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[Marxism] A Roof Over Our Heads and Other Inalienable Rights
A Roof Over Our Heads
and Other Inalienable Rights
By Bonnie Weinstein
http://www.socialistviewpoint.org/mayjun_09/mayjun_09_01.html
In an April 22, 2009, article in The New York Times by David
Streitfeld, entitled, “An Effort to Save Flint, Mich., by Shrinking
It,” the first two paragraphs read:
"Dozens of proposals have been floated over the years to slow this
city’s endless decline. Now another idea is gaining support: speed it
up.
"Instead of waiting for houses to become abandoned and then pulling
them down, local leaders are talking about demolishing entire blocks
and even whole neighborhoods."
In other words, instead of allowing families to remain in their homes
during this severe economic crisis, the city of Flint intends to
demolish the homes outright, leaving homeless families to fend for
themselves.
Meanwhile, a gripping and heartbreaking MSNBC.com Dateline
documentary has been circulating on the Internet. It follows the
evictions of families from their homes. Some were evicted as the
result of being swindled into subprime mortgages with balloon
payments; others because they could not afford to keep up rents or
mortgages for various reasons, such as work injuries, sickness,
cutbacks in hours, or job loss.(1) An FDIC government resource,
ForeclosureHelpandHope.org, provides this information from the
Mortgage Bankers Association:
One out of every 200 homes will be foreclosed upon…. Every three
months, 250,000 new families enter into foreclosure…. One child in
every classroom in America is at risk of losing his/her home because
their parents are unable to pay their mortgage.(2)
The Dateline crew accompanies sheriffs, with guns pulled, backed by
other officers and flanked by a “moving crew,” as they break open the
door of a home. Finding no one there, they proceed to move all the
belongings of a full household out into the street and change the
locks on the doors; then they move on to another eviction. They do
around 20 a day. The family has 24 hours to pick up their belongings
from the street, and then the stuff is carted off to the dump. No
security is left to protect the family’s belongings for those 24
hours; they’re simply left out in the street, free for the taking,
and the house left abandoned and uncared for.
Evictions up close and personal
The first family the documentary focuses on is a family of four, the
Alvarezes: Junior Alvarez, who works for the city of Coral Gables,
Florida, his wife, Maureen, their two children—a two-month-old son
and a two-year-old daughter—and an elderly grandmother. Their
mortgage payments ballooned from $2,000 to $4,000 a month—an amount
Junior could no longer afford. After being evicted they stayed for a
short time with friends, sleeping on their living room floor, until
they found a small apartment they could afford to rent.
The second family featured were renters, Lea and Porey Niscieri,
their 11-year-old daughter, Hanna, and her two cats. They did not
fare as well as the Alvarezes. When the sheriff came to her door, Lea
told him that they were up to date on their rent—that they didn’t owe
a dime, she was sure of it.
Upon returning home, Porey confessed to the Dateline reporter that he
hadn’t told his wife that they were three months behind in the rent.
He had had an accident on his job and was unable to work for about
seven months. He just couldn’t afford the rent on his disability
income. He didn’t tell his wife because he thought he had 30 days
after the notice to make a payment, and hoped he’d be able to make it
on time since he’d just gone back to work.
Luckily, their next-door neighbor took them in temporarily. But then
the generous neighbor himself was evicted the very next week!
Their daughter Hanna, had to give up her cats to an animal shelter.
The family moved into a Howard Johnson’s, but it was too expensive so
they moved again, into a cheaper motel.
Porey admits that he wanted to kill himself. He felt like a complete
failure. They were having a hard time finding a place to live. Their
credit rating was by that time so bad no one would rent to them. They
finally found a landlord willing to give them a chance in spite of
their credit rating and they now live in a small, two-bedroom
apartment about half the size of the home they were evicted from.
Hanna still misses her cats terribly. “I don’t have them, but they
are in my heart forever. They were a part of me,” she said.
Other families are moving from place-to-place, shelter-to-shelter,
couch-to-living room floor—or out onto the streets. The bankers are
leaving perfectly good homes to rot—or worse, to the mercy of the
wrecking ball.
