Monday, December 29, 1997
Homeless make a comeback in America
We haven't heard much about the homeless since the Clinton
Administration took office nearly five years ago. Until then,
homelessness was said to be the result of Republican insensitivity
and the economic policies of the Reagan and Bush administrations.
Vice President Al Gore thrust the homeless back into the spotlight
just before Christmas when he rounded up a group of children from
a Washington, D.C., homeless shelter and brought them to the Department
of Housing and Urban Development where they served as props for
an administration announcement to spend $865 million to help the
homeless "find homes and hope."
Displaying his theological ignorance (matched only by his environmental
ignorance), the vice president said Mary and Joseph were homeless.
In fact, they had left home to pay taxes in another town. They
found a "no vacancy" sign at an inn and had to camp
in a stable. While traveling, I have been turned away from motels
because they were booked to capacity, but in seeking other accommodations
I never viewed myself as homeless.
A HUD spokesperson said the homeless children were briefed
before the event. Jessica Christie said the kids were shown a
picture of Gore before he showed up and were given "background
information so they would know why he is important." That
would be instructive for the rest of us. The vice president then
showed up to what must have been wondering eyes. He read them
a Christmas story (but not THE Christmas story). When the event
concluded, the homeless kids - having served his purpose - were
shuttled back to their shelter where they could ponder the important
company they had briefly kept.
Gore told them not to worry because some of America's publishers
were going to donate hundreds of thousands of books to them and
other homeless kids. Former Congresswoman Patricia Schroeder,
now head of the Association of American Publishers, said, "Every
American needs to know that reading out loud to children is as
important as fastening their seat belt."
Things are looking up for the homeless, no thanks to government.
Since government benefits have declined, 20 percent of the homeless
have checked into rescue missions, according to the International
Union of Gospel Missions. Instead of a government check, rescue
missions seek to change lives from the inside-out. IUGM Executive
Director Rev. Stephen E. Burger says: "Those who lost benefits
tend to be alcohol and drug-addicted men and women in their 40s
and 50s who previously received Social Security Disability and
SSI benefits. The government has finally done away with their
drunk checks."
While rescue missions cannot force people to change, they can
lead them to confront the responsibility they have to deal with
their problems and can empower them in ways that secular government
cannot.
How cynical of the vice president to use homeless children
as props and then immediately thrust them back into their all-too-real
world. In the story of the Good Samaritan, the one who tells the
injured man by the side of the road to have a nice day is condemned,
while the man who picks up the injured traveler and instructs
the innkeeper to care for him at his benefactor's expense is praised.
Real compassion isn't a government check, and it isn't using
the wretched unfortunates as backdrops for one's political aspirations.
Why didn't the vice president ask the kids to spend the night,
or give them sleeping bags or some other substantive gift that
might have eased their misery? Ask yourself. If you were homeless,
would you prefer a meal and a home to a book?
"No child should have a life where there's no address
for Santa Claus to come on Christmas morning," Gore said
in his most compassionate voice. Thanks to Gore's quick eviction
of the homeless kids (they were there for 90 minutes, which included
the briefing), Santa could see all of them together in a homeless
shelter.
Mrs. Bush's story time was better than this.
Los Angeles Times Syndicate
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Abilene Reporter-News / Texnews / E.W. Scripps Publications
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