Log in

View Full Version : One in six New Yorkers



ComradeR
22nd November 2007, 12:51
New York hunger levels 'rising'

Food Bank is unable to meet demand, with shelves empty
Over 1.3 million people, one in six New Yorkers, cannot afford enough food, with queues at soup kitchens getting longer, anti-poverty groups say.

The New York City Coalition Against Hunger says the number of people who use food pantries and soup kitchens in the city increased by 20% in 2007.

Some of the food distribution points are struggling to meet demand.

The coalition blames the situation mainly on increased poverty as well as government cutbacks in food aid.

"This annual survey of food pantries and soup kitchens shows that more working families, children, and seniors are being forced to seek emergency food," Joel Berg, the coalition's executive director, said in a statement.

"Given that hunger continued to increase in the city, even when the economy was still strong last year, it is no wonder that now, when the economy is weakening, lines at pantries and kitchens are getting even worse."

Some food outlets said they would not be able to distribute turkey rations for Thanksgiving on Thursday, because their federal supplies of food had been cut by as much as three-quarters.

Food Bank, a non-profit organisation which distributes food to about 1,000 pantries, said its shelves were half full compared with usual levels.

According to a survey, 59% of New York's food programmes, up from 48% last year, said they did not have enough resources to meet demand.

The US Department of Agriculture says 12.6 million households nationwide, or more than 30 million people - 10% of the population - did not have enough food at some point in 2006.
Source (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7106726.stm)
And this is in the richest imperialist nation on earth. Isn&#39;t capitalism glorious. <_<

TheDifferenceEngine
22nd November 2007, 17:12
They Live on &#036;5 coffee instead.

Dros
23rd November 2007, 01:48
Wow. That&#39;s scary.

Ok people. I guess we&#39;ll just have to have a revolution.

Comrade Rage
23rd November 2007, 01:54
Originally posted by [email protected] 22, 2007 07:50 am
And this is in the richest imperialist nation on earth. Isn&#39;t capitalism glorious. <_<
That&#39;s actually nothing new. There are a lot of areas in America with extreme poverty:Detroit, Michigan ; Benton Harbor, Michigan ; East Saint Louis, Illinois....

I live in what the government considers the &#39;Rust Belt&#39;, my city is the 8th poorest in America. There&#39;s a lot more poverty here than in NYC.

It seems wierd, but we have little &#39;third world&#39; areas in America. Europe has it&#39;s class issues, but they&#39;re probably not as bad.

AGITprop
23rd November 2007, 04:45
Nothing pains me more than to know someone is hungry. I&#39;ve never actually not had food to eat. I&#39;ve gone hungry at times because I din&#39;t have money to buy food when I was too busy to go home and eat and it sucked because hunger is painful but to know that people actually cannot afford to eat, in the world&#39;s richest country, literally hurts me. We have the means to feed every mouth on Earth, yet we deem it illogistical and inconveniant to try. WHY? Because, unfortunately, money makes the world go round. Why spend your money you fithy capitalist, oil-craving bastards? How would you feel if hat was your child crying to have something to eat.

Schrödinger's Cat
23rd November 2007, 04:48
America may be the richest, but out of the industrialized nations the wealth disparity is also one of the worse imaginable.

What&#39;s so wrong with having everyone live an upper-middle class lifestyle? I just don&#39;t understand capitalists.

BobKKKindle$
23rd November 2007, 07:18
This is the market system. One only gains access to a good if one has sufficient income to pay the market price - even if the good in question (in this case, food) is essential to ensuring a basic degree of wellbeing for the individual. This derives from the driving force of the capitalist system - profit. Firms do not give away their goods to everyone that needs them because this would not enable them to maximize their profits.

ComradeR
24th November 2007, 15:02
Originally posted by COMRADE [email protected] 23, 2007 01:53 am
That&#39;s actually nothing new. There are a lot of areas in America with extreme poverty:Detroit, Michigan ; Benton Harbor, Michigan ; East Saint Louis, Illinois....
And that&#39;s the point. The fact that this nation which is the wealthiest country in the world and an industrial superpower has conditions like this is abhorrent. It goes to show what a screwed up system capitalism is.

Labor Shall Rule
24th November 2007, 16:34
The prison-industrial complex will have a field day with this — the entire city is already crawling with cops, but with this “surplus population” that are craving everyday necessities, more prisons are going to be needed to house the hungry.

RevSkeptic
26th November 2007, 01:37
So far, you&#39;re all missing the point. Different social structures will be needed to replace current existing ones, otherwise you&#39;re replicating the same type of culture and hence the same type of mindset that exist in Capitalist society. But, people have lived so long with the current type of lifestyle that Capitalism has to offer that it&#39;s like plucking them out of medieval religious times and putting them into a modern city. They&#39;ll be lost because money and "work" and commerce is what they&#39;ve known all their lives.

Most people don&#39;t like thinking long and deep about their lives being an social engineered product of somebody else more powerful than them. The sad thing is they don&#39;t even know that they don&#39;t know.