Voice of the League of Revolutionaries for a New America

Uniting struggles for human needs and the planet with a vision of revolutionary change!

THE LEAGUE on Social Media

Available in the following language/s:

Inexcusable Rise of Homelessness During Pandemic

SHARE or PRINT

Though homelessness has been increasing for over four decades, the COVID-19 pandemic has brought homeless and tenant’s rights organizers to the forefront of American politics, forcing politicians to address the issue in new ways. Minnesota Representative Ilhan Omar has worked with tenants rights organizations throughout the country to draft a plan to end evictions and provide mortgage relief to landlords. First introduced in April 2020 (to a hostile Congress), the bill was reintroduced in March of this year. In support of Omar’s Rent and Mortgage Cancellation Act, Washington Representative Pramila Jayapal told The Hill, “It is not enough to sit back and just hope that a patchwork of eviction moratoriums keeps families in their homes, we must cancel rent and mortgage payments during this crisis because housing is a human right, during a pandemic and always.”

Such efforts have pushed the President of the United States to address homelessness. Of Biden’s plan, Donald Whitehead, leader of the National Coalition for the Homeless, told The Seattle Times, “We haven’t seen an approach this comprehensive since the outset of modern homelessness.” With 640 billion dollars to halt evictions and assist with rent and affordable housing, Biden hopes to make homelessness an entitlement issue to be offered to “anyone who qualifies,” like food assistance.

Though such efforts to address homelessness are welcome, it’s important to remember that past efforts—such as shelter systems—have led to new problems such as crowded, risky, and unhealthy living conditions and systemic abuse, not unlike that in the prison system. The comparison to our government’s efforts to address hunger should also set off alarms. The International Monetary Fund’s ranking of food insecurity in the top 20 advanced economies ranks the United States last, rural communities suffering twice the food insecurity of urban populations, and minority groups suffering the worst hunger urban or rural.

Similarly, racial minorities are disproportionately represented among the homeless, with individuals, single-parent families, and veterans among the highest demographics. According to the nonprofit National Alliance to End Homelessness, modest gains in the fight against homelessness have not stopped the rise, which has increased significantly over the past decade. The group conservatively projects that COVID-19 will increase the overall demand by at least 400,000 new housing units. Eighty four percent of those currently living unsheltered also have health issues that make them more susceptible to the disease, and at least a third of the homeless population is over 50, with homelessness causing effects equivalent to accelerated age-related risk factors related to the pandemic.

The rise in homelessness directly parallels the rise in laborless production, and the homeless literally have no home in this system. Brutally thrown into conflict with private property, the homeless fight on the front lines of the new class. With constant downward pressure on our class as a whole, the homeless have long been the victims of the system’s most aggressive fascist measures, including not only the abuse associated with the shelter system but government “clean-up” sweeps destroying makeshift homes and personal property and robbing the homeless of even the most meager means of survival.

Homelessness is the direct result of an economy that can no longer meet the needs of the people, and we must recognize the struggle against homelessness as a desperate frontline battle between human needs and private property. The conflict will only escalate until our class unites to ensure the distribution of safe, secure homes to all who need them, and this will only come with a new system that places human rights first.

Published: March 31, 2021
This article published by Rally, Comrades!
P.O. Box 477113 Chicago, IL 60647 rally@lrna.org
Free to reproduce unless otherwise marked.
Please include this message with any reproduction

Featured

Working Families Unite

Trump’s vendetta against Chicago began in his first term, when its people repeatedly expressed their hatred for his policies with mass protests, actually forcing Trump to cancel his appearance at the UIC Forum. Now ICE raids schools as families drop off and pick up their children. Veterans for Peace called on Illinois Governor Pritzker to offer sanctuary if members of the National Guard refuse to go to Chicago.

Searise

From the Editors: This poem was submitted to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the...

The Fight Against Fascism in Oakland

By Oakland Basic Needs Electoral Committee (OBNEC) The current war on residents of Oakland, CA,...

The Attack on Immigrants and All of Us 

Fascistic ICE raids criminalize a section of the working class, turning us against each other instead of uniting against a government controlled by billionaires. As this drives up living expenses for everyone, public protests are forcing state and local officials to stand up against the federal government.

Youth Against Fascism Speak Out!

Among the 5 million Americans who hit the streets to oppose the Trump administration’s assaults on democracy, justice and morality, this 16 year old identifies what’s really underway

THE LEAGUE on Social Media

Read More from Rally!

Fascism Attacks Higher Education

Trump’s attacks on universities reveal how fascism operates with open criminality, facilitated by the politics of compromise of university leaders and corporate Democrats. Attacking equity and inclusion means that treating all people equally is formally rejected. MAGA offers only the rhetoric of white supremacy, since most working class whites won’t be able to afford higher ed or other “privileges.”

Reform and Revolution 2025

Automation is polarizing humanity into one camp possessing the vast wealth of society and the other without adequate means of survival. As this polarization becomes more extreme, the struggle for basic necessities must move from trying to reform the system toward revolutionary transformation.

The Fight Against Fascism in Oakland

It is time to go on the offensive by uniting unhoused people with tenants and the entire larger movement for housing.

Working Families Unite

Trump’s vendetta against Chicago began in his first term, when its people repeatedly expressed their hatred for his policies with mass protests, actually forcing Trump to cancel his appearance at the UIC Forum. Now ICE raids schools as families drop off and pick up their children. Veterans for Peace called on Illinois Governor Pritzker to offer sanctuary if members of the National Guard refuse to go to Chicago.

A New Urban Movement: Public Wealth For Public Good

In Chicago and New York the idea of “public wealth for public good” has led to calls for city-run grocery stores and fare-free transit. This challenges the belief that basic survival must be monetized. Can city government become a builder and provider – not to extract profit, but to deliver justice?

Searise

From the Editors: This poem was submitted to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Katrina disaster and the people’s heroic struggle.   Searise In a thousand years the...

The Fight Against Fascism in Oakland

By Oakland Basic Needs Electoral Committee (OBNEC) The current war on residents of Oakland, CA, is serving as a test case for the consolidation of...

Uniting Against Fascists to Defend Housing for All

It is time to go on the offensive by uniting unhoused people with tenants and the entire larger movement for housing.

The Attack on Immigrants and All of Us 

Fascistic ICE raids criminalize a section of the working class, turning us against each other instead of uniting against a government controlled by billionaires. As this drives up living expenses for everyone, public protests are forcing state and local officials to stand up against the federal government.

Octavia Butler Warned Us Of Fascism

Nineteen years after her death, the work of acclaimed writer Octavia Butler has been renewed by the publication of a graphic art version of her prophetic anti-fascist novel Parable of the Talents. Her words and image have also reappeared in Internet news reporting and at rallies against MAGA.

Youth Against Fascism Speak Out!

Among the 5 million Americans who hit the streets to oppose the Trump administration’s assaults on democracy, justice and morality, this 16 year old identifies what’s really underway

Fourth of July: The American revolution is not finished

Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, a member of the tobacco planter class and a delegate to the rebel Continental Congress, wrote the Declaration of Independence...
Verified by MonsterInsights