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Homeless crisis on the West Coast

TaiShang

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Homeless crisis on the West Coast
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The homeless crisis


The Skid Row area of downtown Los Angeles is home to thousands of chronically homeless people. Poverty, despair and drugs are endemic.

The U.S. homeless population increased this year for the first time since 2010, driven by a surge in the number of people living on the streets in Los Angeles and other West Coast cities, including San Diego, the San Francisco Bay Area, Portland and Seattle.

https://www.cbsnews.com/pictures/homeless-crisis-los-angeles-skid-row-portland-san-diego-seattle/2/
 
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@TaiShang

If you need sources to my article, please visit these websites :
http://americanpoverty.org

http://www.nccp.org/topics/childpoverty.html

http://www.fightpoverty.mmbrico.com/facts/america.html

http://www.dosomething.org/tipsandtools/11-facts-about-education-and-poverty-america

http://capaassociation.org/newsletter_N009/Articles/PovertyCrime.htm

http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/08/09/turning-poverty-into-an-american-crime

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/21stC/issue-1.2/Poverty.htm

http://www.americanprogress.org/iss...8/5103/the-straight-facts-on-women-in-poverty

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...it-hardest-by-poverty-says-census-report.html

http://www.legalmomentum.org/our-work/women-and-poverty/women-and-poverty-in-america-issues.html

http://money.cnn.com/2004/12/22/news/economy/poverty_healthcare/index.htm

http://money.cnn.com/2004/12/16/news/economy/poverty_corporate/index.htm

http://money.cnn.com/2004/12/22/news/economy/poverty_overview/index.htm

http://www.americanprogress.org/iss...y-a-national-strategy-to-cut-poverty-in-half/

http://www.americanprogress.org/iss...ive-vision-for-reproductive-health-and-rights

Poverty crisis in USA :

The American people have turned from starvation to theft of other people, or government and public places. The news of the stolen goods is published everyday, which in America's minds may never have been conceived of their material value. In the shadow of the false politics of the capitalist system of warfare, poverty and hunger are now becoming a widespread social and security crisis in the United States that is being promoted to other nations as a dreamland of "opportunities."
Poverty in America is becoming a major social crisis. This crisis has not come about overnight, and is rooted in the depth of the militant-driven profit-oriented capitalist system. The United States has always suffered from more general poverty than most of the world's industrialized nations. For example, in the mid-1990s, the poverty rate in the United States was about twice as high as in the Scandinavian countries and 1.3 times the poverty rate in Japan. However, more than 42 percent of American wealth is controlled by about 1 percent of the country's capitalist population. Four hundred wealthy Americans have more than $ 1 trillion in value, with an average income of about $ 3.5 billion.
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Poor Children in the States Before the Poverty Leap in 2004:
In the states of the blue: 20 percent and more, green: 15 to 19 percent, yellow: 10 to 14 percent, and white less than 10 percent of the children live in poverty.

In the last decade, the US economy has achieved a record of poverty, in which one out of every six Americans live in poverty. Before the recession, there were 30 million poor people, which now has reached 46 million and has hit a new record. The general condition of the lives of Americans over the past decade has often been the dismemberment of families due to poverty and bankruptcy. People have lost their homes and added to the number of single-parent families whose responsibilities have often fallen for women. For many children, these families did not have the opportunity to study and the students faced large debts.

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Increasing Poor Children in US States in 2010.

A large part of the American people have lost hope of life and see their dreams come to life. The need to use state food aid is also seen even in a part of the educated and specialist people who lost their jobs. Given the expectations of educated people, life is much harder for this part, and despair and depression occur more deeply and deeply. In fact, a new wave of poverty with an unprecedented growing social and social margin in the United States, which saves the wealth of its people to war and bombs and massacres in the interests of many Zionists around the world.

Falling into poverty in USA :


According to experts, the decline of Americans since 2000 has continued to fluctuate between 2007 and 2008. In 1973, the poverty rate in the United States reached 11.1 percent, the lowest since World War II. That figure was 15.2 percent in 1983, equivalent to one out of every ten Americans. In 2005, the poorest people in the United States were 37 million, or 12.5% of the population. The rate among black families was 24.9 percent, more than double the poverty rate among white families.

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Elderly and empty baskets

The official poverty rate in 2007 was 12.5% and in 2008 it was 13.2%. The federal government announced the official rate for poverty in 2010 at 15.1%, up from the previous year's figure of 14.3 percent. In 2010, the number of poor people fell to 46 million. The figure reached 15.7 percent in 2011, the highest since 1965. And finally, in August 2012, ABC News reported that the number of poor in the United States reached about 150 million! This is an increasing trend from the aftermath of the economic downturn, as well as billions of dollars of American people's money being spent on spreading international insecurity and wars.

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Poor homeless people in the few places provided by the popular foundations helping the poor souls.

American people and poverty crisis :

Poverty rates have been rising in all demographic categories in the United States, affecting a large number of families, children and the elderly. One third of the American middle class is under the poverty line, and more than 20 million Americans live in "absolute poverty." Living in absolute poverty means that people's income is less than 50 percent of the poverty line. Elderly and children are the most vulnerable in the face of the poverty crisis, with the poverty rate among people over the age of 65 reaching its highest level in American economic history, and among children this rate was more than 22% in 2010, Currently, this rate is higher for children from any other age group. The percentage of children living in women under housewives doubled from 1970 to 2003, rising from 6.11% to 23.6%. This increase continued in the following years.

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The poverty rate among black families is more than double the poverty rate among white families. A large part of the poor American population is Spanish and black. More than a quarter of the blacks live under the poverty line of the United States. This figure for Asian is about 12%, and for white is less than 10%.

Poverty at the level of hunger

The welfare indicators of the American people have fallen by almost 70% since the 1990s. But the poverty of Americans has gone a long way since the lack of access to welfare facilities has deepened. The lack of food security shows the most visible depth of the American people's poverty. Now there are many families who can no longer afford enough food. More than 46 million Americans receive food aid these days. This figure has grown by 14 million over the past four years and continues to grow. According to the Food and Drug Administration, several million more people are also on the list of people who die from hunger without food aid.

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DeParle, a journalist who pays special attention to poverty, says: "In the new age, men never needed food aid to this extent. About 50 million Americans need such assistance. " According to DeParle, food aid is essential for the American people because of the great economic downturn, and if this is not the case, humanitarian disasters will be easy. There are now 6 million people in the United States, whose only income is the government's food aid.

Women's poverty and poor mothers

Between 1959 and 2005, the number of poor people living in single-parent families grew, rising from 17.8 percent in the late 50's to 28.7 percent in 2005. That year, the statistics showed a much higher rate of poverty among all types of families, and so far, with the expansion of the recession, has continued to grow. An American mother says she will receive a daily allowance of $ 367 per month, about $ 12 a day, which should be spent on three daily meals and a child. She believes that this money is not enough for a healthy diet, especially for children growing up, and children who receive these food aid will no longer have access to vegetables and fruits in the family's food basket.

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Women in all races are more likely to be poorer than men. Black women make up the poorest Americans.

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Based on the above statistics, women shape the poorest level of American society.

American leaders seem to have changed some of the concepts of poverty line definition to prevent the awful announcement of real poverty expansion figures. Discussions on this issue are currently circulating in the press and among statistical experts. According to some opinion polls, which are sometimes confirmed by the Census Bureau, although the poverty rate has been officially announced at 1.51 percent, the real figures are higher than those and more than 16 percent. The controversy over the definition of the poverty line has been highlighted, and conservatives are trying to maintain their current definition in order to add fewer people to the list of state aid. But opponents of the definition of the current poverty line believe that this definition, which was adopted in 1969, has been updated every year with regard to inflation, but it has not changed in terms of living standards and does not respond to current economic problems, and thus The pattern of its inclusion, the actual number of the poor is not clear, and poor people are deprived of many financial resources and experience a terrible life.

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Children beg for daily food.

In fact, when a family of Americans is said to be living below the poverty line, it's actually meant that this family lives under conditions that were below the poverty line in 1969. Because the living standards intended to define the poverty line have not changed over the past four decades, and the figure of 50 million poor is based on living standards in 1969. It is quite clear that the US government is trying to prevent the truth of its appalling economic situation by stating this statistics. The official poverty line for a family of 4 people based on yearly national income in 1969 is $ 22350. For the year 2011, this would be $ 46,651 if changes were made in per capita national income. With this in mind, nearly 30 percent of American families live in poverty, which is twice as high as government official figures.

Social Security and Poverty :
With the spread of poverty and the weakness of the state in controlling the economic situation, the security of the people is also compromised. The activities of criminal groups active in the field of human trafficking, prostitution, drugs and planned robbery have intensified. Many unemployed people are attracted to these groups and sometimes lose their lives during violent acts of these groups. The entry of women and girls into prostitution, which is carried out solely for the purpose of providing daily living, has increased in particular among ethnic minorities and has led to the spread of health problems among the poorest. And many female students have turned to prostitution to finance their education.



