Miami’s Vice is anti-homeless barbarism

Latest

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Downtown Miami homeless encampment sweep in progress
Downtown Miami homeless encampment sweep in late February on NW 1st Place beneath I-395.
Photo / A. Soleil.

MIAMA, FL — A phrase, a name, the mention of a city can conjure meanings that come to mind automatically.

If that city happens to be Miami, one may think mojitos on the beach, or the place where Muhammad Ali began his path to becoming both icon and pariah, depending on which side of the political fence one plants their feet.

Too rarely is Miami recognized for its other, more repugnant, realities.

This is the Miami led by arguably the most right-wing government of any major US city, where the waves of McCarthyism have never ebbed. The Miami where profound corruption in its politics and policing is the accepted norm. And the Miami where homeless people are brutalized on a daily basis despite the sweet lip service that’s been perfected by the NGO purveyors of the homelessness-industrial complex.

Recently, dating back to early 2021, led by the Miami PD and employing the services of homeless outreach workers known as Green Shirts, whose job description is to offer services, the assaults on those encamped on the city’s streets took an even more aggressive turn than usual.

In August, the city’s barbarism attained new heights when dozens upon dozens had all of their property confiscated and destroyed, from tents to vital medicines, ID’s and family photos, one man’s years long research to create a family tree, and one woman’s last and more direct connection to family, the urn containing her mother’s ashes. All of it, by the light of the equally relentless Miami sun, went to the dump.

To highlight the extent of the harm, as one man I interviewed told me, “We value our stuff more than housed people.”

Then came the camping ban.

First proposed in late summer by uber-conservative Commissioner Joe Carollo, the measure was passed on a 4 -1 vote on October 28. Carollo, for the record, has long been in the habit of referring to his political enemies, mostly Democrats, as Communists. (We who are actual Communists are duly humored.)

This odious law, which was opposed at commission meetings by many dozens of people and groups, including the ACLU, NLG, the National Homelessness Law Center and at least two dozen local social justice org’s, will criminalize even the simple and life-sustaining act of sleeping on a piece of cardboard in any public space in the city. As things stand, it will go into effect on November 27, two days after Thanksgiving and just in time for the holiday season. By comparison, a lump of coal in a stocking would be an enviable gift.

Those of us who advocate for and with our sisters and brothers on the streets are far from done with this fight. The lawyers, we expect, will do what lawyers do, and out of that may come a modicum of relief.

But the struggle we advocates bring is not a legal fight but a moral one and, more basically, one that is rooted in politics and economy.

The lack of affordable housing in Miami, recently rated the second least affordable market in the country, is notoriously heinous, and screams to a system where even holding a decent job is no guarantee of holding onto a roof over one’s head.

But that part of the story, in this neoliberal hell where housing is more about providing an investment opportunity for the rich than a home for the rest of us, is not just a Miami tale.

Jeff Weinberger, founder of the October 22nd Alliance to End Homelessness, has been advocating for the rights of people experiencing homelessness in south Florida for over 12 years.

Jeff Weinberger, founder of the October 22nd Alliance to End Homelessness, has been advocating for the civil rights of people experiencing homelessness for 15 years. His street outreach has led to successful federal lawsuits to overturn unconstitutional bans on panhandling in several Florida cities, and to end the City of Miami’s indiscriminate trashing of homeless folks’ property.

Free to republish but please credit the People's Tribune. Visit us at www.peoplestribune.org, email peoplestribune@gmail.com, or call 773-486-3551.

The People’s Tribune brings you articles written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Unsigned articles reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: ©2024 peoplestribune.org. Please donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Supreme Court Dismantles Federal Regulation of Business

Recent Supreme Court decisions have opened the floodgates to allow corporate interests, in the name of profit, to dismantle the system of federal regulation that protects our rights and wellbeing.

Campaign to Debunk the Lies about Migrants and Refugees

Join a campaign to combat the mainstream lies and shine a moral light on the truth: that no human being is illegal, and seeking asylum is a human right.

U.S. Supreme Court’s Criminalization of Homeless Met with Universal Disgust

A movement is growing against the latest “legalized” atrocity on the most vulnerable, in governments, among advocates, ordinary people, and most importantly, by organized and individual homeless people. As said in the homeless movement, “We only get what we are organized to take!”

Project 2025: Far Right’s Plan to Demolish Immigration Threatens All of Us

The right-wing Heritage Foundation's Project 2025, billed as a policy playbook for a second Trump administration, includes provisions that would demolish the existing immigration system and set the stage for mass deportations.

Supreme Court Rules Arresting, Citing People for Not Having Shelter is Constitutional

Criminalizing the homeless for sleeping in public spaces when having no other option does not violate the cruel and unusual punishment clause of U.S. Constitution’s Eighth Amendment, according to new ruling.

More from the People's Tribune