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In 2007 Mark (not his real name) had a good job, a small apartment, a little bit of savings, and a pretty normal life. When the Great Recession hit he lost his job and his health care. For a few months he was able to hold onto his apartment but he got hit by a really bad medical condition that hit his legs hard, and things started to go down hill quickly. Soon money got too short and he ended up living in his car. His main focus was on getting his legs back in working shape so he did physical therapy every day until he was able to walk well again. That took around a year.
When his health improved enough so that he could walk well, he thought that one way he could make a living was going back to something he’d done many years ago, washing windows. He wandered from shop to shop and house to house offering his services. When he came into our shop for the first time I had no idea that this articulate, healthy-looking, friendly, handsome, 60-something year old gentleman (and I use that term on purpose) could possibly have been homeless. Having been in our shop for only a few months, I had learned that the art of “traveling salesman” had not disappeared after my grandfather had mastered it. In fact, we had traveling salesmen coming into the shop all the time. A window washer seemed like just another entrepreneur.
Mark did all the windows lining the front of our shop and they looked great. His price? $20. Not bad for about 45 minutes work. Over the last two years I learned that Mark was, in fact, homeless. He’d lost the car after it died and he couldn’t afford the repairs. You can live in a car as long as the car can move from place to place. Once the car dies, you’re just a short time away from the police taking it away… and they did.
On Friday this week he hung out in the shop for around an hour, and, because I asked a lot of questions, I got to learn much more of his story. Right now he’s got congestive heart failure and a couple of plugged arteries that need stents. He sleeps in an alley and would give anything to have a car, any working car, that he could sleep in instead of on the street. A car could also help him go a little further with his window-washing business. He doesn’t use drugs. He doesn’t have any mental problems. He doesn’t drink. I could have guessed all of that from the conversations I’d had with him in the past.
With a little bit of help he could start climbing out of the hole he’s in, but he doesn’t want that help to come from the government. The government would force him to do things their way (true), including forcing him to live where they wanted him to live (also true). He doesn’t want to be dependent, even though, as a veteran, he is ENTITLED to help from the VA. So where does a guy like him fall in Mitt Romney’s 47% v 53%?
At the depths of the Great Depression in 1933, Tom Paine’s common-sense proposal was resurrected by a medical doctor from Long Beach, California. Francis Townsend wrote a letter to the editor of a local paper, proposing a universal old-age pension system for Americans. The “Townsend Plan” concept swept like wildfire. Grassroots groups formed to promote it all over the nation. Some say that Franklin Roosevelt proposed the Social Security old-age pension system in order to stave off the momentum of the Townsend movement.
In 1969, the idea surfaced again in a new form, the Family Assistance Plan, championed by Republican President Richard Nixon and New York independent Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Their idea was to guarantee a base level of income for all Americans. It proposed a paltry benefit, but the concept would have cut through the bureaucracy and disincentives to work that plagued the AFDC welfare system. It would have established the principle of universality – thus increasing the likelihood of ongoing political support for it, and removing the stigma of the term “welfare”. The proposal collapsed in the US Congress, but it led to the creation of the Earned Income Credit, a small but important reverse income tax for low income workers.
Presidential candidate Mitt Romney recently disparaged as “victims” the 47% of the country’s citizens who receive government benefits. He complained that these people are not taking personal responsibility for themselves. But 100% of Americans get government benefits. Everybody is dependent on government-provided sewers, water, roads, public health programs, national defense, and a host of other essential services. What does Romney mean by taking personal responsibility? Digging a hole in your back yard for your own personal outhouse? I think the problem is exactly the opposite of the one Romney suggests. Americans aren’t as dependent on their government as they should be.
To be sure, some folks would be lazy and try to live off the universal income check alone. But lazy people are to be found in all economic classes today. Their lack of virtue is its own punishment: they miss out on so much of what life has to offer. A universal income system would not be perfect. But it would be more humane, efficient, and practically sustainable than the systems we have today. Tom Paine’s idea is still just common sense. Let’s demand a system that protects the most vulnerable by protecting everybody!”
I can’t imagine anyone looking at our homeless friend Mark and calling him lazy. He walks mile after mile after mile, right now with an ailing heart, carrying a big bucket, rags, and a few window-washing tools up and down the streets of three cities, going door to door and offering to wash people’s windows. He does a great job too. Would a guaranteed level of income, something that could promise basic human needs, help him? I think so. Would he be lazy if that bottom-line-income was guaranteed every month? I don’t think so.
My small ways of helping Mark are usually saying yes when he comes by the shop (whether the windows are really dirty or just a little), spending time talking (or actually mostly listening), and always making sure he gets a cup of tea and some chocolate before he leaves. The guilty part of me laments that I don’t offer to let him sleep in the shop at night (I’m afraid of doing that). I’m not perfect. Mark’s not perfect. The 100% of us aren’t perfect. But wouldn’t it be a better country if we all worked together to ensure that losing your job and getting sick didn’t result in losing everything? Thomas Paine may have had it right.”
2012-09-29 12:25:19
Source: http://coyoteprime-runningcauseicantfly.blogspot.com/2012/09/common-sense-musing.html