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Homelessness is abundant in the streets of the cities of the southern states.

Aside from expanding the gangs of gangs, ordinary people are also abundantly abusing hunger for robbery of other people or government and public places. If in the past, such events were reported more than just certain states, today the monopoly is gone, and the thief and theft have spread throughout the United States. The news of the stolen goods is published everyday, which in America's minds may never have been conceived of their material value. People also do not have mercy on electric cables, railroads and sewage wells, and they use every opportunity to escape poverty! Metal objects, such as any iron, brass and steel objects, and in general anything of little value, are easily stolen from public places, including sanitary facilities and parks. The looting of stores and attacks on supermarkets are also occurring abundantly. This picture shows that, in the wake of the false policy of the capitalist system of warfare, poverty and hunger are now becoming a widespread social and security crisis in the Americas that propagates for other nations as a dreamland of "opportunities".
 
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LOL at the OMG in the title it's a @onebyone meme:
https://defence.pk/pdf/search/10707983/?q=god&o=date&c[title_only]=1&c[user][0]=158593

https://defence.pk/pdf/search/10707979/?q=omg&o=date&c[title_only]=1&c[user][0]=158593



https://fairus.org/issue/illegal-immigration/how-many-illegal-immigrants-are-in-us
How Many Illegal Aliens are in the US?
"As of 2017, FAIR estimates the number of illegal aliens in the US to be approximately 12.5 million"

https://ww2.kqed.org/news/2016/09/2...-hidden-segment-of-l-a-s-homeless-population/
Immigrants a Largely Hidden Segment of L.A.’s Homeless Population

Los Angeles County’s growing homeless population includes one group that’s not so visible: immigrants who came to the United States to earn a better living but couldn’t, and are ending up without shelter.

On any given day at a Cypress Park Community Job Center, located in the parking lot of a busy Home Depot, some of the day laborers waiting for work don’t have a home.

“A lot of them are staying on the streets,” said Luis Valentan, who manages the day labor center, which is run by Instituto de Educacion Popular del Sur de California, a community nonprofit. “We know a couple of workers that sleep in the back of a truck or under a bridge, or in a park,” he said.

Among the day laborers is a 51-year-old man who goes by Alonso. He did not want to use his full name because he doesn’t have legal status and he does not want this family to know he’s homeless. He said he’s been that way for about four years.

“I sleep on the street, not in the open street, but someplace where I have a tent,” said Alonso.

Alonso said he camps high up in Elysian Park, about a 15-minute walk from the Home Depot. He shows up for work looking clean and presentable. He said he tries to use public showers when he can, but other times, washes in the L.A. River or in the nearby Arroyo Seco.

“I bathe when it rains and it is clean,” he said in Spanish.

Alonso has struggled since the recession. Until about four years ago, he was able to rent a room nearby. But the work dried up, and the money wasn’t enough. He stopped sending money home to his parents.

Others who came to the U.S. to find work have found themselves on similar footing, Valentan said.

“It’s more about survival,” Valentan said. “This gentrification that is happening in Los Angeles, it is leaving pretty much everybody without opportunities. Like rents are very expensive now. There is no way for a worker that is not working every day to pay a decent rent. There are no more decent rents.”

Lately, Valentan and the job center staff have referred a growing number of workers to the Dolores Mission in Boyle Heights. The shelter is unique in that it caters to Spanish-speaking immigrants.

“Overall, we have seen a huge increase in the number of people coming to us, and newly homeless, since 2009,” said Cynthia Sanchez, director of Proyecto Pastoral, the nonprofit that runs the shelter at Dolores Mission Church.

The church shelter first opened its doors nearly 30 years ago to house refugees fleeing war-torn Central America. Now, it shelters a different crowd.

“Most of them are day laborers. They work in construction or they work in restaurants, they work in landscaping,” Sanchez said.

Twenty-six men sleep inside the church sanctuary and several others sleep in adjacent buildings. A smaller women’s shelter opened a year and a half ago, housing mostly older women who work in domestic jobs.

Most of those who wind up on the street are single men, Sanchez said. They are here on their own, without families in the U.S., and often send money back home to relatives.

‘Shadow’ Population

Sanchez and others who work with the homeless immigrants see them as a shadow population within Los Angeles’ growing homeless ranks. Since last year, the number of homeless in Los Angeles County rose by almost 6 percent over the past year to 46,874 people, according to a census of the homeless released in May.

The immigrant homeless are part of this population, but there are barriers to assisting them. Many are reluctant to seek services or go to shelters, according to local day labor centers and others who work with them. They said they are afraid of others on the street who are mentally ill or use drugs. Some from foreign countries are fearful of the black homeless population.

There is also a sense of shame, Sanchez said. Some among the immigrant homeless are reluctant to accept help.

“You know, they don’t see themselves as being homeless or as needing shelter, but rather as needing support so they can work,” Sanchez said.

Their lack of legal status in the U.S. also makes them reluctant to step forward, whether to report a crime or to enter a shelter.

“Even when they come here to the program, and we start putting their information into the computer, they ask: Where does this information go? Is it going to affect us?” said Salvador Mendoza, who handles intake at Dolores Mission.

County officials said those who lack legal status also have other issues accessing services.

For the most part, undocumented immigrants are not eligible for public benefits, that being federal housing subsidies, or CalFresh benefits, formerly known as food stamps,” said Phil Ansell, director of Los Angeles County’s new Homeless Initiative.

Ansell said that’s not to say U.S. citizens and legal residents who are homeless have it much easier. He said there isn’t enough federal Section 8 housing assistance to go around.

“The overall challenge is that rents are high and that wages are low,” Ansell said. “And that is the same challenge that faces most other homeless families and individuals.”

Ansell said he hoped recent minimum wage and anti-wage theft laws might help. Wage theft — when employers withhold wages or benefits owed to an employee — is rampant in day labor and other low-wage industries that attract immigrants.

Sanchez at Dolores Mission said for now, their best solution for moving people into permanent housing is to place them with roommates in private rentals. But rising rents lately have made that difficult.

Getting Off the Streets

Every night at the Dolores Mission, after dinner, the cots go up inside the church, even where the altar stands.

“It gets pushed to the side to allow space for eight cots to go up on the altar,” Sanchez said.

Twenty-six men sleep in the church. Others sleep in adjacent buildings. Altogether the men’s shelter houses 45. There is also a smaller women’s shelter that opened a year and a half ago.

One recent evening, a few of the men gathered around the TV before dinner. Among them was 59-year-old Andres Gonzales Perez, a relatively recent arrival to the mission.

“I’ve been here for two months,” Gonzales said. “It is the first time I am here at a mission, unfortunately.”

Gonzales said it’s the first time he has been homeless. He used to work as a baker, but became sick with a lung ailment that needed treatment and couldn’t keep working. He tried unsuccessfully staying with his brother. About three months ago, he wound up on the street.

“It was very cold,” Gonzales said. “I got an ugly cough.”

Rigoberto Bejerano has been on the street longer. He said he tried staying for a time downtown, near Skid Row, where all the services are, but he found that frightening.

“There’s lots of drugs, lots of alcoholism, lots of perdition, lots of vandalism,” said Bejerano, who has worked as a handyman. “People don’t have any money, so they attack others to get what they want. It’s dangerous living downtown.”

Back in Cypress Park, Alonso said one reason he camps in the hills is to avoid the dangers of the streets. He said he’s been thinking lately about heading back to Mexico after 16 years in the U.S.

He said he hasn’t talked to his parents since he’s been on the street. At first, he told them everything was OK. Then he stopped calling.

“Instead of making them happy to hear from me, it would make them upset,” he said.

It’s been years now since he had contact.

“What really breaks my heart is that I don’t know if my dad is alive, if my mom is alive, if my siblings are OK,” Alonso said. “I love them very much … and I’m afraid they will think that I am ingrate, that I don’t want to help them, that I forgot about them — and it’s not like that.”

He said that if things don’t get better within a couple of years, he’ll head home.

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/poli...me-beijing-where-helping-homeless-can-get-you

Welcome to Beijing: where helping the homeless can get you evicted
Chinese migrant worker Yang Changhe lost the roof over his head when he tried to help those suddenly forced out by a government crackdown on safety

28 November, 2017, When Yang Changhe decided to help migrant workers thrown out of their homes in a citywide safety crackdown in Beijing, he didn’t expect it would end in his own eviction.

Yang, who moved to the Chinese capital from Hunan in 2009, ran a drop-in centre for other migrants in his spare time and was one of many members of the public who rallied to help the tens of thousands of people given just days – and in some cases hours – to leave their homes on the fringes of the city.

“I saw there were so many people desperately in need of help, and I just wanted to do something for them,” he said.

