Saturday, January 25, 2025


Toward a Better World


 January 24, 2025

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With the return of Donald Trump to the White House, advocates for peace, social justice, racial and economic equality, fair immigration policies, climate renewal, trans rights, and other movements for change are bracing for hard times. The new administration will be doggedly opposed to so many of the values we hold dear, as well as programs that have helped keep millions of Americans above the poverty line.

Only recently, newly reelected Speaker of the House Mike Johnson reaffirmed his commitment to an “America First” agenda, which distills the most harmful aspirations of the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 into 10 priority areas, including slashing social welfare, healthcare programs, and public education; supporting increased military spending to promote “peace through strength”; unleashing a nightmarish version of immigration enforcement; and restricting voting rights.

Many of us are now asking ourselves, how did we end up here? Part of the answer is simple enough: the status quo, regardless of which party has been in power, simply hasn’t been working for all too many Americans. Research compiled by our colleague Shailly Gupta Barnes of the Kairos Center indicates that some 140 million of us live either in poverty or one financial emergency away from joining the ranks of the poor. One out of six children in this country now lives below the official poverty line and the families of nearly half of all kids are in a state of economic precarity or food insecurity. Meanwhile, the average life span of white American males is actually declining, while more than 20 million people lost their access to health care in 2024 alone.

All of this is, of course, a far cry from the conventional wisdom that America’s economy is doing well, based on statistics like the unemployment rate or the rate of economic growth as a whole, none of which capture the lived experience of so many of us. Indeed, the head of Moody’s Analytics recently told the Financial Times that, while “high-income households are doing fine, the bottom third of U.S. consumers are tapped out.”

Although the system isn’t working for millions of Americans, a business-as-usual, market-based approach remains what’s on offer in official Washington. This has been the governing modus operandi across party lines for the past 30 years and continues to enjoy bipartisan support, even as faith in government declines in the country as a whole. Without a viable plan that could change the basic living conditions of people in need, it’s easier for right-wing populists to offer false promises of change or, even worse, provide scapegoats like undocumented immigrants to “explain” declining living standards and the outright desperation so many people now feel.

Of course, this propaganda is fueled by countless millions of dollars contributed by rich donors, often enough billionaires, who, for starters, want more tax cuts, more deregulation of business, unfettered access to government contracts, and free rein for cryptocurrency. It’s reinforced by proponents of religious nationalism who organize around single issues like opposition to abortion, while falsely portraying moves towards racial and gender equality as “threats” to Christian values. Over the past several years, such interests have combined forces to usher Donald Trump back into the White House and dozens of “Christian nationalists” into the judicial and legislative branches of government, including Speaker of the House Mike Johnson.

Contrary to mainstream accounts that put the responsibility for Trump’s rise and then return to power on working-class voters (some of whom did indeed press the lever for him), the real victors in the November elections were the wealthy and powerful, many of whom used their public profiles and deep pockets to help propel the Trump-Vance ticket to victory. They and their corporations are now ready to receive ample government contracts and benefit from the erasure of corporate regulations. Meanwhile, religious extremists will welcome further encroachment on reproductive and LGBTQ rights.

Case in point: on the day that Donald Trump was pronounced victorious in the 2024 election, the eight richest men in the world were instantly worth another $64 billion. Nevertheless, much of the analysis surrounding the 2024 elections continues to emphasize the notion that Trump’s victory was primarily due to decisions made by the working class and the poorest Americans.

So, what is to be done? This is no time to blame those who are going to be hurt by Trump’s draconian policies, nor is it a moment to get in a defensive crouch to fight off only the worst policies in the making without also putting forth a vision of the world we’d actually like to see, a world where people’s needs are met with real programs, not diversionary rhetoric and false promises.

Promoting a Government That Works for All

While people like billionaire Elon Musk are busy hatching schemes to dismantle large parts of the federal government, we need to push for an agenda in which the government actually works for everyone. Shifting federal budget priorities toward improving lives and away from war spending and tax breaks for the rich would be a central element of such a program. Pouring resources — more than a trillion dollars a year — into the war machine and the national security state starves other priorities, ranging from public health to environmental protection. In fact, defunding such programs, an essential part of Trump’s second-term plans, risks another pandemic or the “quad-demic” that health officials have been warning about, as well as increased hunger, untreated medical conditions, and dirtier air and water. The problems to come won’t just involve an imbalance on a spreadsheet. There are all too many lives at stake, as surely as lives are at stake in a shooting war.

