Celebration of the 50th anniversary of the welfare rights movement

Latest

Selma Goode and Marian Kramer
Sema Goode and Marian Kramer, long time fighters in the welfare rights movement. Photo/Mary Kay Yarak

 
Editor’s note: Below we resume our coverage of the celebration of the Welfare Rights movement’s 50th anniversary in the fight to eliminate poverty. It is fitting to note that August 22, 2016 marked the 20th anniversary of Bill Clinton’s signing of the welfare reform law that, as one speaker noted, “legalized the death of the emerging new class of unneeded workers; legally ending the right to survive. Now, decades later, the bankruptcy judge tells us,  ‘you don’t have the constitutional right to water, even though you need it to live.’’
Below are more voices from the conference who are committed to carry the struggle forward:
Margaret Prescod (top), Karen Shaumann (bottom)

“I want to speak of the reach of the National Welfare Rights movement, not only in this country but internationally. I’m from a little village in a little island that was a British colony for over 300 years, growing up with no running water, no electricity and one meal a day. The poverty of those of us in the global south . . . when you go to Haiti, Jamaica, Kingston, when you go to the backstreet of my father’s village, you will see what they have done to us, and what welfare rights has meant to people like me . . .  it’s about reclaiming what was stolen from us, not only in this country, but in the global south and other parts of world. We intend to reclaim it and take every damn penny they have stolen from us. That’s the reach of welfare rights and I want to lift those women up.”
— Margaret Prescod, Radio producer, Women’s rights and global anti-poverty activist
“There is the possibility of an even more fascist America  . . . we need to reach those young white kids. The most donations at the Sanders campaign averaged $27. These kids have been giving their life up to work for a socialist. Maybe not the same kind of socialist. But these young people know that by the time they graduate, they will owe more than what a home will cost. People who lost their jobs are losing their homes, and their retirement. We need to come together with those other people.” Karen Shaumann
Other speakers add:
“Tax foreclosure here was the largest tax foreclosure in the country: 100,000 homes. When they dismantelled the social net of welfare, a thousand heads of the snake popped up – homes under attack, water under attack, schools under attack, we’re under attack.”
“ The water struggle here is heating up. It taught us how important welfare rights is to water rights and social justice . . they’ve been fighting for access to clean affordable water for 15 years.  That welfare rights is about poor people . . . that they are not trying to make a profit off of poor folks . . .  makes me proud.”
“Welfare Rights has accumulated 50 years of experience and knowledge fighting on behalf of the poor for the new wave of fighters to learn from and take to the next level. I’ve learned so much from these fighters.”
Visit http://peoplestribune.org/pt-news/2016/08/50th-anniversary-celebration-welfare-rights-movement-1966-2016/ for more coverage.

PT Logo collage
+ Articles by this author

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

Pushing People into a Really Bad System Will End Really Badly

President Trump's executive order fuses drug use and homelessness, ignoring that homelessness can cause or exacerbate substance use because people use drugs to cope with pain. Forced institutional settings rather than housing will not help the ill or unhoused.

Chicago Resistance Speaks: ‘Until All Are Free, None Are Free’

An uprising is growing as the government tries to impose a dictatorship. Chicago resistance leaders recently offered their thoughts in public remarks made at demonstrations and press conferences.

Los Angeles Continues to Rebuild and Resist

Angelinos, suffering from the profit over people economy, continue to rebuild after the fires and to protest immigration raids, while also experiencing joy in such difficult times.

Chicago Teachers Union Says: Trump, Stay Out of Our City

Chicago Teachers Union rejects any unlawful federal occupation of their city, while welcoming federal leadership that fully funds public education, restores SNAP, and expands Medicaid to healthcare for all.

Journalist Says Why ‘I Can No Longer Work With Reuters’

A photojournalist says why it is impossible for her to maintain a relationship with Reuters "given its role in justifying and enabling the systematic assassination of 245 journalists in Gaza."

More from the People's Tribune