The migrants were evicted as part of a 40-day campaign launched last week to address safety threats in the aftermath of a residential fire that killed 19 people this month.

The campaign corresponds with a bigger push over the last year to limit the size of Beijing’s population, a drive that has involved shutting down wholesale markets and warehouses and clearing slum areas.

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The municipal authorities have denied the most recent sweep targets the so-called low-end population of migrant workers and their families, insisting the main goal is to tackle threats from unlicensed buildings.

But the effect has been to force men, women and children onto the street at the start of winter.

That prompted Yang, 43, to swing into action. In March he had opened the drop-in centre called Tongzhou Home, meaning “in the same boat”, providing a range of free services such as movie nights, haircuts and table tennis for migrant workers – all supported by donations from the public.

On Friday afternoon he posted a notice online offering displaced people the chance to store luggage or stay the night at the centre. He also urged people with a car to help.

That night, as he waited for word to spread, Yang was visited by police officers who told him to cease and desist. The officers watched as he deleted the online appeal, returning the next day to tell him to shut down Tongzhou Home.

“They said I wasn’t certified to take in the workers, because I’m not running a guest house or hotel,” he said.

In the meantime he fielded more than 20 offers for help – each one of which had to be turned down because of the police.

The Majiqiao police station and the Tongzhou district public security bureau could not be reached for comment on Sunday.

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Similar appeals have disappeared from the accounts of other not-for-profit groups, including the Illness Challenge Foundation registered with the Ministry of Civil Affairs.

Through its public WeChat account on Friday, the foundation offered to store luggage for workers with rare diseases and help them find new accommodation. The post has since been deleted because it “violated regulations”, according to an online notice.

A catering industry group also called on restaurants to use its account to post job openings for migrant workers on Friday, attracting job offers at more than 500 restaurants until the section was closed down.

Just days old, another group called Warm Beijing saw its posts deleted, according to a volunteer.

The hardline official approach comes as authorities continue to narrow the space for civil society by cracking down on rights groups and introducing legislation to exert tighter control over the sector.

Back at his rented home above the closed drop-in centre on Sunday night, Yang had packed up his belongings and was ready to move out, ordered to leave in yet another visit by the police. He said he would stay at a friend’s place before looking for a new home for himself and his community endeavour.

“I’ve worked in a factory, been a street vendor, and run a few small businesses – I know how hard it is [to be a migrant worker],” he said.

“I don’t regret [helping them]. It was the right thing to do and there is nothing to regret.”
 
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https://m.theepochtimes.com/surviving-in-new-york-5-cents-at-a-time_692456.html

Surviving in New York, 5 Cents at a Time
The life and daily struggle of a 72-year-old can collector

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Yabi Luo, an immigrant who collects cans from trash receptacles for a living, sorts her cans at the Sure We Can redemption center in Bushwick, Brooklyn. (Samira Bouaou/Epoch Times

NEW YORK—A shard of shattered glass slashes the tip of Yabi Luo’s left ring finger. She grunts, then pauses to examine the droplet of blood that is beginning to emerge from her dusty, stained skin. It does not appear to be a deep cut. There have been worse cuts. She sucks the blood from her finger and resumes her work sorting the sticky bottles and cans that she collects from the trash receptacles of New York City.

Luo is a canner, a person who collects cans, bottles, and other plastics for a five cent deposit. For this 72-year-old illiterate Chinese immigrant, canning is her sole source for survival.

She emigrated to New Jersey with her husband in 1994. They were sponsored by his aunt, who owned a Chinese restaurant in Long Beach Island. Luo was one of the chefs, her specialty was hong shao fish, fish simmered in peanut oil, soy sauce, Chinese red wine, and sugar.

Luo’s husband passed away six years ago; her sister-in-law passed away three years later. The restaurant closed, and Luo was left to fend for herself.

So Luo spends four hours each afternoon sorting and counting the cans she collected from various garbage bins throughout Bushwick and Bedstuy. She wears royal blue arm warmers to protect the sleeves of her sweatshirt from grime, a jade bracelet to protect her soul from evil spirits.

She and four siblings grew up on a fish farm on the coast of rural Shanghai. Their father died when she was 14. She speaks broken mandarin, tidbits of English, and never attended elementary school.

She has one son living in the U.S, and two in China. But they have their own wives, children, and money worries. Her son who lives in New York is conscientiously saving to bring his wife over from China. Luo refuses to burden them.

Yet where can a 72-year-old Chinese woman with limited English proficiency and no education go at a time when the American economy is languidly recovering from a recession? China would be ideal, but there is no pension for rural retirees.

New York City, her Chinese friends told her. It’s one city with a lot of trash.

Bill of Bottles
In 1983, New York became one of the 10 states to enact the container-deposit legislation. It requires customers to pay a 5-cent refundable deposit on each beer, soda, and water container they buy in New York. The deposit goes to beverage distributors, who returns the deposit if the customer chooses to recycle its products at a supermarket, drugstore, or another business registered as a redemption center. The distributor then recycles the cans, plastics and glasses. But consumers often don’t go out of their way to recycle in this form; hence, an informal economy is born.

Many homeless New Yorkers, and others living on the margin, make a living from redeeming the deposits of thrown away bottles and cans. And it’s not easy. Canners like Luo can wait up to four hours in line at a supermarket, which legally restricts them to redeem a maximum of $12 worth of cans per visit.

The bottle legislation creates a dilemma for supermarkets for some canners are drug addicts and some have diseases. Sometimes, they also cause scenes.

“We just had a situation just a few moments ago,” says Gloria Curiel, 33, a Gristedes supermarket manager. “A lady canner was yelling and saying she was going to call consumer affairs.”

There are more than 100 canners who come to redeem their recyclables each day at the Gristedes in Chelsea. Canners are not the only ones using the redemption machine, it is open for the public. “You can see why the machine fills up fast,” Curiel says.

Usually it’s not a problem, but on some nights employees call in sick and they are short on staff. On those occasions, the machine may remain full for the evening.

That is why in 2007 a Roman Catholic nun and a former canner decided to create a non-profit redemption center dedicated solely to the redemption of cans.

Sure We Can
On the border of Bushwick and East Williamsburg, optimistic graffiti deck the metal garage doors that stretch across the entrance of this redemption center: a dolphin, fantastical animals, and a woodpecker pecking at a tree while speaking through a bubble speech that read “Sure We Can.”

Behind the metal garage doors, the Sure We Can redemption center consists of a series of trailers that is the humble abode to hens who fertilize a community garden for the canners. Scanty, barren trees grow from fertilizer amassed in car tires painted sky blue and pink; festive-colored cans hang from its branches like Christmas lights.

Sure We Can is the only licensed, non-profit redemption center in the city. Its sole business is to facilitate the redemption of cans and bottles. It was founded by the destitute to help the destitute in 2007. Canners receive extra cash for sorting their own bottles and cans and can redeem an unlimited number of recyclables. Most important, canners are sure they can get their full five cents for a can, while pick-up redemption trucks often cheat them to four cents.

The center was founded by Eugene Gadsden, a former canner turned community activist, and Ana Martinez de Luco, a Roman Catholic nun.

De Luco came from Spain to New York in 2004 to work for the UN Civil Society. In New York, she had an enlightenment that she should to do more for the poor from the micro rather than the macro. She chose to live on the streets in 2005, where she met Gadsden.

They decided to create a redemption center that could make canning a little easier. De Luco gathered up her contacts from the UN—Florence Erb and Douglas Erb—and a Wall Street broker named Joseph Mula to form a board. Over pizza, they figured out the business side of things.

Sure We Can set the precedence for a non-profit model of redemption centers during a time when many major business-registered redemption centers have closed due to gentrification. According to a report by Picture the Homeless, a grassroots organization founded by homeless people, some crucial redemption centers below 125th Street in Manhattan have closed in recent years. As a result, canners must turn to smaller stores and further supermarkets to cash their recyclables, where there are often longer waits and full machines.

Canners have the option of going to roughly 282 recycling centers in Queens, 103 centers in Brooklyn, and 13 in Manhattan. But at Sure We Can, there is a community garden to feed hungry canners and free English and computer lessons to help improve their job qualifications.

An Invisible Community
De Luco, 59, has vivid black eyebrows and a head of short, graying hair. She has worked tirelessly to build a community for canners. She is at the redemption center even when she has the flu. Her English is excellent, but sometimes, she is so fatigued that she switches to Spanish mid-sentence without realizing.

She organizes events at the center, like a cookout to celebrate Earth Day last month. Around fifty people attended, including a NY1 journalist who is producing a documentary about canners. He brought his wife, they made pasta fresh on the spot.

De Luco implores Luo to join their feast, but Luo modestly declines. She does not want to stop working.

