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Zoom fuckyesmarkwebber:

The  Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign is building a movement  that unites the poor across color lines.  Poverty afflicts Americans of  all colors.  Daily more and more of us are downsized and impoverished.   We share a common interest in uniting against the prevailing conditions  and around our vision of a society where we all have the right to health  care, housing, living wage jobs, and access to quality primary,  secondary, and higher education. The Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign includes people  of many backgrounds.  We are mothers, fathers, children, and  grandparents; we are the unemployed, the working poor, the downsized,  the homeless, the victims of welfare reform and NAFTA, the cast-asides  of the new economy; we are social workers, religious leaders, labor  leaders, artists, lawyers, and other people of conscience; we are young  and old; we live in rural areas and in urban centers. We are committed to uniting the poor as the leadership base for a  broad movement to abolish poverty everywhere and forever.  We work to  accomplish this aim through the promotion of economic human rights,  named in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as Articles 23, 25,  and 26.  These articles state our right to such provisions as housing,  health care, a living wage job, and education.  The founding creed of  the United States of America, which asserts our rights to Life, Liberty,  and the Pursuit of Happiness, inspired the formulation of these human  rights.  Our government signed the UDHR in 1948; its full implementation  would mean that our country would be living out the true meaning of its  creed.  This American Dream is possible because our country is the  richest and most powerful in the world.We do not seek pity.  We do seek power to end conditions that  threaten all of us with economic human rights violations denying us our  birthrights to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.

Having spent 17 of my 23 years living on the streets, in motels, and in shelters, this is something I’d love to get more involved with in my lifetime. I’ve been reading a lot about Cheri Honkala lately — she’s so admirable.

fuckyesmarkwebber:

The Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign is building a movement that unites the poor across color lines. Poverty afflicts Americans of all colors. Daily more and more of us are downsized and impoverished. We share a common interest in uniting against the prevailing conditions and around our vision of a society where we all have the right to health care, housing, living wage jobs, and access to quality primary, secondary, and higher education.

The Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign includes people of many backgrounds. We are mothers, fathers, children, and grandparents; we are the unemployed, the working poor, the downsized, the homeless, the victims of welfare reform and NAFTA, the cast-asides of the new economy; we are social workers, religious leaders, labor leaders, artists, lawyers, and other people of conscience; we are young and old; we live in rural areas and in urban centers.

We are committed to uniting the poor as the leadership base for a broad movement to abolish poverty everywhere and forever. We work to accomplish this aim through the promotion of economic human rights, named in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as Articles 23, 25, and 26. These articles state our right to such provisions as housing, health care, a living wage job, and education. The founding creed of the United States of America, which asserts our rights to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, inspired the formulation of these human rights. Our government signed the UDHR in 1948; its full implementation would mean that our country would be living out the true meaning of its creed. This American Dream is possible because our country is the richest and most powerful in the world.

We do not seek pity. We do seek power to end conditions that threaten all of us with economic human rights violations denying us our birthrights to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.

Having spent 17 of my 23 years living on the streets, in motels, and in shelters, this is something I’d love to get more involved with in my lifetime. I’ve been reading a lot about Cheri Honkala lately — she’s so admirable.

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    Having spent 17 of my 23 years living on the streets, in motels,...in shelters, this is...
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