
!off-topic warning!
Hey, rebelnow,
Long live Shays Rebellion!
1) Research needs to be done on how many people were classified with 'mental illness' BEFORE they lived on the street, and how many developed mental illness as a result (massive stress, grossly unsanitary conditions which can lead to nervous system deterioration, and in larger cities susceptibility to physical attack even while asleep -- and it happens). I have talked to Street People who have described these problems. Some of them were once successful professionals who said or did the 'wrong thing' to the Nazis.
2) A very small percentage live on the street 'by choice' alone. Many have been blacklisted by the New Nazi Corporate Goons.
MA,yes,the pebbles,the ripples,the tsunami...we must all do whatever little thing that we can,to over-ride the'let them eat cake'mindset of the (bushmaster=the largest and most venomous snake in the new world)of this nabobian regime.
MA_, I also believe we can stop this. It's going to take alot of hard work and people will have to stand up and say enough but it IS achievable! I am not "religious" but I am spiritual and I believe working together we can achieve anything. The key is breaking down boundaries between people and good old fashioned communication. Russo did a massterful job and that film, so sad his passing...
I know I am leaping here but I KNOW we have whatever what you want to call it around us. We have what it takes to start provoking peace on earth. We have the means to stop this before it goes any further down the pike.
My God in heaven, I have a 10 month old grandson and I willing to do whatever it takes to ensure that sweet child a future....along with his dad.
God bless Russo's soul! I think God's work before he left this plane. The good people on this earth need to pick up where he left off.
goeff, glad you took the time to watch "America to Fascism". It was chilling to be sure. I've been trying very hard to get more people to watch it but it seems 2 hours is more than most people are willing to give up in order to learn the truth of what is going on in this country and the world. Here's the link if anyone else would like to watch it, Russo did a great job on the film and I couldn't stop watching til it was over. I had meant to just watch the first half hour and save the rest for later...http://tinyurl.com/2xl433
Your not kidding annabelle. People need to do more than they are doing, this is absolute madness and it needs to stop!
We are not government slaves. We are free human beings damn it, and this is OUR country!
Agreed that the 750,000 figure for the entire USA is grossly underestimated, and the 3,000,000 figure sounds far more real for a few years ago, with perhaps more now. The smaller figure may be of verifiable, clearly documented, people registered in some sort of special program somewhere. I live in the San Francisco Bay Area, where thousands of homeless people are highly visible every day... and we have probably more social assistance programs than most of the country.
What about all those people left homeless in New Orleans, and then relocated to others cities.
If New York has similar homeless populations, 750,000 might be the number in New York alone.
Just like in the 1920s and 1930s, to minimize the number of homeless (then called 'Hobos') is to cover up for the gross greed-driven political corruption destroying our nation to its core. Most people live on the street because of the lack of adequately-salary jobs, an outrageously deteriorating public education system, drug trafficking profitably implemented and allowed by leading politicians (on an international scale), and the coldness and indifference of Corporations (which now run nearly everything) to anything but the rights and needs of the wealthy privileged. Social Darwinism at its worst, and VERY much like the Third Reich in Germany yet perhaps even less responsive to the needs (health, education, quality-monitored food) of the general population not branded as 'good-for-nothing' (i.e. opposed to the Nazi agenda).
Increasingly large numbers of 'street people' are also reporting marked physical and psychological abuse in both jails and psychiatric hospital wards -- all so Republicans and their Corporations can lower their tax rates and operate with a higher profit-margin for the Investor Class. This is Sooo much like the Coolidge-Hoover Era, it's disgusting that we should be making the same mistakes (from a non-masterialistic and social/spiritual perspective) over again. America's soul aches from this abuse, and we as a nation will continue to suffer until the Mammonists (many of them nominally 'Christian') are driven from Washington.
rebelfarmer,some benzopredanines are short chain nueron glue..xanax is a long chain nueron glue,in other words SUPER-glue.long term use leads to an inability to make a sound judgement either for yourself or anyone else.steroids might have upped the aggression level of the wrestler that murdered his family...but my money is on the TRUE culprit,XANAX,which was found in the blood of EVERY family member.you would be better off finding a milder short chain med..such as librium or even just a natural lithium.dont get me wrong i am not a doctor,just a reader and a curious researcher......
There is no way that only 750,000 are homeless. I read an estimate by those in the know well over a year ago that estimated three million. With the housing bubble bursting and the dollar devaluing, it has to be higher now.
whitewatersally: Never thought about that one! Good catch. I'm manic/depressive and have been on medication for years. I quit about a month ago because I could no longer stand what I call "the dead zone". But even on medication, what is going on around us still got my blood to boil. Even then I was ready to hit the streets. Thing is that we have to throw off our corporate masters and the government they control before we can solve any of these other horrible messes that we find ourselves in. We HAVE to stay focused on the bigger picture.