The rims of her irises are beginning to match her gray hair. Her thin lips are fixed in a frown. Her work clothes consist of a faded military green Boar’s Head apron, a plaid vest, and a burgundy hooded sweatshirt. Every now and then, she finds a semi-full soda can that leaks. She steps aside to pour it away from her precious pile. Her face contorts, unconsciously, into a grimace while she pours the old soda.

She is hungry and considers joining the cookout, but decides against it. Luo does not feel comfortable eating western food. She thinks of the red wine fish she has sitting at home, an apartment on Flushing Avenue where a friend is letting her live pro bono.

Luo has no cell phone, no computer, and a sparse selection of clothes. If she needs to get in touch with one of her sons, she uses her friend’s son’s phone. Nonetheless she indulges in cooking, her sole luxury. She has cooking utensils. She has red wine. And she pays for her groceries herself. Luo cannot access food stamps because she does not have a formal address. The apartment she is staying in is already registered for someone else’s food stamps.

But Luo does not represent the phenomenon of canning; there are many canners who, unlike Luo, have other full time jobs.

Alberto Miguel, 50, is a canner by day, and an indoor soccer referee for New York City schools by night. He emigrated from Ecuador in 1980. He and his wife have been canning for the past year and a half. Through canning, they bring in a little extra support for the perennial needs of their three children and seven grandchildren.

Wen, who does not want to give his first name, is a canner who lives in a studio in Manhattan’s Chinatown with his wife and their two adult children. He was a technician in China, but since he speaks limited English he has not been able to find a job in that sector. He currently works in maintenance at a mattress store in Manhattan.

Then, there are those who have passed their primes and yearn to feel useful.

Sixty-eight-year-old Wang, who also does not want to give her first name, collects cans roughly twice a week. Her hair is dyed black and embellished with a curly perm. Wang’s granddaughter, who will be attending the Fashion Institute of Technology this fall, is the one who picked out Wang’s stylish black pea coat. They live in Manhattan’s Chinatown and whenever Wang is caught rummaging for cans, her son scolds her.

“I used to think it was embarrassing too. We would see her going through other people’s trash around town,” says Angela, her granddaughter. “But now I think she’s doing it, well, just to do something. It has to do with her age. There’s not much she can do, she wants to feel productive. ”

Wearing jeans, a black t-shirt, and chipped hot pink nail polish, Wang’s granddaughter follows her awkwardly around the Sure We Can Earth Day cookout. Her parents do not know she is there.

It is easy to assume, but difficult to determine the precise demographics of canners. The only data on canners that are easily accessible is a survey conducted by Picture the Homeless in 2005.

“Unfortunately, this is an issue where there aren’t a ton of folks doing work on their behalf,” says Sam Miller, the communications director for Picture the Homeless. “This may be the most accurate data that exists, even though it’s outdated.”

The National Employment Law Project, a non-profit research organization that advocates for workers’ rights, has never dealt with canners because they fall under an informal sector.

The Chinese Progressive Association, a non-profit founded to raise living and working standards for New York’s Chinese community, has never spoken with canners, according to its executive director Mae Lee.

Neither labor professors, shadow economy experts, nor sociologists who specialize in Chinese Americans, have conducted studies on the phenomenon of canning.

According to employees at Sure We Can, a large number of canners are elderly Chinese immigrants. Half of the regular canners at Sure We Can are Chinese, the other half are mostly Hispanic. “Since more redemption centers have opened, the Chinese have dispersed. But we still have about 30 Chinese regulars now,” de Luco says.

Employees of the redemption center say Luo is one of the hardest working canners they have seen.

“All the Chinese people work very hard here, but she’s the hardest worker, she’s always here,” de Luco says. Luo wakes up at six a.m to collect cans, seven days a week.

De Luco would like Sure We Can to be closed on Sunday’s. But since Luo pestered de Luco so ardently to keep it open, she was given her own storage space that she could access on Sunday’s. “That’s why we have a storage room for her,” de Luco says.“So she can still keep working even when we’re not open.”

In a receding section of the redemption center, there are 15 stalls for the center’s most frequent canners.

Luo has five bulging bags of cans and bottles in her storage for rainy days that are not good for collecting but good for sorting. At this redemption center on the border of East Williamsburg and Bushwick, Rou finds the closest thing she can to a sense of community and a solution to a missing social safety net for the rural Chinese elderly.

White rice and vegetables wrapped in aluminum foil are placed on a side table for those who need it; free English and computer classes are offered on Saturday’s. There are five canners who attend the English class regularly, Luo is not one of them.

Luo feels it is pointless to learn English; no one hires seniors. It is enough to know how to say numbers and beverage brands.

“One hundred eight, Heineken!” she yelled, “Poland Spring, two hundred sixteen!” An employee glances at her bags and jots down her numbers for the day. They take her word. She is precise and does not round up. Luo tracks her progress by scribbling numbers on her hands and over the walls of the storage corridor in a blue permanent marker.

When Luo forages through the garbage in the streets of Brooklyn, she does not take every bottle and can she sees.

She must know which distributor the brand falls under, otherwise it could be useless. It’s a game of experience and memorization. Minute Maid, Fanta, Evian, fall under the brand of Coca-Cola. Most beer brands belong to Manhattan Beer –Corona-, Union Beer –Budweiser and Phoenix Beverages –Heineken-. Water bottles are often problematic for redemption centers. There are so many brands, it is hard to tell which distributor is responsible for picking them up.

As Luo sorts her bag of cans back at the redemption center, she comes across an unrecognized brand that snuck into the pile. Tsingtao Beer. “Loo-yi!” she yells.

A man by the name of Louis rushes over.

“What this? Heineken?”

“Corona.”

Mammoth compilations of bags of cans and bottles are piled throughout the center. Cases and cases of beer bottles are stacked atop one another. And everything, everything is meticulously sorted by brand.

A Distributor’s Dilemma
Sometimes, distributors do not come to pick up and recycle its redeemed cans and bottles.

In March, 600 bags of sorted and redeemed beer cans and 60 pallets of glass bottles at in Sure We Can waiting for the Manhattan Beer Distributors. Distributors are legally obliged to pick up their empties from redemption centers. Many come twice a month, and some come every week due to the large volume of recyclables the center receives.

But the Manhattan Beer Distributors recently closed a branch in Brooklyn and did not come in February or March, which meant that the staff at SWC have to wait longer for their salary and pay canners out of their own pocket.

De Luco has been frantically calling the company, and received no response for the first two months. If they didn’t come, those cans and bottles would cost the center roughly$16,000.

“They have been on time each month for six years, I know it must be because they are struggling,” she says.

The Manhattan Beer Distributors finally came at the end of April, with three trailers. Yet within a week, the center finds itself with 300 bags waiting for the Manhattan Beer Distributors again.

Money Talk
The door shuts and subdues the clamor of cans and bottles. Luo walks up to the accountant and sighs. She hands over her ticket and speaks loudly in Chinese to Evelyn Ruez, 40, an El Salvadorian refugee who does not understand Chinese.

“I really don’t know how we make it through each day,” says Ruez, Sure We Can’s accountant. “It’s all in the hand gesturing.”

A case of sorted glass means $1.50, but if a canner uses the redemption center’s case, they receive $1.40. A bag of 40, 2 liter plastic bottles, translates to $2.50. A bag of 240, 12 oz cans equates to $14.50.

The center exchanges $1,000 to $2,000 a day for cans and bottles —depending on the weather and if it is nearing a recycling day.

Luo takes her cash and goes back outside to sweep her spot by the storage rooms. No one asked her to clean up after herself but she does it anyway.

Luo returns to the accounting room 10 minutes later. As usual, she cries “shen jing bing”(mentally ill) at a Hispanic man resting in the corner. It’s a strange way to make friends, but it works.

He does not understand her, he laughs. And then Luo, who only speaks a handful of English words, translates for herself. “Loco!” she yells, poking his head with her finger. Laughter erupts throughout the room. Luo goes on speaking in Chinese.

“She’s a funny, lovable lady,” de Luco says. “The way she expresses herself is through shouting.”

“Some people don’t understand and think she’s angry, but really she just has a lot of love,” de Luco says. Her shouting seems to be the result of an unusual excess of energy. When sorting, she flings useless bottle caps with a terrifying strength.

Luo made $60 that day. Normally she makes $80, Ruez says. She makes the most money out of all the canners there.

But Luo is working slower because she recently pulled a muscle on her back, which causes a cutting sensation each time she bends over to pick cans.

China, a Distant Past and Future
Luo’s rival, Wang, thinks she’s crazy.

Wang has a storage room, too, because she paid for it. Luo thinks one shouldn’t can if one doesn’t have to. Wang did not go to the center for the last few weeks because she was on vacation in China. Upon her return, Luo greets her with a verbal fight.

Wang calmly remarks that Luo is mentally ill and smiles a benign smile infused with an air of superiority. “You don’t speak clearly, I don’t understand what you’re saying,” Wang says.