This is the chaos that exists under capitalism, a dictatorial
economic system that puts profit over people; that tears down homes
as homelessness soars.
Shelter from the storm
The crux of the issue is whether or not human beings have a basic
right to a roof over their heads—shelter from the storm. Directly
connected to housing is the right to education, jobs, and healthcare.
These are all inalienable rights that belong to everyone, because we
can’t thrive without them!
Youth hit hardest
While millions of adult working people are finding themselves
teetering on the brink of economic annihilation, joblessness, and
homelessness, it’s much worse for our youth.
Young people today will earn half of what their parents earned, and
even now find it nearly impossible to leave the nest, let alone
support families of their own. Fewer youth are able to attend
college. The mass entrance into college by working-class youth in the
’60s and ’70s is in high-speed reverse.
Our children are forced to endure overcrowded, police-occupied public
schools that more closely resemble juvenile detention centers than
educational institutions, and have failed to give them the most basic
skills and knowledge they need to develop their individual talents,
skills and interests. Increasingly our schools are more likely to
funnel youth into jail or the military than into higher education or
gainful employment.
This economic crisis did not appear suddenly out of a void. It has
been taking its toll on working people—especially youth—since the
1970s. Women didn’t join the workforce because they were bored; the
steadily increasing cost of living forced the necessity of the two-
income family.
The confidence game
The “conventional wisdom” of the politicians and mass media tell us
we must learn to “tighten our belts,” to “live more simply.” We are
told we must have faith that the government is doing everything
possible to keep things from getting even worse.
They especially emphasize how “everyone is hurting,” including the
wealthy, and that bailing out the wealthy is the essential key to
bailing out the poor! We’re told that the wealthy bankers, who have
emptied the wallets of working people to line their own with gold,
have to regain the confidence to invest money back into the economy.
And we are told that the only way for them to regain that confidence
is for us to pay them trillions of dollars from our own pockets—-to
keep them confident that they can continue to steal more from us!
It’s we who must tighten our belts not them! They implore us, “How
can we save this economy without the sacrifice and support of everyone?”
But working people know what this means. The wealthy endure
“restricted retention bonuses” while working people sacrifice their
jobs, their healthcare, their pensions, their homes—and their
children’s future—for the sake of banking and corporate confidence.
My youngest son’s girlfriend commented to him that the economy seems
to be doing better after she saw some upbeat story on the local news.
(They’re both currently unemployed, with two children and rent coming
due again at the end of the month.) My son explained to her:
“You have to understand that they mean the economy is better for some
people. Not for most people. They’re talking about making things
better for the top wealthiest one percent or less of the population
at the expense of the bottom 99 percent. The top wealthiest one
percent or less owns 80 percent of the Earth’s wealth. The government
is bailing out those people at the top using trillions of dollars of
our money. The rest of us have to scramble for a share of the crumbs
the wealthy drop from their plates. And at this time they’re not only
wiping their plates clean but stealing the food right out of our
plates!”
A fightback begins
But there is some good news. All across the country and around the
world, working people are beginning to mount a fightback and they are
winning real victories!
Not all families are taking it on the chin. In an April 10, 2009,
article in The Times, “With Advocates’ Help, Squatters Call
Foreclosures Home,” John Leland wrote:
"Ms. Omega, 48, is one of the beneficiaries of the foreclosure
crisis. Through a small advocacy group of local volunteers called
Take Back the Land, she moved from a friend’s couch into a newly
empty house that sold just a few years ago for more than $400,000.
"Michael Stoops, executive director of the National Coalition for the
Homeless, said about a dozen advocacy groups around the country were
actively moving homeless people into vacant homes—some working in
secret, others, like Take Back the Land, operating openly.
"In addition to squatting, some advocacy groups have organized civil
disobedience actions in which borrowers or renters refuse to leave
homes after foreclosure."
The groups say that they have sometimes received support from
neighbors and that beleaguered police departments have not
aggressively gone after squatters.
