Friday, January 09, 2015

The cold icy heart of capitalism

In 2013 homelessness in the US reached its highest levels since the Great Depression, according to a federal Housing Department report that said 610,042 people experienced homelessness that year. More than a third were in unsheltered locations.

For hundreds of thousands of homeless men, women and children, winter is a matter of life and death. The current cold snap sweeping the midwest and east coast has packed tens of thousands into emergency housing in small towns and major cities alike.

In Boston, where nearly 17,000 people were homeless last year and the wind-chill temperature dipped below 0F (-18C) on Thursday, shelters were at full capacity. The Salvation Army Cambridge Shelter for Men, ran out of beds on Wednesday night. “We used all our overflow cots. We had people sitting, heads on the tables, just to stay warm here.”

There are as many as 138,575 homeless people in Chicago – where the highest temperature on Thursday was forecast to be about 13F (-11C) – according to an estimate by the city’s Coalition for the Homeless. Stephen Welch, executive assistant to the president of the Pacific Garden Mission, said between 1,100 and 1,200 people slept at the “overburdened” shelter on Wednesday night, on beds, cots and foam mats.

New York has some 60,000 homeless people in and out of shelters, according to the Coalition for the Homeless. The city’s Department of Homeless services enacts a “Code Blue” procedure for severe cold. During a Code Blue, the city relaxes the usual intake process for people who want to access shelters and “drop-in” centers and doubles the number of teams that search for homeless people at risk.


It isn’t the cold that kills – it’s capitalism. The charities do an admirable job trying to cope with poverty but deal with the cause: the economic system and the underlying beliefs which create it. Anybody who dies in the cold is a failure of capitalism to look after people and society.

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