Turce: I like your approach.
Until someone presents an accurate form of actual living expenses and an actual pay check and follows those two lists for a couple of months it is impossible to get a real honest look at what is happening. For example, even the author explains that rent is way out of reach of the average worker. A worker making $8.95 @ hour (that is above minimum wage)takes home about $255.00 @ week or $1,020,30 @ month. Less 800.00 for rent if you were lucky enough to find a place which leaves you all of $220.00 for transportation to get to and from work, child care, laundry, not to mention food and clothing. That averages out to about $7.30 a day for basic necessities. How can anyone put down anyone else for finding a difficult time treading water in this crazy world??? The biggest oxymorin of this century is the Working Poor. What a crock!!!
a vast cospiracy of the pharmecutical companies in conjuntion with medical aid for the underpriviliged..is contibuting and aggravating the problem.benzopednedines(xanax etc.)are being handed out like candy for every imaginable ailment.have you ever tried to start a revolution on xanax??it is deliberate sedation of the masses,addiction-sponsored by government, the old c.i.a.streetheroin idea,all grown up and LEGAL...
I was homeless for two years. I live in Baltimore and there are few options here. The Dems weren't much better than Bush and his crew. Shame on them!
I cna not believe that no one yet get it, but for a few people. The banks lost their butts, and needed to get their money back. A scam was created to artificially inflate the price of housing acrosss America, even though incomes were down, IT WAS the only thing they could drive equity into, whatsoever. IT was a SCAM, by the following; Banks, Real Estate Agencies, Home Loan Companies, and EVEN yes the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA government, and Federal Reserve took the lead! Period! The facts have been, and are on the record as being presented to Congress every year for the past 6, with political Statesman Lyndon LaRouche exposing the upccoming scam, then retelling them that it is ongoing, then coming back and warning them, time and time again, being ignored the whole time. Would I vote LaRouche for President? NO, I would not. Everyone of those mentioned above are guilty of extortion under the RICO Act.
Americans will no longer need a passport to visit third world nations because they will be living in one.
For those of you who have visited third world nations:
Hope you took note of the concrete or brick walls topped with razor wire or embedded glass shards that surround homes and businesses. It won't be long before Architectural Digest, Dwell and other designer publications will feature stylish versions for the American builder.
We need to start at home with priority's, housing, healthcare, education, employment opportunity's. We need to start by raising each other up and do for the better good of all.
I know a great deal of people don't believe in God but I KNOW that this world isn't what God intended it to be and WE have the power within us to make it happen. We have the ability within us. I have absolutely NO doubt about that. We need to stop people from oppressing us and do for the better good of all.
Life is a gift and we need to start honoring it for love is all we truly have and with it anything is possible.
There are alot of homeless in the city I am near, although when I was going to DC for the rally I witnessed an incredibly high amount of homeless. On the east Coast it gets so friggin' cold, but I am sure Bush has told them the pluses of the steam grates. When I am in LA, weather factor, an incredibly huge population of homeless.
Many homeless people are mentally ill and they have no healthcare, hmmmmm, wonder why, ergo no meds, which means no work which keeps them in that same position. Everytime I stop and talk with someone who is homeless, I find many are Vets, as well. I really do not care if they use the money I always give them to self medicate or get a cheap ass room, it isn't my business. My business is to make sure this administration starts doing something, so many vacant homes, I mean WTF?
I don't give money to them out of guilt, I have it, I have worked my ass off from the time I was 12 and the money means shit to me because I am able to pay my bills, now. I am able to receive the proper meds for severe mania so I can hold on to what I have. As long as I can pay my bills and have a roof over my head, the rest I give to which ever cause(s) I feel need it and will use a proper percentage to aid those they are suppose to help.
It just keeps getting worse in this nation, in this world. You just don't know where to start.
Paul: Thanks for your comments and observations. You might also want to consider forming workers' cooperatives. They are the only form of business that make any kind of sense on a community basis. And, by the way, the impoverishment of the middle class was planned. It's all part of the corporate/fascist model. It started with the disembowelment of workers rights and the smashing of the unions. Workers no longer have power in the economic structure, and labor really has no value anymore. The cost of real estate is really just an outgrowth of all that.
Here's an interesting quote:
If the american people ever allowed the banks to control the issuance of their currency. . .the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property, until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.
Thomas Jefferson
This comes from a documentary that someone referred to on another thread called "America To Fascism."
I took the advice and thought it was pretty good.
http://tinyurl.com/2xl433
I suspect that poverty in the US is a forced thing, a logical and necessary byproduct of our whacked-out system. We have only a fraction of the population density compared with parts of Europe and Asia, a wealth of resources (lumber, fresh water, fertile soil, etc.). A pretty good climate by world standards.