Luo retaliates by calling Wang an illegal immigrant, a claim that is ungrounded. She only knows that Wang is from Fujian, a province in southeast China that has a reputation for illegal emigration.

“She is from Fujian, I am from Shanghai, how dare she say I can’t speak properly,” Luo mumbles after Wang walks away.

The truth is Luo would like to go back to China, too. But rural Chinese workers like Luo do not receive a retirement pension from the Chinese government.

Long-term urban Chinese workers receive substantial retirement pensions. But elderly rural citizens generally receive no assistance from the Chinese government, according to a National Research Council of the National Academies report called “Aging In Asia.” The majority of China’s rural seniors must rely on financial support from their children. In an extreme case, the Associated Press reported an incident where a mother sued her children in China for neglecting her in her old age.

The reason why Luo works so hard everyday at the redemption center is so that she could perhaps one day save enough to retire in China.

“Mother, mother come back,” her two sons in China would say when she sporadically calls them on her landlord’s cell phone.

They tell her that they would help support her. But Luo knows better than to listen to them; they should be saving for their own retirements and school for their children.

“Life is hard no matter where you are, China or America,” she says. “But at least I can buy more in China with one U.S dollar.”

She has saved a minimal amount enough for her retirement. But she gets up each day to collect cans anyway, knowing not when the last day will be. Perhaps it will be the day when her back finally gives out; perhaps it will be the day when another part of her body disintegrates from old age. Whichever day it is, the more she saves, the better.

Plus, it’s not so bad to live in New York.

“Do I feel lonely?” she says. “No, I wouldn’t say that I am, these westerners have been very kind.”
 
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It's hard to say if in high income countries can have a poverty like that above.

An income of USD 1000 in developing country can be considered as middle class.
 
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Escape from LA might just become a real story than a only a movie
 
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It's hard to say if in high income countries can have a poverty like that above.

An income of USD 1000 in developing country can be considered as middle class.
China is a developing country, moves properly toward killing poverty and corruption. Whole world knows that they are hard working people.

About USA, read this :
America's richest 1% owns 40% of country's wealth - study
Published time: 8 Dec, 2017 15:46
Get short URL
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© Global Look Press

America's richest one percent own a whopping 40 percent of the country's wealth, a new study has revealed. The finding marks a widening gap between rich and poor in the United States.
The paper, written by economist Edward N. Wolff, used data from the federal Survey of Consumer Finances. The data showed that the wealth owned by the one percent shot up by nearly three percentage points since 2013, from 36.7 percent to 39.6 percent. That number represents the most wealth owned by the one-percenters since at least 1962.

Meanwhile, wealth owned by the bottom 90 percent has decreased. As a result, the top one percent of households now own more than the bottom 90 percent combined. The top 20 percent own 89.9 percent of the wealth.

Read more
Gap between rich & poor in US among highest of major industrial countries – report
To better understand the numbers, Wolff breaks down the percentages in terms of net wealth. The average net worth of the top one percent equaled $26.4 million in 2016. That's compared to an average net wealth of -$8,900 from the bottom 40 percent.

"The percentage increase in net worth from 1983 to 2016 was much greater for the top wealth groups than for those lower in the distribution... all in all, the greatest gains in wealth were enjoyed by the upper 20 percent, particularly the top 0.1 [percent]," Wolff wrote in the paper.

The number represents a widening in the wealth gap in the United States, with Wolff noting that income inequality rose by 24.5 percent between 1983 and 2016. He also broke down the disparity between races, noting that average net worth climbed by 73 percent for white households between 1983 and 2001. However, it only rose by 31 percent for black households.

The economist also addressed the impact of the Great Recession, saying it hit "like a tsunami" and "hit African-American households much harder than whites." He also noted that young households were particularly "pummeled."

Wolff's findings come just weeks after a Credit Suisse report found that the richest one percent of people across the globe have more money than the poorest half of the world's population. It noted that the wealthiest one percent owned 42.5 percent of global wealth in 2008.
 
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It's hard to say if in high income countries can have a poverty like that above.

An income of USD 1000 in developing country can be considered as middle class.

When you have 12 million people in the US illegally (that’s twice the population of Singapore) because their home country can’t adequately take care of them you are going to have low income people on the streets. They can’t be legally hired by companies. They aren’t eligible for all government programs including housing. What’s worse sometimes the free housing is used in many places (like Sanctuary Cities) for illegals and so when a legal person ends up homeless they can’t get a free apartment because they are already full of illegals.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanctuary_city
“In the United States and Canada, a sanctuary city (French: ville sanctuaire, Spanish: ciudad santuario) is a city that limits its cooperation with the national government effort to enforce immigration law”
 
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@TaiShang

If you need sources to my article, please visit these websites :
http://americanpoverty.org

http://www.nccp.org/topics/childpoverty.html

http://www.fightpoverty.mmbrico.com/facts/america.html

http://www.dosomething.org/tipsandtools/11-facts-about-education-and-poverty-america

http://capaassociation.org/newsletter_N009/Articles/PovertyCrime.htm

http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/08/09/turning-poverty-into-an-american-crime

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/21stC/issue-1.2/Poverty.htm

http://www.americanprogress.org/iss...8/5103/the-straight-facts-on-women-in-poverty

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...it-hardest-by-poverty-says-census-report.html

http://www.legalmomentum.org/our-work/women-and-poverty/women-and-poverty-in-america-issues.html

http://money.cnn.com/2004/12/22/news/economy/poverty_healthcare/index.htm

http://money.cnn.com/2004/12/16/news/economy/poverty_corporate/index.htm

http://money.cnn.com/2004/12/22/news/economy/poverty_overview/index.htm

http://www.americanprogress.org/iss...y-a-national-strategy-to-cut-poverty-in-half/

http://www.americanprogress.org/iss...ive-vision-for-reproductive-health-and-rights

Poverty crisis in USA :

The American people have turned from starvation to theft of other people, or government and public places. The news of the stolen goods is published everyday, which in America's minds may never have been conceived of their material value. In the shadow of the false politics of the capitalist system of warfare, poverty and hunger are now becoming a widespread social and security crisis in the United States that is being promoted to other nations as a dreamland of "opportunities."
Poverty in America is becoming a major social crisis. This crisis has not come about overnight, and is rooted in the depth of the militant-driven profit-oriented capitalist system. The United States has always suffered from more general poverty than most of the world's industrialized nations. For example, in the mid-1990s, the poverty rate in the United States was about twice as high as in the Scandinavian countries and 1.3 times the poverty rate in Japan. However, more than 42 percent of American wealth is controlled by about 1 percent of the country's capitalist population. Four hundred wealthy Americans have more than $ 1 trillion in value, with an average income of about $ 3.5 billion.
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Poor Children in the States Before the Poverty Leap in 2004:
In the states of the blue: 20 percent and more, green: 15 to 19 percent, yellow: 10 to 14 percent, and white less than 10 percent of the children live in poverty.

In the last decade, the US economy has achieved a record of poverty, in which one out of every six Americans live in poverty. Before the recession, there were 30 million poor people, which now has reached 46 million and has hit a new record. The general condition of the lives of Americans over the past decade has often been the dismemberment of families due to poverty and bankruptcy. People have lost their homes and added to the number of single-parent families whose responsibilities have often fallen for women. For many children, these families did not have the opportunity to study and the students faced large debts.

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Increasing Poor Children in US States in 2010.

A large part of the American people have lost hope of life and see their dreams come to life. The need to use state food aid is also seen even in a part of the educated and specialist people who lost their jobs. Given the expectations of educated people, life is much harder for this part, and despair and depression occur more deeply and deeply. In fact, a new wave of poverty with an unprecedented growing social and social margin in the United States, which saves the wealth of its people to war and bombs and massacres in the interests of many Zionists around the world.

Falling into poverty in USA :


According to experts, the decline of Americans since 2000 has continued to fluctuate between 2007 and 2008. In 1973, the poverty rate in the United States reached 11.1 percent, the lowest since World War II. That figure was 15.2 percent in 1983, equivalent to one out of every ten Americans. In 2005, the poorest people in the United States were 37 million, or 12.5% of the population. The rate among black families was 24.9 percent, more than double the poverty rate among white families.

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Elderly and empty baskets

The official poverty rate in 2007 was 12.5% and in 2008 it was 13.2%. The federal government announced the official rate for poverty in 2010 at 15.1%, up from the previous year's figure of 14.3 percent. In 2010, the number of poor people fell to 46 million. The figure reached 15.7 percent in 2011, the highest since 1965. And finally, in August 2012, ABC News reported that the number of poor in the United States reached about 150 million! This is an increasing trend from the aftermath of the economic downturn, as well as billions of dollars of American people's money being spent on spreading international insecurity and wars.

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Poor homeless people in the few places provided by the popular foundations helping the poor souls.

