Tag Archive for 'homelessness'

No helping hand to people perceived at fault

Homeless. Hungry. But at least I got a new coffee can. Please help, okay?photo © 2009 Ed Yourdon | more info (via: Wylio)Fundraisers have long seen that natural disasters are more compelling reasons for making a situational charitable donation than tragedies sourced to some sort of human incompetence or malfeasance.  Hurricane Katrina, the earthquakes in Chile and Haiti and the Indian Ocean tsunami on 2004 had donors breaking out their checkbooks and credits cards to give what they could to those whose homes had been obliterated.

But giving during last summer’s Gulf Oil spill didn’t see an outpouring of financial support.  BP and friends were quickly tagged as responsible by spectators and the government, which left Gulf Coast Residents on their own.

A recently published study in the European Journal of Social Psychology shows this bias in play. Holloway University researchers found subjects more willing to provide assistance to those suffering from natural disasters than man-made ones in 4 different scenarios.

“People perceive victims of humanly caused events in more negative terms, even when there is no information available about the victims’ blameworthiness,” Zagefka and her colleagues conclude. “This amounts to a systemic bias against people suffering from humanly caused disasters.”

The researchers attribute this unfortunate tendency to the Just World Hypothesis, which asserts that humans are strongly inclined to view the world as fundamentally fair, orderly and predictable. To defend this belief, “Potential donors are motivated to blame the victims when given the slightest chance,” they write.

That same attitude seems to apply to the social safety net that politicians argue endlessly about.  Post welfare reform in the 90s,  Americans who struggle to make ends meet are more likely to be demonized by politicians looking to score a quick rhetorical point or to save money via safety net budget cuts than they are to receive a helping hand in their community.

More than 15 million Americans are unemployed. 1 in 8 Americans is on food stamps.   One in 5 children lives below the poverty level. And roughly 1 percent of Americans will spend part of any given year homeless.

Some would have us believe those numbers are because a segment of the population hasn’t been making the effort to succeed, so it’s not my problem.

But how do we appropriately assign responsibility for poor life outcomes and provide the necessary support to break the cycles of poverty and crime, when we instinctively blame the person stuck in the cycle?  How do we acknowledge the contribution of the circumstances that led to a person becoming a sad statistic, so that we can begin to correct those common injustices for the next generation?

VOD: Foreclosure Alley & Tent City USA

Andrew Sullivan embedded the heartbreaking piece on what happens to foreclosed homes.

Though I’ve been reading about “jingle mail” since last winter, I never realized that people abandon their homes fully furnished.   Not only are they losing their largest and most expensive (bad) investment, but many people leave behind closets of clothes, computers, family pictures, children’s toys, and even grandpa’s ashes.

Worse, the companies hired to clear out the homes have been unable to find a charity that can take perfectly usable furniture and clothing for resale on the low-end charitable sales market because the timing doesn’t work out.  (Part 1, Part 2)

Where do people wind up after losing their homes? They downgrade to apartments, stay with family, and some wind up in tent cities that are springing up across America.

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Uncle Sam wants you

Earlier this month, the National Alliance to End Homelessness released really disturbing news via their study on homeless veterans:

The report exposes a shockingly disproportionate representation of veterans among the homeless population. Veterans, who represent only 11 percent of the civilian adult population, comprise 26 percent of the homeless population, despite the fact that, as a group, they typically have a lower poverty rate than the general population.

I bet the armed forces recruiters are leaving this statistic off their list when they’re trying to recruit high school seniors to join the army. The returns on serving aren’t looking so impressive. . . either those accrued college tuition dollars and “job skills” just don’t seem to go as far as the Army would like you to think or the psychological damage of serving is so great as to render veterans unable to serve as productive members of society.