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The pandemic offers a chance to transform the US' cruel policies toward poor people [cnn.com]

 

By Philip Alston, Rev. William Barber, and Rev. Liz Theoharis, CNN Opinion, April 30, 2020

Out of the wreckage of World War II, the United States worked with other countries to proclaim, in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, that "freedom from fear and want" are people's highest aspirations. Seventy-two years later, with a pandemic laying waste to lives and livelihoods, the world is again gripped by fear and want.

In the United States, the world's wealthiest nation, the coronavirus is laying bare the dire consequences of policies that have led to widespread poverty and inequality.
We are intimately familiar with poverty in this country, having led fact-finding missions in recent months and years on behalf of the United Nations and the Poor People's Campaign. What we have seen over the past two years -- from Alaska to Alabama, from Mississippi to Massachusetts -- is staggering: children wading through yards flooded by raw sewage, families forgoing medical care for fear of bankruptcy, and people working two or three jobs without benefits to pay the bills.

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Poor and low-income people do not need platitudes and prayers that recognize how "essential" they are while ignoring their basic needs. They need accessible health care, living wages, food security, worker protections and access to clean water and affordable housing. And unless these needs are heeded, America will fail in its efforts to rebuff the coronavirus, with the poor condemned to conditions that fuel its spread.
In a country as wealthy as the United States, poverty is a political choice, and it is time for real solutions that provide lasting freedom from fear and want.
Powerful!
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