It is the artificially inflated cost of real estate -- based on a lending/gambling culture -- that has put so many people into poverty. Not too many commodities are prone to wild speculation that causes their price to go from what is affordable, to what it borrowable, to what is a sheer gamble.
If my mortgage were about half my current rate, and I could get shop space for a fraction of the current going rate I'd probably start my own business, perhaps creating a few jobs in the process. But the bar on space has been raised too high: speculators, flippers, Big Boxes, distant economies, foreign investors, negligent regulators, etc. that there's no room for individual acts of productivity.
US citizens have become nothing more than oppressed voiceless wage slaves. Protesting is futile. Representatives no longer respond to letters. Some of us vent our frustrations by blogging and others choose to remain oblivious.
The US sold its citizens out of the government in 1913 to Corporate America. Corporate America holds the purse strings that controls our government. I don't think there is a need to review the debt, death, destruction and corruption that has taken place over the years along with the loss of our freedom to pursue happiness.
This country can not make progress or pursue happiness when people are struggling to meet their basic needs of survival. I have absolutely no doubt that this country is on the path of self-destruction and that those responsible for it are within although it has been quite profitable for them to make scapegoats responsible.
America should learn from example of what freedom means to those who have invaded Iraq for control of their natural resources. Millions have been free to move out of Iraq. Milions more have been freed by death. Oppressed citizens of Iraq are either passive, debilitated, defenseless or revengeful, maleovent and unhuman. Just reading this forum one can find the same thing happening in the US. Nothing positive can be achieved by oppression and the threat of death.
If this country continues on the path of self-destruction US citizens will find themselves in the same fate as Iraq. Each and every person in the US has the "God" given power, right and peaceful means to stop providing the means for the oppressors to oppress us and those around the world. It is time to take responsibility for our futures and for the future generations to come. http://www.freedomtofascism.com/
Last week I noticed a number of people at the corners of mall parking lots or near interstates with signs reading "lost our home, help" or "need work" etc. These were people living out of their cars, some with children, all looked scared. They are new arrivals to the world of the homeless.
sharon99,that is one possible use,ketchup to put in their bottles............millercopter,knight of the roundhouse,glad you brought up barbara...i hold an unpopular notion that she is not only the power behind that throne,they all call her"BOSS"......
The numbers seem conservative to me. Similar to the unemployment rates the MSM dumps on us on the news. Uncounted are the MILLIONS of homeless and unemployed that were not counted in the census.
What a crock of shit.
The fact is, 7% unemployment, counting only those people who recieve unemployment benefits, looks a lot better than 30% unemployment when you factor in all the people who are inelibgible to recieve unemployment benefits.
This country is poor. But to make matters worse, you have a majority population in america living at or below the poverty level and yet they are taught or brainwashed to believe they are "middle class".
Too bad americans don't have higher expectations for themselves. I'll wager that if you told them that they lived in the greatest country in the world, they would believe it.
Americans are pretarded. They strive to one day achieve full retardedness.
Mission accomplished, Barbara.
What I really don't like is the connotation founded in this article that homelessness is somehow worse when it consists of a family; that is ridiculous! What about all of the homeless youth living on the streets, not because their families are poor, but because they are abusive. And I'll bet that the majority of the 15-25 range of homeless people are males, who are less likely to be helped because of the rigid sexism in our society that demands they be "tough" and "self-sufficient." I also think it is needless that another poster here at common dreams seemed to justify people's prejudices against the homeless having emotional difficulties or substance abuse issues. As someone who has been homeless, I can tell you that there is really little else to do, or to numb the pain with then feeding addictions, and that recovering from anything is impossible when you have to constantly worry about survival. ALL homeless people deserve housing, deserve assistance, deserve a return to society that doesn't involve working at the worst possible jobs for minimum wage and living in slums. The U.S. needs guaranteed housing, living wages for all, and assistance for people with disabilities.
http://www.dreamingearth.net
count me as a lucky one who has a home. there are so many different topics this thread touches. four million iraqis have escaped hoping for safety from george's war. all of them deserve homes in the usa, as do so many here whether they are counted sheltered for the night or uncounted homeless. the government won't bail out poor people needing help--just rich ones. foreclosures are up. unemployment lines are getting longer here in michigan. republicans are trying to recall anybody who voted for a tax increase to allow our state government not to shut down. i feel pessimistic. tell me something good that's happening out there.
Oh how happy George of the Coprophagous Smirk will be to learn that three quarters of a million poor Americans can live without making house payments. Just like he and his filthy rich buddies do. He was so proud to learn that some poor Americans actually held three jobs . . . and as His mom, Barbara, says America's poor are so lucky to be Nickled and Dimed - they never had it this good!