American people and poverty crisis :

Poverty rates have been rising in all demographic categories in the United States, affecting a large number of families, children and the elderly. One third of the American middle class is under the poverty line, and more than 20 million Americans live in "absolute poverty." Living in absolute poverty means that people's income is less than 50 percent of the poverty line. Elderly and children are the most vulnerable in the face of the poverty crisis, with the poverty rate among people over the age of 65 reaching its highest level in American economic history, and among children this rate was more than 22% in 2010, Currently, this rate is higher for children from any other age group. The percentage of children living in women under housewives doubled from 1970 to 2003, rising from 6.11% to 23.6%. This increase continued in the following years.

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The poverty rate among black families is more than double the poverty rate among white families. A large part of the poor American population is Spanish and black. More than a quarter of the blacks live under the poverty line of the United States. This figure for Asian is about 12%, and for white is less than 10%.

Poverty at the level of hunger

The welfare indicators of the American people have fallen by almost 70% since the 1990s. But the poverty of Americans has gone a long way since the lack of access to welfare facilities has deepened. The lack of food security shows the most visible depth of the American people's poverty. Now there are many families who can no longer afford enough food. More than 46 million Americans receive food aid these days. This figure has grown by 14 million over the past four years and continues to grow. According to the Food and Drug Administration, several million more people are also on the list of people who die from hunger without food aid.

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DeParle, a journalist who pays special attention to poverty, says: "In the new age, men never needed food aid to this extent. About 50 million Americans need such assistance. " According to DeParle, food aid is essential for the American people because of the great economic downturn, and if this is not the case, humanitarian disasters will be easy. There are now 6 million people in the United States, whose only income is the government's food aid.

Women's poverty and poor mothers

Between 1959 and 2005, the number of poor people living in single-parent families grew, rising from 17.8 percent in the late 50's to 28.7 percent in 2005. That year, the statistics showed a much higher rate of poverty among all types of families, and so far, with the expansion of the recession, has continued to grow. An American mother says she will receive a daily allowance of $ 367 per month, about $ 12 a day, which should be spent on three daily meals and a child. She believes that this money is not enough for a healthy diet, especially for children growing up, and children who receive these food aid will no longer have access to vegetables and fruits in the family's food basket.

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Women in all races are more likely to be poorer than men. Black women make up the poorest Americans.

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Based on the above statistics, women shape the poorest level of American society.

American leaders seem to have changed some of the concepts of poverty line definition to prevent the awful announcement of real poverty expansion figures. Discussions on this issue are currently circulating in the press and among statistical experts. According to some opinion polls, which are sometimes confirmed by the Census Bureau, although the poverty rate has been officially announced at 1.51 percent, the real figures are higher than those and more than 16 percent. The controversy over the definition of the poverty line has been highlighted, and conservatives are trying to maintain their current definition in order to add fewer people to the list of state aid. But opponents of the definition of the current poverty line believe that this definition, which was adopted in 1969, has been updated every year with regard to inflation, but it has not changed in terms of living standards and does not respond to current economic problems, and thus The pattern of its inclusion, the actual number of the poor is not clear, and poor people are deprived of many financial resources and experience a terrible life.

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Children beg for daily food.

In fact, when a family of Americans is said to be living below the poverty line, it's actually meant that this family lives under conditions that were below the poverty line in 1969. Because the living standards intended to define the poverty line have not changed over the past four decades, and the figure of 50 million poor is based on living standards in 1969. It is quite clear that the US government is trying to prevent the truth of its appalling economic situation by stating this statistics. The official poverty line for a family of 4 people based on yearly national income in 1969 is $ 22350. For the year 2011, this would be $ 46,651 if changes were made in per capita national income. With this in mind, nearly 30 percent of American families live in poverty, which is twice as high as government official figures.

Social Security and Poverty :
With the spread of poverty and the weakness of the state in controlling the economic situation, the security of the people is also compromised. The activities of criminal groups active in the field of human trafficking, prostitution, drugs and planned robbery have intensified. Many unemployed people are attracted to these groups and sometimes lose their lives during violent acts of these groups. The entry of women and girls into prostitution, which is carried out solely for the purpose of providing daily living, has increased in particular among ethnic minorities and has led to the spread of health problems among the poorest. And many female students have turned to prostitution to finance their education.



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Homelessness is abundant in the streets of the cities of the southern states.

Aside from expanding the gangs of gangs, ordinary people are also abundantly abusing hunger for robbery of other people or government and public places. If in the past, such events were reported more than just certain states, today the monopoly is gone, and the thief and theft have spread throughout the United States. The news of the stolen goods is published everyday, which in America's minds may never have been conceived of their material value. People also do not have mercy on electric cables, railroads and sewage wells, and they use every opportunity to escape poverty! Metal objects, such as any iron, brass and steel objects, and in general anything of little value, are easily stolen from public places, including sanitary facilities and parks. The looting of stores and attacks on supermarkets are also occurring abundantly. This picture shows that, in the wake of the false policy of the capitalist system of warfare, poverty and hunger are now becoming a widespread social and security crisis in the Americas that propagates for other nations as a dreamland of "opportunities".

It is incredible for a developed, super advanced country as the US to have large pockets of poverty and undernourishment.

They may need targetted poverty alleviation, but I do not think the power elite care about it.
 
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I don't care much about seeing homeless men but seeing homeless women and girls is very heart breaking.

Too many wolves preying on the vulnerable and in a country where doctors bankrupt their patients and simple procedures cost exorbitant sums of money the poor get poorer and the poorest of all ar fcuked.
 
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I don't care much about seeing homeless men but seeing homeless women and girls is very heart breaking.

Too many wolves preying on the vulnerable and in a country where doctors bankrupt their patients and simple procedures cost exorbitant sums of money the poor get poorer and the poorest of all ar fcuked.


It may be worse than we are told, actually.

https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsa...poverty-in-the-u-s-from-alabama-to-california

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/dec/01/un-extreme-poverty-america-special-rapporteur
 
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It is a focking joke the Americans, whether they are of Indian/Viet origins are talking the Chinese down everytime and trying to be morally correct when they know they are just lucky to ride on the boat leading to the vast and bountiful fertile land known as "america" where you find their "ancestors" were massacred and now reduced to a pitiful population living in seclusions in Indian Reservations in the USA.

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https://m.theepochtimes.com/surviving-in-new-york-5-cents-at-a-time_692456.html

Surviving in New York, 5 Cents at a Time
The life and daily struggle of a 72-year-old can collector

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Yabi Luo, an immigrant who collects cans from trash receptacles for a living, sorts her cans at the Sure We Can redemption center in Bushwick, Brooklyn. (Samira Bouaou/Epoch Times

NEW YORK—A shard of shattered glass slashes the tip of Yabi Luo’s left ring finger. She grunts, then pauses to examine the droplet of blood that is beginning to emerge from her dusty, stained skin. It does not appear to be a deep cut. There have been worse cuts. She sucks the blood from her finger and resumes her work sorting the sticky bottles and cans that she collects from the trash receptacles of New York City.

Luo is a canner, a person who collects cans, bottles, and other plastics for a five cent deposit. For this 72-year-old illiterate Chinese immigrant, canning is her sole source for survival.

She emigrated to New Jersey with her husband in 1994. They were sponsored by his aunt, who owned a Chinese restaurant in Long Beach Island. Luo was one of the chefs, her specialty was hong shao fish, fish simmered in peanut oil, soy sauce, Chinese red wine, and sugar.

Luo’s husband passed away six years ago; her sister-in-law passed away three years later. The restaurant closed, and Luo was left to fend for herself.

So Luo spends four hours each afternoon sorting and counting the cans she collected from various garbage bins throughout Bushwick and Bedstuy. She wears royal blue arm warmers to protect the sleeves of her sweatshirt from grime, a jade bracelet to protect her soul from evil spirits.

She and four siblings grew up on a fish farm on the coast of rural Shanghai. Their father died when she was 14. She speaks broken mandarin, tidbits of English, and never attended elementary school.

She has one son living in the U.S, and two in China. But they have their own wives, children, and money worries. Her son who lives in New York is conscientiously saving to bring his wife over from China. Luo refuses to burden them.

Yet where can a 72-year-old Chinese woman with limited English proficiency and no education go at a time when the American economy is languidly recovering from a recession? China would be ideal, but there is no pension for rural retirees.

New York City, her Chinese friends told her. It’s one city with a lot of trash.

Bill of Bottles
In 1983, New York became one of the 10 states to enact the container-deposit legislation. It requires customers to pay a 5-cent refundable deposit on each beer, soda, and water container they buy in New York. The deposit goes to beverage distributors, who returns the deposit if the customer chooses to recycle its products at a supermarket, drugstore, or another business registered as a redemption center. The distributor then recycles the cans, plastics and glasses. But consumers often don’t go out of their way to recycle in this form; hence, an informal economy is born.