Imagine how starkly different this country would be if we were to invest in the lives of people rather than filling the coffers of the military-industrial complex. Take the expanded (and fully refundable) child tax credit, or CTC. Created in March 2021 through the American Rescue Plan, this federal policy granted modest monthly cash payments to families with children, including poor families, independent of their work or tax status. Families making less than $150,000 received regular cash infusions they could use to pay daily expenses or shore up slim to nonexistent savings.

The results were staggering. By December 2021, that program had reached more than 61 million children, nearly four million of whom had been lifted above the official poverty line. In its first and only year, official child poverty witnessed a dramatic decline, the single largest drop in American history, including a 25% decrease in poverty among Black children, narrowing the overall racial gap among poor kids. At the time, Moody’s estimated that the impact of the CTC on the economy was comparable to, if not greater than, the jobs created through military spending.

Despite its success, the expanded CTC was abandoned as 2021 ended. Two Democrats and 49 Republicans voted to end it, with West Virginia Democratic Senator Joe Manchin claiming that poor families might be using the money to buy drugs. The CTC, of course, hadn’t failed. The failure was that of an impoverished democracy, increasingly captive to the interests of the rich and powerful and willing to leave nearly half the population living hand to mouth, despite proven policies that could help lift the load of poverty.

And consider that the real danger of the second Trump administration, which has already appointed a record 13 billionaires to government posts, is its debt to the enormously wealthy at the expense of the rest of us. You need look no further than Trump’s cozy relationship with future trillionaire Elon Musk. As co-head of the new Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, with business interests in the very institutions he’ll have some authority over, Musk will also, it seems, have an undue influence on future federal budgets, priorities, and programs. Indeed, DOGE co-chairs Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy have already set their sights on shutting down the Department of Education and cutting about one-third of the federal government’s annual budget, or $2 trillion.

We’re preparing for this and more in the coming weeks and months, but it doesn’t need to be this way.

What Is to Be Done?

In 1968, as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was organizing against the triple evils of racism, militarism, and poverty in what would be the last crusade of his life, he said, “Power for poor people will really mean having the ability, the togetherness, the assertiveness, and the aggressiveness to make the power structure of this nation say yes when they may be desirous to say no.” His theory of change was to turn those most adversely impacted by poverty into a political force powerful enough not to be denied, even by the greatest economic and military power in the world.

Under the second Trump administration, there will be a torrent of emergencies to deal with, including threats of mass deportation, the shredding of the social safety net, and attacks on efforts to promote racial and economic justice and gender equality. Some of this will be new to us, including potentially massive immigration raids on schools and churches, while much of it has already been unfolding at a state level. For example, in 2024 alone, more than 650 bills were introduced nationwide to restrict the rights of trans people. Because such bills were massively unpopular, well over 600 of them failed. This may change, however, if they’re taken up at the federal level in 2025.

As people of conscience fight back against such assaults, we should connect that resistance to calls for a government that reflects our deepest values and commitments to justice. To fight for such a future means making demands that are far beyond what’s politically possible now. Simply resisting what Donald Trump’s government tries to do won’t be enough. We need to build public support for a robust, carefully crafted plan for public investment that will be a viable stepping-stone toward a more equitable, peaceful, and just world.

During the first Trump administration, the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival produced an ambitious social and economic agenda, “The Poor People’s Moral Budget: Everybody’s Got a Right to Live.” It called for the right to living-wage jobs, affordable housing, debt cancellation, strong anti-poverty programs, guaranteed adequate income, and much more. It made clear that, through far fairer taxation and the shifting of funds from bloated military budgets to programs of social uplift, it would be possible to “lift from the bottom” in America.

Imagine a country where everyone could exist free of the fear of poverty, hunger, homelessness, or lack of access to quality health care. Of course, trying to shift this country’s priorities in such a way would pose a major political challenge, but social and political organizations and movements have succeeded in the past, even in the darkest of times. The organizing of the Citizen’s Army during the Mine Wars in West Virginia early in the last century and the birth of the labor union movement successfully pressured both corporations and the government for better wages and working conditions that workers still benefit from today. In the midst of the Great Depression of the 1930s, military veterans in the Bonus Army Encampment in Washington, D.C., demanded that the government pay those promised “bonuses” and won. The Black Panther Party’s Free Breakfast Programs fed more children in the late 1960s than any other institutional entity. It paved the way for free breakfast and lunch programs in public schools across the country, while calling out the failures of the government to provide life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for all people. During those same years, welfare rights leaders formed the largest poor people’s organization of the time and secured essential benefits for tens of thousands of people, while more than doubling the amount of federal support flowing to the poorest Americans.