Rebel Farmer,
I've wondered how many additional families are forced to sell before foreclosure happens (which I'm told takes many months into financial trouble to actually occur)? So people who see the writing on the wall aren't reflected in any of these statistics. There's no real way to measure "hardship sales" of homes, but my guess is that it's larger than the number of foreclosures.
We'll have some interesting problems here in the northern climates. Houses need to be kept heated or else the pipes may freeze & burst. If the home has its pipes blown dry, pumped full of anti-freeze or something, it might survive the winter without heat -- but it's not really in a saleable condition that way either.
So unless the property is bought by a fairly local owner who can rent it out for a higher monthly rate (he needs to get some profit, or else it's not worth the expense) than what a mortgage-to-own monthly bill would provide a prospective buyer, someone may have to take a loss on it. Many of these homes won't even be worth renting -- they'll just sit vacant until the price comes down.
Speaking of run amok development on new townhomes, etc. Basically 2 years after their construction, there are 3 out of 6 townhomes near my house which have never had an occupant. We had a terrible hailstorm a few weeks ago, and the units must have had an insurance claim -- so they're being re-roofed! And yet they've never been occupied. What a waste...
Purvis....
please explain your view?
Are you "home free"?
I do know of some who choose this life free from a traditional shelter, but the numbers suggest they are a very small minority of the people who are without a 'legal residence'( now there's a fine choice of words). Anyways, I no longer see the picture as a matter of choice; though I will say perhaps many of these adults made some poor choices along the way. Lord knows I've made many poor choices in my life and am fortunate to have what little comforts I can afford. I was homeless at one time (though only for a month) and it was a very humbling and insecure existence.
and your thoughts again? mr. charlie
Purvis: Corporatists would love your "rebranding". "Free" trade (as opposed to "Fair") seems to work for them too.
Paul: I think maybe a lot of those "For Sale" signs are on homes in foreclosure. I would guess that the families being thrown out would have "first" squatters' rights.
This all goes back to the priorities of our government, and by extension all Americans. Ever since RayGun, America decided everybody is on their own. No safety net, no healthcare, no unions, no middle class, no support for community, no social conscience. Everybody is alone. We are no longer citizens. We are just consumers and wage slaves. Our voice and our votes don't matter. They aren't listening and they don't care. Just look at the latest travesty - a lame duck president has just vetoed the expansion of the SCHIP program and the House will probably not be able to override the veto. Why?
As I recall, Moses got pretty pissed off at the idolitry of a golden calf. It might be a good time to rethink our priorities as a nation and as members of the worldwide community.
"750,000" covers those in homeless shelters. Anybody counting those who sleep in the streets?
hello out there in Wonderland...
Two key words to read in this report.
ABUSE.... time after time we read of abused family members (if we are so concerned about acts of terrorist here is major souces of it that needs to be addressed!)
FAMILIES.... nearly 1/2 of the homeless folks are out there are with children to care for. Lets stop assuming 'they' are addicts and mentally ill who choose to live on the streets. True, a small % are out there by choice; but...
"here is a good example of political gamesmanship that is easily measured in human suffering." me
ENOUGH ALREADY!!!
I wonder if this is the real purpose behind all those concentration camps that Halliburton has been building here in the U.S.---to house the people who are being driven out of their homes by BushCo's domestic policies?
From Paul Bramscher:
"one wonders if homeless will simply start squatting in the growing number of unoccupied homes."
It begs the question - who owns these unoccupied homes? Which begs a whole nether question: Why were all these homes built by all these developers with all of their loans from all of these banks and all these insurance entities..etc., etc., etc.
If i was homeless, i would try to find a place of shelter - who here wouldn't?
Peace,
Ken Hausle
As the number of homeless rise, and the number of "for sale" signs also appears to rise (at least this is my anecdotal experience), one wonders if homeless will simply start squatting in the growing number of unoccupied homes.
Please. "Homeless" has such a negative connotation. Forthwith refer to them as "home free."
And how much is the adminisration spending on their illegal wars ? Half of the oil requirements taken up by the military. Time to get your priorities right US of I.
postingproblem,fingerspasm,didnt get to edit..hearye,hearye,the refugees of america are being created,, PEOPLE WITHOUT A COUNTRY !!that deserves repeating..A PEOPLE WITHOUT A COUNTRY !! (this public announcement,brought to you and paidforby'iraqR'US)
due to the weather,we contain a very large constituent of homeless human beings.our local governing body,when proposed a project for more shelter and services for the victims of this nefariousnabob platform,america has wholeheartedly adopted,our local reprsentatives said no,because it would be'crippling'to our local economy.