Many homeless New Yorkers, and others living on the margin, make a living from redeeming the deposits of thrown away bottles and cans. And it’s not easy. Canners like Luo can wait up to four hours in line at a supermarket, which legally restricts them to redeem a maximum of $12 worth of cans per visit.

The bottle legislation creates a dilemma for supermarkets for some canners are drug addicts and some have diseases. Sometimes, they also cause scenes.

“We just had a situation just a few moments ago,” says Gloria Curiel, 33, a Gristedes supermarket manager. “A lady canner was yelling and saying she was going to call consumer affairs.”

There are more than 100 canners who come to redeem their recyclables each day at the Gristedes in Chelsea. Canners are not the only ones using the redemption machine, it is open for the public. “You can see why the machine fills up fast,” Curiel says.

Usually it’s not a problem, but on some nights employees call in sick and they are short on staff. On those occasions, the machine may remain full for the evening.

That is why in 2007 a Roman Catholic nun and a former canner decided to create a non-profit redemption center dedicated solely to the redemption of cans.

Sure We Can
On the border of Bushwick and East Williamsburg, optimistic graffiti deck the metal garage doors that stretch across the entrance of this redemption center: a dolphin, fantastical animals, and a woodpecker pecking at a tree while speaking through a bubble speech that read “Sure We Can.”

Behind the metal garage doors, the Sure We Can redemption center consists of a series of trailers that is the humble abode to hens who fertilize a community garden for the canners. Scanty, barren trees grow from fertilizer amassed in car tires painted sky blue and pink; festive-colored cans hang from its branches like Christmas lights.

Sure We Can is the only licensed, non-profit redemption center in the city. Its sole business is to facilitate the redemption of cans and bottles. It was founded by the destitute to help the destitute in 2007. Canners receive extra cash for sorting their own bottles and cans and can redeem an unlimited number of recyclables. Most important, canners are sure they can get their full five cents for a can, while pick-up redemption trucks often cheat them to four cents.

The center was founded by Eugene Gadsden, a former canner turned community activist, and Ana Martinez de Luco, a Roman Catholic nun.

De Luco came from Spain to New York in 2004 to work for the UN Civil Society. In New York, she had an enlightenment that she should to do more for the poor from the micro rather than the macro. She chose to live on the streets in 2005, where she met Gadsden.

They decided to create a redemption center that could make canning a little easier. De Luco gathered up her contacts from the UN—Florence Erb and Douglas Erb—and a Wall Street broker named Joseph Mula to form a board. Over pizza, they figured out the business side of things.

Sure We Can set the precedence for a non-profit model of redemption centers during a time when many major business-registered redemption centers have closed due to gentrification. According to a report by Picture the Homeless, a grassroots organization founded by homeless people, some crucial redemption centers below 125th Street in Manhattan have closed in recent years. As a result, canners must turn to smaller stores and further supermarkets to cash their recyclables, where there are often longer waits and full machines.

Canners have the option of going to roughly 282 recycling centers in Queens, 103 centers in Brooklyn, and 13 in Manhattan. But at Sure We Can, there is a community garden to feed hungry canners and free English and computer lessons to help improve their job qualifications.

An Invisible Community
De Luco, 59, has vivid black eyebrows and a head of short, graying hair. She has worked tirelessly to build a community for canners. She is at the redemption center even when she has the flu. Her English is excellent, but sometimes, she is so fatigued that she switches to Spanish mid-sentence without realizing.

She organizes events at the center, like a cookout to celebrate Earth Day last month. Around fifty people attended, including a NY1 journalist who is producing a documentary about canners. He brought his wife, they made pasta fresh on the spot.

De Luco implores Luo to join their feast, but Luo modestly declines. She does not want to stop working.

The rims of her irises are beginning to match her gray hair. Her thin lips are fixed in a frown. Her work clothes consist of a faded military green Boar’s Head apron, a plaid vest, and a burgundy hooded sweatshirt. Every now and then, she finds a semi-full soda can that leaks. She steps aside to pour it away from her precious pile. Her face contorts, unconsciously, into a grimace while she pours the old soda.

She is hungry and considers joining the cookout, but decides against it. Luo does not feel comfortable eating western food. She thinks of the red wine fish she has sitting at home, an apartment on Flushing Avenue where a friend is letting her live pro bono.

Luo has no cell phone, no computer, and a sparse selection of clothes. If she needs to get in touch with one of her sons, she uses her friend’s son’s phone. Nonetheless she indulges in cooking, her sole luxury. She has cooking utensils. She has red wine. And she pays for her groceries herself. Luo cannot access food stamps because she does not have a formal address. The apartment she is staying in is already registered for someone else’s food stamps.

But Luo does not represent the phenomenon of canning; there are many canners who, unlike Luo, have other full time jobs.

Alberto Miguel, 50, is a canner by day, and an indoor soccer referee for New York City schools by night. He emigrated from Ecuador in 1980. He and his wife have been canning for the past year and a half. Through canning, they bring in a little extra support for the perennial needs of their three children and seven grandchildren.

Wen, who does not want to give his first name, is a canner who lives in a studio in Manhattan’s Chinatown with his wife and their two adult children. He was a technician in China, but since he speaks limited English he has not been able to find a job in that sector. He currently works in maintenance at a mattress store in Manhattan.

Then, there are those who have passed their primes and yearn to feel useful.

Sixty-eight-year-old Wang, who also does not want to give her first name, collects cans roughly twice a week. Her hair is dyed black and embellished with a curly perm. Wang’s granddaughter, who will be attending the Fashion Institute of Technology this fall, is the one who picked out Wang’s stylish black pea coat. They live in Manhattan’s Chinatown and whenever Wang is caught rummaging for cans, her son scolds her.

“I used to think it was embarrassing too. We would see her going through other people’s trash around town,” says Angela, her granddaughter. “But now I think she’s doing it, well, just to do something. It has to do with her age. There’s not much she can do, she wants to feel productive. ”

Wearing jeans, a black t-shirt, and chipped hot pink nail polish, Wang’s granddaughter follows her awkwardly around the Sure We Can Earth Day cookout. Her parents do not know she is there.

It is easy to assume, but difficult to determine the precise demographics of canners. The only data on canners that are easily accessible is a survey conducted by Picture the Homeless in 2005.

“Unfortunately, this is an issue where there aren’t a ton of folks doing work on their behalf,” says Sam Miller, the communications director for Picture the Homeless. “This may be the most accurate data that exists, even though it’s outdated.”

The National Employment Law Project, a non-profit research organization that advocates for workers’ rights, has never dealt with canners because they fall under an informal sector.

The Chinese Progressive Association, a non-profit founded to raise living and working standards for New York’s Chinese community, has never spoken with canners, according to its executive director Mae Lee.

Neither labor professors, shadow economy experts, nor sociologists who specialize in Chinese Americans, have conducted studies on the phenomenon of canning.

According to employees at Sure We Can, a large number of canners are elderly Chinese immigrants. Half of the regular canners at Sure We Can are Chinese, the other half are mostly Hispanic. “Since more redemption centers have opened, the Chinese have dispersed. But we still have about 30 Chinese regulars now,” de Luco says.

Employees of the redemption center say Luo is one of the hardest working canners they have seen.

“All the Chinese people work very hard here, but she’s the hardest worker, she’s always here,” de Luco says. Luo wakes up at six a.m to collect cans, seven days a week.

De Luco would like Sure We Can to be closed on Sunday’s. But since Luo pestered de Luco so ardently to keep it open, she was given her own storage space that she could access on Sunday’s. “That’s why we have a storage room for her,” de Luco says.“So she can still keep working even when we’re not open.”

In a receding section of the redemption center, there are 15 stalls for the center’s most frequent canners.

Luo has five bulging bags of cans and bottles in her storage for rainy days that are not good for collecting but good for sorting. At this redemption center on the border of East Williamsburg and Bushwick, Rou finds the closest thing she can to a sense of community and a solution to a missing social safety net for the rural Chinese elderly.

White rice and vegetables wrapped in aluminum foil are placed on a side table for those who need it; free English and computer classes are offered on Saturday’s. There are five canners who attend the English class regularly, Luo is not one of them.

Luo feels it is pointless to learn English; no one hires seniors. It is enough to know how to say numbers and beverage brands.

“One hundred eight, Heineken!” she yelled, “Poland Spring, two hundred sixteen!” An employee glances at her bags and jots down her numbers for the day. They take her word. She is precise and does not round up. Luo tracks her progress by scribbling numbers on her hands and over the walls of the storage corridor in a blue permanent marker.

When Luo forages through the garbage in the streets of Brooklyn, she does not take every bottle and can she sees.

She must know which distributor the brand falls under, otherwise it could be useless. It’s a game of experience and memorization. Minute Maid, Fanta, Evian, fall under the brand of Coca-Cola. Most beer brands belong to Manhattan Beer –Corona-, Union Beer –Budweiser and Phoenix Beverages –Heineken-. Water bottles are often problematic for redemption centers. There are so many brands, it is hard to tell which distributor is responsible for picking them up.