Because they did it then, we can do it now.

This is not to suggest that shifting funds from the Pentagon to domestic programs is a magic solution to America’s economic problems. Even cutting the Pentagon budget in half would not be enough to meet all this country’s unmet needs. That would require a comprehensive package, involving a major shift in budget priorities, an increase in federal revenues, and a crackdown on waste, fraud, and abuse in the expenditure of government loans and grants. It would, in fact, require the kind of attention and focus now reserved for war planning.



Imagine a real war on poverty, not the “skirmish” (as Dr. King called it) of the 1960s, President Lyndon Johnson’s effort that would be cut short by the war in Vietnam. What’s needed is a coordinated series of campaigns that could change the conditions that produce poverty for good.

Now, let’s be real: 2025 is going to be a truly hard year for the poor and vulnerable in our society. But the promise and possibility of ending poverty, reclaiming democracy, and advancing peace and justice remain closer than any of us may think. What’s needed is to begin to build something better, with, as Dr. King suggested, “the ability, the togetherness, the assertiveness, and the aggressiveness” to make it so.

This piece first appeared on TomDispatch.

Liz Theoharis is a theologian, ordained minister, and anti-poverty activist. Director of the Kairos Center for Religions, Rights and Social Justice and co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival, she is the author of the forthcoming book You Only Get What You’re Organized to Take: Lessons from the Movement to End Poverty and  Always With Us? What Jesus Really Said About the Poor. Follow her on BlueSky at @liztheoharis.kairoscenter.org.
William D. Hartung is a senior research fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and the author of Prophets of War: Lockheed Martin and the Making of the Military-Industrial Complex

The Basics of Bioregioning: Three Videos for Your Watch List



 January 24, 2025
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Bioregioning. I’ve been seeing that word around more. Signifying the active process of making a bioregional life. The art of living in place, in tune with natural realities. Bioregionalism has that “ism” to it, which calls to an ideology. That’s okay. We need to start thinking in bioregional terms to come back into balance with the planet on which we depend. But bioregioning – an integrated set of acts that moves us there -really gets at what it it.

Three recent videos provide a basic education on bioregioning and the bioregional concept. One which dropped just the other day is an interview by Nate Hagens with three bioregioning practitioners on his podcast, The Great Simplification. The name comes from the proposition that complex human civilization is overshooting its ecological boundaries, particularly through its dependence on fossil energy, and will inevitably have to downshift and simplify to survive. In the show Hagens says he is just learning about bioregioning, which I found a little surprising since he is in many ways on the ecological cutting edge. His three guests provide him with a basic education on the concept. They are:

+ Daniel Christian Wahl, author of Designing Regenerative CulturesDescribed as the Whole Earth Catalog of the 21st century, “The book asks how can we collaborate in the creation of diverse regenerative cultures adapted to the unique biocultural conditions of place? How can we create conditions conducive to life?”

+ Samantha Power, regenerative economist, futurist and bioregionalist, co-founder and director of the BioFi Project, a collective of experts supporting bioregions to create financing facilities that fund transition to regenerative economies. Her new book, Bioregional Financing Facilities: Reimagining Finance to Regenerate Our Planet, explores the concept.

+ Isabel Carlisle, a communicator, educator and large-scale project organizer with the U.K.-based Bioregional Learning Center, “Building collaborations to shift South Devon towards long-term climate resilience. We work in and at the intersection of economy, ecology, learning, arts and culture and the gaps in between.”

Here it is, 1 hour, 28 minutes well spent.

The next two, h/t to Brandon Letsinger of Cascadia Bioregional Movement,are shorter. The first is from Nerdy About Nature, which seeks to engage people in their natural surroundings. It is a 4 minutes, 50 seconds brief on the basics of the bioregional idea from another inhabitant of Cascadia, set in a coastal temperate rainforest typical of the bioregion.

The second is a 20-minute video from Claudio Ayuso’s Origin Story. The U.K.-based channel seeks to look at today’s problems and “imagine the future in which humans are part of the solution.” Here she takes on the question of artificially drawn borders with no relation to natural realities and looks at the bioregional idea of nature-based boundaries, with Cascadia as an example. Brandon is one of her interviewees.

