Housing is a human right

Latest

Protest in the Uptown neighborhood in Chicago to resist the growing anti-homeless ordinances and harassment. PHOTO/LESLIE WILLIS
Protest in the Uptown neighborhood in Chicago to resist the growing anti-homeless ordinances and harassment.
PHOTO/LESLIE WILLIS

 
CHICAGO, IL —“Human bodies need sleep—Humans need a place to sleep!” read the sign in front of a Tent City in Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood.
Hot dogs off the grill fed the crowd of homeless people that gathered for a protest. Those who had tents pitched them on a grassy area near the viaducts where they had been allowed to sleep until the city forced them out, using the excuse of upcoming lakefront concerts.
“I don’t understand the harm in allowing them to rest their tired feet at the end of the night by sleeping under a tree? I don’t understand why you have taken a personal vindictive against someone who has no money in their pocket to pay for a room or to provide a home for themselves? Why has the homeless become your enemy? Why do you pick on them by demanding the police department wake up, kick out and force hardship on a man or woman who has no place to go?” wrote Tent City organizer, Carol Boyd, in a letter to the Chicago Park District.
Everyone at the protest had hardships that were painful to even hear about, let alone bear: from endless rounds of bureaucracy that never result in aid to unbelievable cruelty at the hands of our government. One young woman had her baby taken away from her at the hospital, because she could not find a shelter that would take them both.
Such hardships are a motivating force for people to join together and organize to resist the growing anti-homeless ordinances and harassment, and assert the natural rights of all human beings to have a place to sleep undisturbed through the night.
During the evening, Chicago Police threatened to arrest the protesters. Organizers asserted their First Amendment right to protest in a “public right of way,” and the police backed off.  “Tonight is a victory, but it’s only the beginning of our fight,” Carol Boyd told a cheering crowd, despite the drenching rain. As soon as the protest was over, however, the police moved in, uprooting the homeless from the area.
Organizers point to Alderman James Cappleman as a driving force behind the harassment of homeless people in Uptown to accommodate wealthy property developers who are drooling over the dollars to be made off lakefront properties. This story is repeated throughout the city. Property developers’ desires come before the needs of Chicago’s people.
Anyone standing in the way of the needs of these large private property owners is considered an “enemy’ and apparently there are no human rights that they have to respect. As more and more of us find our situations deteriorating, something definitely must give.  Besides the growing homelessness, most people are fighting a losing battle attempting to make the rent, the house note, and take care of all the other needs that we humans have.
What if we the people could confiscate the land that is now in the hands of large private property developers and use it to provide housing for all who really need it whether they have money or not. Isn’t it time to assert this new thinking: that housing is a human right that no one should be allowed to deny.

+ 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.

1 COMMENT

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Couple Seeks Accountability After Mom In Active Labor Discharged

A Black couple from Illinois was discharged from an Indiana hospital while the mother was in active labor, forcing a roadside birth.

Poverty and Deportees on the Streets in Tijuana

In U.S. media, even progressive media, we pay little attention to what happens to people when they're deported. Many are dumped through the border gate, have no home to go to and live on the streets in cities like Tijuana.

No Tows Without Homes

At the same time that advocates for San Francisco’s vehicle-dwelling residents charged the City to protect RV and large vehicle residents from displacement by a parking enforcement program, City workers were removing trailers about five miles away.

‘Jesus Is Being Tear Gassed At Broadview’

The struggle to close the Broadview ICE facility in Chicago where deportees are held under torturous, inhumane conditions includes clergy who are part of a movement of religious leaders opposed to the assault on immigrants.

No Kings Rallies Show the Fight Is On!

No Kings Day showed the rising awareness of people to how dangerous the situation is, that everyone’s rights, living standards, and democracy itself is in danger. Millions are mobilizing in diverse ways to confront the situation.

More from the People's Tribune