As Luo sorts her bag of cans back at the redemption center, she comes across an unrecognized brand that snuck into the pile. Tsingtao Beer. “Loo-yi!” she yells.

A man by the name of Louis rushes over.

“What this? Heineken?”

“Corona.”

Mammoth compilations of bags of cans and bottles are piled throughout the center. Cases and cases of beer bottles are stacked atop one another. And everything, everything is meticulously sorted by brand.

A Distributor’s Dilemma
Sometimes, distributors do not come to pick up and recycle its redeemed cans and bottles.

In March, 600 bags of sorted and redeemed beer cans and 60 pallets of glass bottles at in Sure We Can waiting for the Manhattan Beer Distributors. Distributors are legally obliged to pick up their empties from redemption centers. Many come twice a month, and some come every week due to the large volume of recyclables the center receives.

But the Manhattan Beer Distributors recently closed a branch in Brooklyn and did not come in February or March, which meant that the staff at SWC have to wait longer for their salary and pay canners out of their own pocket.

De Luco has been frantically calling the company, and received no response for the first two months. If they didn’t come, those cans and bottles would cost the center roughly$16,000.

“They have been on time each month for six years, I know it must be because they are struggling,” she says.

The Manhattan Beer Distributors finally came at the end of April, with three trailers. Yet within a week, the center finds itself with 300 bags waiting for the Manhattan Beer Distributors again.

Money Talk
The door shuts and subdues the clamor of cans and bottles. Luo walks up to the accountant and sighs. She hands over her ticket and speaks loudly in Chinese to Evelyn Ruez, 40, an El Salvadorian refugee who does not understand Chinese.

“I really don’t know how we make it through each day,” says Ruez, Sure We Can’s accountant. “It’s all in the hand gesturing.”

A case of sorted glass means $1.50, but if a canner uses the redemption center’s case, they receive $1.40. A bag of 40, 2 liter plastic bottles, translates to $2.50. A bag of 240, 12 oz cans equates to $14.50.

The center exchanges $1,000 to $2,000 a day for cans and bottles —depending on the weather and if it is nearing a recycling day.

Luo takes her cash and goes back outside to sweep her spot by the storage rooms. No one asked her to clean up after herself but she does it anyway.

Luo returns to the accounting room 10 minutes later. As usual, she cries “shen jing bing”(mentally ill) at a Hispanic man resting in the corner. It’s a strange way to make friends, but it works.

He does not understand her, he laughs. And then Luo, who only speaks a handful of English words, translates for herself. “Loco!” she yells, poking his head with her finger. Laughter erupts throughout the room. Luo goes on speaking in Chinese.

“She’s a funny, lovable lady,” de Luco says. “The way she expresses herself is through shouting.”

“Some people don’t understand and think she’s angry, but really she just has a lot of love,” de Luco says. Her shouting seems to be the result of an unusual excess of energy. When sorting, she flings useless bottle caps with a terrifying strength.

Luo made $60 that day. Normally she makes $80, Ruez says. She makes the most money out of all the canners there.

But Luo is working slower because she recently pulled a muscle on her back, which causes a cutting sensation each time she bends over to pick cans.

China, a Distant Past and Future
Luo’s rival, Wang, thinks she’s crazy.

Wang has a storage room, too, because she paid for it. Luo thinks one shouldn’t can if one doesn’t have to. Wang did not go to the center for the last few weeks because she was on vacation in China. Upon her return, Luo greets her with a verbal fight.

Wang calmly remarks that Luo is mentally ill and smiles a benign smile infused with an air of superiority. “You don’t speak clearly, I don’t understand what you’re saying,” Wang says.

Luo retaliates by calling Wang an illegal immigrant, a claim that is ungrounded. She only knows that Wang is from Fujian, a province in southeast China that has a reputation for illegal emigration.

“She is from Fujian, I am from Shanghai, how dare she say I can’t speak properly,” Luo mumbles after Wang walks away.

The truth is Luo would like to go back to China, too. But rural Chinese workers like Luo do not receive a retirement pension from the Chinese government.

Long-term urban Chinese workers receive substantial retirement pensions. But elderly rural citizens generally receive no assistance from the Chinese government, according to a National Research Council of the National Academies report called “Aging In Asia.” The majority of China’s rural seniors must rely on financial support from their children. In an extreme case, the Associated Press reported an incident where a mother sued her children in China for neglecting her in her old age.

The reason why Luo works so hard everyday at the redemption center is so that she could perhaps one day save enough to retire in China.

“Mother, mother come back,” her two sons in China would say when she sporadically calls them on her landlord’s cell phone.

They tell her that they would help support her. But Luo knows better than to listen to them; they should be saving for their own retirements and school for their children.

“Life is hard no matter where you are, China or America,” she says. “But at least I can buy more in China with one U.S dollar.”

She has saved a minimal amount enough for her retirement. But she gets up each day to collect cans anyway, knowing not when the last day will be. Perhaps it will be the day when her back finally gives out; perhaps it will be the day when another part of her body disintegrates from old age. Whichever day it is, the more she saves, the better.

Plus, it’s not so bad to live in New York.

“Do I feel lonely?” she says. “No, I wouldn’t say that I am, these westerners have been very kind.”

The unfortunate Chinese folks above in the usa are way better than these people on the subcontinent. agreed?

3a0566f9b611390c0cae53a233ec5ea3--poverty-and-hunger-indian-government.jpg


2i0u7bo.jpg


Hunger.jpg



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The unfortunate Chinese folks above in the usa are way better than these people on the subcontinent. agreed?

I totally agree that these Chinese folks living in the US are doing way better than if they were living in India or China. That's why a FLOOD of people from both of your countries are moving here. You don't see hundreds of thousands of Americans moving to India or China!!!! Our "poor" are nowhere close to the poor in your non-developed countries. Nobody is starving here...plus we don’t have a history of little children being intentionally crippled and left with limbless/bloodied stumps for arms/legs begging on our streets.

childbeggarchina.jpg

http://www.scmp.com/news/china-insi...t-highlights-plight-dongguans-disabled-beggar
Criminal gangs 'crippling children and forcing them to work as beggars'

As for the Chinese trash pickers in the pictures it is a shame that these unfortunate Chinese folks are ending up at the bottom of society in the US because life as a homeless trash picker in the US is better than any life in China. Apparently they can't do this in China because so many people in China have to make a living as trash pickers that competition is too fierce. They have an untapped market over here. However it just attaches a stigma to Chinese as a whole when one of the first pictures of Chinese people that pops into the heads of Americans is the guy they pass in the morning going through the trash containers in front of their house.

Screen Shot 2017-12-16 at 7.36.05 AM.jpg
 
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Lol
I totally agree that these Chinese folks living in the US are doing way better than if they were living in India or China. That's why a FLOOD of people from both of your countries are moving here. You don't see hundreds of thousands of Americans moving to India or China!!!! Our "poor" are nowhere close to the poor in your non-developed countries. Nobody is starving here...plus we don’t have a history of little children being intentionally crippled and left with limbless/bloodied stumps for arms/legs begging on our streets.

childbeggarchina.jpg

http://www.scmp.com/news/china-insi...t-highlights-plight-dongguans-disabled-beggar
Criminal gangs 'crippling children and forcing them to work as beggars'

As for the Chinese trash pickers in the pictures it is a shame that these unfortunate Chinese folks are ending up at the bottom of society in the US because life as a homeless trash picker in the US is better than any life in China. Apparently they can't do this in China because so many people in China have to make a living as trash pickers that competition is too fierce. They have an untapped market over here. However it just attaches a stigma to Chinese as a whole when one of the first pictures of Chinese people that pops into the heads of Americans is the guy they pass in the morning going through the trash containers in front of their house.

View attachment 442900

LoL at your simple-mindednessand more sadden to see the plights of the downtrodden people if they are Chinese.
The Indians and Americans are amongst the least qualified to complain about the underworld's atrocities and crime committed in China against the innocent. I despise these scumbags that prey on our People else in Greater China and the world. You need to re-visit movies like "scumdog millionair", "good fellas", the "godfather" saga etc to refresh your memory.

For those can-collectors who are much hampered by the deficiency in the language to find a decent job in the USA, they should go back home in China where our Government is expanding our "Poverty Eradiction" programmes. All they need a ticket. At least they are dignified to participate in the tasks of "recycling" and they earn they money with their own hands. I regard our Compatriots several notches in the morality index above the thriving whores in your **** industry which ranks no. ONE in the world.
There is also one significant point you are missing: the above Chinese people live well into their adulthood unlike on the sub-continent where you are lucky to live beyond 5 year-old.
Also the "epochtimes" is not a credible source to quote for facts. How do you know they are not people of a different orgin from the Chinese (can-pickers)?
 
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