In God They Tru$t
“Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.” - Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, Article 25, Section 1
The Supremacist Control Freaks are at it again.
You can watch the two short videos, approximately 1.5 and 3 minutes. Essentially, 90-year-old Arnold Abbott (an appropriate last name [1]), after preparing food in a church then serving it outdoors to the homeless was physically restrained, along with two pastors, because Fort Lauderdale, Florida, has an ordinance prohibiting such charitable acts. OK, after I stopped shaking my head then banging it on the desk I tried to figure the reasoning behind it.
Maybe the police were concerned that it was GMO food and not organic? Fat chance!
Must be some way to figure this out. Let's see, selling Girl Scout Cookies [2] is OK, therefore business transactions are cool, therefore it has to do with money.
Another article revealed:
Gentrification in service of the almighty dollar.
Think
Global, Feed Local
Globally, this scenario has played out perhaps most prominently in defense of sport, which is in defense of tourism and business, so there's that almighty dollar, again. Remember the recent Not Everybody's World Cup in Brazil where paramilitaries were on rooftops so as to control protesters, [4] many of them from poor or lower classes. Then there was the 2008 Olympics in Beijing: “Homeless Swept off Streets for Olympic Image.”[5] A short video shows a Chinese man whose livelihood depends on collecting and redeeming plastic bottles; the Olympics curtailed that. And the 2000 Olympics: “Sydney's homeless to be removed for Olympics.” [6] What’s ironic and hypocritical about the Fort Lauderdale incident is that the Church is supposedly a sacred American institution, yet even the actions of a Church-inspired “brother's keeper” nonagenarian must bow to the dictum of: clean streets and clean people equals dirty, er, clean, business. “'I’m going to have to go to court again and sue the city of Fort Lauderdale -- a beautiful city,' Abbott told Local 10. 'These are the poorest of the poor, they have nothing, they don't have a roof over their heads. How do you turn them away?'”[7]
Perhaps some Amerizen koans will shed some light on the issue:
As Michael Stoops notes, some argue that feeding encourages homelessness and that the food should be served in appropriate shelters. Shelters are, perhaps, a workable solution but even if that was the answer, why weren't the Ft. Lauderdale police saying, 'Hey, folks, the food looks good, we'll help you move it to a shelter.'
The Imprint of Church and State The mammon-based society flies in the face of God, Church, and any apple pies that the 90-year-old may bake. And doesn't this all just transcend labels of God, Church, and stereotypical Americana? The real issue at hand (and mouth) is feeding hungry human beings for whom a meal is probably the highlight of their day, emotionally, nutritionally, and communally.
As Russell Brand points
out: “...America just had midterm elections
where $4 billion was spent on campaigning... But feeding the homeless?
That’s illegal.”[8]
A brief look at the history of “In God We Trust” on the coin of the USEmpire realm will shed some light.
First off, “It is also the motto of the U.S. state of Florida.”
Historically:
The phrase is thus connected with taking sides during hot/cold war time. And now it's a different kind of civil war, with the Supremacist Control Freaks against the People who most need a hot meal, not a cold shoulder; globally it's a war against the poor and unsightly.
Think Global, Feed Local One of the most prominent suggestions for easing the world's food problems – many of which are created by trans-national agri-businesses and land-grabs – is local, sustainable, small-scale-farming. Maybe cities could help develop garden-tending programs for the homeless.
The attitude toward the homeless is also important. In context, the word “homeless” implies that a home is needed to be a complete person, that someone cannot be at home with his/herself unless he/she is under a roof. Granted, having or living in a home has many comforts and advantages yet for some of our fellow two-leggeds being homeless is a choice to, for example, not participate in the mainstream system – no rent, no mortgage, no bills, no car payments, etc. There needs to be a greater respect for the person, the human being, so as to help get past the derogatory aspect of the label. Like turtles and hermit crabs, in essence, each of us must learn to be at home within ourselves.
Yet, more practically, from the National Coalition for the Homeless Report, October 2014:
In response to Manchester, NH, legislation:
In Olympia, WA:
In St, Augustine, Florida:
For a more thorough look at the issues, with reports from various cities and what can be done to alleviate problems, see: National Coalition for the Homeless Report, October 2014.
Abbott is a Keeper Abbott and Mayor Jack Seiler can be seen shaking hands on TV where, post-incident, they debated the issue. How much the Mayor is trying to save face after “hundreds of angry emails over Abbott's run-in with police, and over the city's ordinance” remains to be seen. From the TV segment:
It's easy to tell from his actions, Abbott loves to feed people. He is his brother's and his sister's keeper. There are many more Abbotts out there.
Mankh (Walter E. Harris III) is an essayist and resident poet on Axis of Logic. In addition to his work as a writer, he is a small press publisher and Turtle Islander. His newest haiku chapbook is “so many people go hungry.” He also hosts an audio show "Between the Lines: listening to literature online." You can contact him via his literary website.
READ MORE POETRY AND ESSAYS BY MANKH ON AXIS OF LOGIC
NOTES: 1. An abbot is the head of a monastery, and the word comes from “Aramaic abba, title of honor, literally 'the father, my father.'” 3. “Fort Lauderdale Latest City to Restrict Feeding Homeless” 4. “Missiles Installed on Apartment Buildings to Protect FIFA's World Cup” 5. “Homeless Swept off Streets for Olympic Image” 6. “Sydney's homeless to be removed for Olympics.” 7. “90-Year-Old Man Defies Police Orders, Continues Feeding Homeless People” 8. “Russell Brand: $4 Billion Spent on Elections, But Feeding the Homeless is Illegal” 9. “In God we trust” 10. “Arnold Abbott and Mayor Jack Seiler Face off In Televised Debate”
© Copyright 2014 by AxisofLogic.com
|