© Spencer Platt/Getty Images According to the Department of Homeless Services, the number of homeless people in New York City has risen by more than 20,000 over the past five years.
Hundreds of full-time New York City workers are homeless and in San Francisco bus drivers sleep in their cars to save money: this is a never-ending crisis In the United States, disaster has become our most common mode of life. Proof that our daily existence was something other than a simmering, smoldering disaster has been historically held somewhat at bay by the myth that hard work equals some kind of subsistence living. For the more deluded amongst us, this 'American dream' even got us to believe we could be something called 'middle class'. We were deceived.
For those not yet woke, I don't see how y'all can stay asleep when story after story proves how screwed we are.
The
New York Post, no bastion of bleeding heart liberalism,
reported on Monday that "Hundreds of full-time city workers are homeless". These are people who clean our trash and make our city, the heart of American capitalism, safe and livable, including for those who plunder the globe from Wall Street. These are men and women, living in shelters and out of their cars, who have government jobs - the kind of workers conservatives
love to paint as greedy, gluttonous pigs.
When a full time government worker can't "find four walls and a roof to call his own" in the city he serves, we are living in a perpetual state of disaster capitalism.
Across the country, the
San Francisco Chronicle told the tale of the "Tech bus drivers forced to live in cars to make ends meet". It's arguable whether living in your car can really be considered "making ends meet", but what can you expect of a newspaper serving a city where tech is supposed to answer all of our needs. Where housing is even more
stupidly expensive than in New York City.
This, too, is perpetual disaster capitalism, creating havoc and inflicting disaster upon individual souls for corporate greed without even needing the pretense of a crisis for an excuse.In her 2007 book
The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism,
Naomi Klein defined "disaster capitalism" as "orchestrated raids on the public sphere in the wake of catastrophic events, combined with the treatment of disasters as exciting marketing opportunities". She was riffing on neoconservatives using Hurricane Katrina as an excuse for a New Orleans land grab. She witnessed the same phenomenon in the 2004 Asian Tsunami and in the aftermath of the US invasion of Iraq.
The concept of public plunder after disaster has been embraced in similar linguistic terms by Democrats and Republicans alike. Condoleezza Rice famously
called 9/11 an "enormous opportunity", and indeed it was a profitable one,
for war contractors anyway. Similarly, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel
once said: "You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. And what I mean by that is an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before". Emanuel was good to his word. While American workers lost their
jobs, lost their
homes and even
took their own lives as a result of the 2008 financial meltdown,
the Obama White House instituted financial "reforms" that arrested no Wall Street executives, and left even
Forbes predicting "ten reasons why there will be another systematic financial crisis".
Back in those halcyon days, Emanuel felt disaster was a necessary fiction before the private plunder of public resources. Now, in an age of perpetual disaster capitalism, with our low-income
housing shortage and bounty of
privatized charter schools, there is no need to pretend. No one needs to pray for their own Hurricane Katrina to destroy their city as a way to fire their teachers, as that
Chicago Tribune columnist
recently did. As mayor, Emanuel rammed through his education agenda without a disaster, natural or otherwise. His school closure plan may have led to mortal dangers like a hunger strike, but he didn't need a 9/11 or biblical flood to justify it.
When our daily life is one of a state of chaos - and with hundreds slaughtered by police annually, and folks who work full time unable to stave off homelessness, and white anchors shot on live TV, and black worshippers shot up in church, and incarcerated victims behind bars "taking their own lives"
daily, it's hard to say that it's not - the continuous state of disaster justifies disaster capitalism continuously, and we're barely able to notice it, and powerless to stop it.
We live in such an interminable state of disaster, we barely see the locusts for the plague. Take the other major sad story this week: that Silicon Valley investor Martin Shkrelli has bought the drug Daraprim, raising its price 5,000%. No crisis necessitated this increase. The drug is 62 years old, and its initial costs had long ago been absorbed.
It's easy to be angry at Shkrelli, his smug smile and his greedy choices that may well equal the deaths of those priced out from the malaria, Aids and cancer medicine they need. But Shkrelli is just a tool. He lives in a world where disaster capitalism will reward him. He now says he will make the drug "more affordable," but the richest nation on earth can't stop him from deciding what "affordable" will mean. He may repulse us, but he represents our American way of disastrous living.
Disaster capitalism no longer just reacts to chaos for profit, or even creates chaos for profit. It creates the conditions by which the spectre of social, spiritual and biological death hang over our heads on a daily basis so oppressively, the crises become seamless.And it asks us to accept that when you work full time driving workers to the richest corporation in the history of the human race and must live in your car, you should be grateful that you're "making ends meet", keep calm and carry on.
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from the ArticelL......"In New York City, former Mayor Michael Bloomberg rolled out a well-regarded Housing First program focusing on mentally ill individuals. But he then gutted housing subsidies for the general homeless population, including families, after saying he thought they promoted passivity instead of "client responsibility." Today, homelessness is the highest since the Great Depression, with 60,000 New Yorkers—including 26,000 children—on the streets, in the subway tunnels, and in the city's sprawling network of 255 shelters, conveniently located far from the playgrounds of the 1 percent."
President Carter's proposal to have all of our vital stats and data stored on one system accessible from a wrist band would be very applicable here in Santa Clara's efforts to solve their homelessness problems: ' Those costs are very hard to determine: There are so many agencies involved—hospitals, jails, police, detox centers, mental-health clinics, shelters, service providers—and they all keep separate records, separate sets of data used for separate purposes, all run on separate pieces of software'
Housing homeless people is 1/3 less expensive than streeting them.