“We’re seeing sheriffs’ departments who are reluctant to move fast on
foreclosures or evictions,” said Bill Faith, director of the
Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio, which is not engaged
in squatting. “They’re up to their eyeballs in this stuff. Everyone’s
overwhelmed.”
In an article in the March/April issue of ColorLines (reprinted in
this magazine), “Hitting the Pause on Foreclosures,” Valeria
Fernández wrote:
"In the last year, Goldberg and his staff at Moratorium NOW!, a
coalition of activists and union and religious leaders, have brought
at least 50 cases to courts in Detroit on behalf of homeowners. They
have been fighting to save homes literally one house at a time
through picketing at the banks and legal action."
The article ends with a quote from Max Rameau, founder of the group
Take Back the Land, a grassroots volunteer organization in Miami,
Florida:
“This is a solution coming from the community,” said Rameu. “We value
the human rights of housing over the right of a corporation to make a
profit.”
As the economy tanks, and evictions and unemployment increase, such
organizations and actions will grow across the country.
In addition to the anti-eviction/foreclosure organizations and
actions sprouting up, there have been sit-down strikes and
occupations in jobsites around the globe, in England, Ireland,
Scotland, Greece, Canada, and here in the U.S., to name a few.
Most recently, coalitions are forming that incorporate all these
issues—including those of immigration and war—with demands such as:
•Money for jobs and social services, not for war
•Tax the rich/progressive taxation
•Single-payer healthcare for all
•Pass the Employee Free Choice Act
•Immediate moratorium on foreclosures and evictions
•No more bailouts for Wall Street—bail out working people
•Stop the ICE raids and deportations
These are the demands of a newly formed coalition in the Bay Area. A
broad organizing meeting was held in San Francisco on April 11, 2009,
at the Plumbers Hall, and was attended by over 70 people. Most
attendees were representatives of labor organizations, including the
heads of the San Francisco and Santa Clara Central Labor Councils and
the President of the AFT 2121 (community college teachers), and of
grassroots, community-based groups.
Many of these groups are funded to help with such things as tenant
and landlord mediation or police-community dialogue, etc. They are
being cut out of the budgets of most cities and towns, leaving the
poor to fend for themselves.
The meeting was called to organize a teach-in based upon the above
demands. The outcome was very encouraging and positive; its work is
ongoing.
The strongest consensus among the participants of this meeting were
the demands, “Bail out working people, not Wall Street!” and “Tax the
rich, not working people.” The goal of the teach-in is to plan a set
of actions, including a mass mobilization, and the establishment of
independent, labor/community committees to build ongoing, proactive
responses to the crisis for the interests of working people.
In other words, they intend to organize a real fightback against this
current economic program of open season on working people, our homes,
healthcare, housing, schools, and all of our social safety nets.
Unite and fight back!
We don’t have to point out to working people that our future and the
very future of our planet are in jeopardy. This is abundantly clear.
Our most important task is to build a broad, democratically
organized, and independent labor movement that unites working people
across the board—-that can organize the unorganized, employed and
unemployed, “documented” or not—-into a movement powerful enough to
carry out the kind of mass, unified actions necessary to win decisive
victories for working people anywhere and everywhere these attacks
occur.
Our unity here and with workers across the globe will fortify our
weakest links with our strongest protection and defense—-our massive
numbers and our solidarity of action against these assaults.
We can keep that wrecking ball from our homes and our schools; we can
force the hospitals to tend to the sick; we can keep factories from
closing; we can move the homeless into homes; we can stop the
deportations and the war machine.
Together in unity and solidarity we can ensure our own inalienable
right to happiness—-to a life of liberty, democracy, economic and
human equality, justice, and a peaceful and healthy world for all.
We, the majority of working people across the globe, have an
inalienable, democratic right to choose people over profits, to bail
out working people not the banks—-to choose socialism over the brutal
chaos and profound inequality of capitalism!
(1) Watch the video at:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/28303876#28303876
And the update at:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/28303876#29684262
(2) http://www.fdic.gov/about/comein/files/foreclosure_statistics.pdf
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