The solution to homelessness is a new society

Latest

Grace Hilliard and Carmela Mendoza were displaced by Silicon Valley’s $2200 a month rents and now live destitute on the streets of San Jose, California. PHOTO/SANDY PERRY
Grace Hilliard and Carmela Mendoza were displaced by Silicon Valley’s $2200 a month rents and now live destitute on the streets of San Jose, California.
PHOTO/SANDY PERRY

First they came for the homeless. When the Nazis began their campaigns of extermination, they first launched a propaganda war against those they were targeting. Today, the laws against the poorest of the poor, those in the streets, and the way they are being treated and spoken of as little better than vermin, has ominous echoes of this.
The police, who flip through his meager possessions while his life bleeds out of him, shoots down an unarmed homeless man camping in the hills above Albuquerque. In the beautiful city named after St Francis, San Francisco, it is now against the law to sit or lie on a public sidewalk from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.—after that the ‘lodging’ law kicks in. Sleep deprivation is torture.  Tickets for these and other crimes of poverty turn into warrants. A jail cell becomes the only form of housing available.
Many cities are criminalizing sharing food in public. Laws are passed against begging or panhandling. People who have nowhere to sleep but the streets are rousted in the night, or sprayed with power hoses and toxic chemicals, their bedding soaked. Homeless encampments where people attempt to find a little bit of shelter, community and mutual protection are razed and their residents scattered.  Bedding, blankets, medicines, personal items and IDs are taken and lost in these sweeps. Untold thousands die each year from the diseases caused by this hard life. Young people travel from town to town in bands of mutual protection, inventing new ways of community in the breakup of the old, which offers them no future.
People whose only crime is that they are victims of a crumbling economic system are criminalized for everything they need to do to survive. Every year more men, women and children are thrown into the streets— glaring evidence that the capitalist system is broken, and those in power unfit to rule.
With computerized labor-replacing technology eliminating millions of jobs, formerly secure workers lose their homes and everything they own. With their labor no longer needed, and thus the value of their labor driven to zero, under the rule of private property they have zero rights. Everything they need to do to survive is criminalized. This Go Die policy is designed to clear public spaces of these reminders of the system’s failures.  Mass homelessness in the U.S. is the system of private property’s Achilles heel. The rulers have no solution.
How insane that anyone should be homeless, hungry and destitute amid the greatest abundance the world has ever imagined!  The demands of the homeless and all those fighting for survival are revolutionary, because they can only be met by an economic system organized around providing for all, ‘to each according to need.’ We organize ourselves to build this new society.

PT Logo collage
+ Articles by this author

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

The Women Who Move the Labor Movement Forward

History shows that the labor movement moves forward when women organize. Women have repeatedly proven willing to confront power, build solidarity, and move the fight forward when others hesitate.

She was sentenced to life in prison. A new law set her free after 23 years.

Nicole Boynton was the first woman freed as part of Georgia’s Survivor Justice Act, putting a national spotlight on how courts discount abuse in homicide cases — especially for Black women.

Stop the War on Iran! Impeach Trump!

The US-Israeli war against Iran is unprovoked, immoral and illegal. The majority of the people of the US are opposed to it, and we are obligated to stand up and stop it. This is also an opportunity to impeach and remove Trump and try and set the country on a new course.

The True Economy

The real economy doesn’t live on Wall Street. The real economy is represented by people standing in line at food banks hoping the food doesn’t run out before their turn comes.

Group Urges Zorro Ranch Investigators to Review Cases of 100+ Female Bodies

New Mexico lawmakers are beginning to examine decades of alleged abuse connected to Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch, and humanitarian search volunteers are calling for the authorities to include in their review a concentrated pattern of female dead bodies found in southern Doña Ana County, New Mexico.

More from the People's Tribune