These videos underscore a trend that heartens me as a bioregionalist with roots in the movement dating to the 1980s and ‘90s. A new generation is coming to the bioregional idea, seeking a way to grapple with the global crises with which our older generations have left them, by building a new way of living rooted in the places we live.

Enjoy the watch!

This originally appeared on The Raven.

The Homeless Have No Rights

 January 24, 2025
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Photograph by Nathaniel St. Clair

The homeless are a class apart, out American untouchables. It goes without saying that in America the homeless have no right to shelter. They also have no right to sleep, be seen in public, go to the bathroom or keep their jobs. In short, the gradual deprivation of rights for unhoused people, sped by iniquitous supreme court decisions, is leading inexorably to the homeless lacking the right to exist.

This is awful in itself and more so since even our phony statistics admit that there are more homeless people than ever. That’s because 22 percent of renters pay ALL their income on rent, according to Redfin, which means of the remaining 78 percent, millions and millions pay a humongous percentage of their money on rent. Indeed, 12.1 million Americans spend more than half their income thus, says the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. The report also mentions that 22.4 million tenants spend over 30 percent of their wages on their leases, the amount commonly recommended as the highest decent limit for rent percentage of income.

The cause of this economic catastrophe is greed. Indeed, during the recent Los Angeles fires, the L.A. Tenants Union reported that “landlords are raising rental listings by more than 50 percent to profit from the fires. Penal Code 396 prohibits price-gouging during a state of emergency.” Other sources indicate 120 percent rental listings increases. So we are dealing with a class of people, the landlord class, who are, to put it nicely, amoral. Meanwhile, abetting their amorality is a housing crunch caused largely by the complete financialization of real estate, so that private investors snap up single family homes, not to live in, but to keep empty, as a place to park excess cash. Fifteen million homes sit vacant in America, while likely 3.3 million citizens lack a permanent address. These uninhabited abodes squeeze would-be buyers by boosting prices through the roof. So lots of those people must rent.

With many desperate would-be tenants out there, landlords can charge what they like, and they like a lot of rental income, even during a disaster. How probable do you think it is that any realtor will be punished for doubling rent in L.A.? My guess is that when the sun doesn’t rise, maybe those landlords will be penalized for gouging during an inferno. Meanwhile we need millions of affordable homes, not more exorbitantly priced apartments or investment properties.

The odds stack up against ordinary Americans, whose median family income increased from $10,000 per year in 1971 to $55,000 annually today, a 5.5 times gain, far surpassed by expenses shooting much higher. According to investor Fred Krueger on X December 29, since 1971 car prices increased 12 times, the cost of a house 14 times, the outlay for an ivy league college 29 times and, worst of all, the cost of healthcare zoomed up 37 times greater than it was in 1971.

Krueger has another lugubrious list. Since 1971, the cost of a gallon of gas has jumped eight times. A slice of pizza in NY also eight times. A Big Mac is up 11 times. Fine dining for two has shot up 10 times. In 1971, “A dental checkup cost $20. Today $200. Up 10x. A 2000 square foot house cost $27,000. Today $425,000. Up 14x. A 5-star hotel cost $60. Today $700. Up 11x…So salaries are up 4-9x, unless you are an investment banker. I couldn’t find any salary category that went up more than 10x…The bottom 5 percent are getting absolutely killed…It’s the same story in Europe or worse.”

So inflation bleeds the poor, and idiotic policies from Washington don’t help. Take sanctions on Russian energy. Joe “The Ruble Will Be Rubble – Ho! Ho!” Biden slapped tons of sanctions on Moscow, most notably on oil. Predictably, prices at U.S. pumps promptly shot into the stratosphere. Then the white house geniuses emptied the strategic petroleum reserve to counter this entirely foreseeable supposed catastrophe of voters stampeding away from Biden. But still, prices stayed stubbornly high, and the U.S. is now vulnerable to an energy crisis, but hey, that’s not Biden’s problem, because he’s now out the door – and he doesn’t care how much Americans have to pay for gas. So as a parting gift, he imposed MORE sanctions on Russian oil and, surprise! Prices soared. Immediately, and by several percentage points. CNBC reported January 10 that Brent gained 3.69 percent and U.S. crude oil jumped 3.58 percent. What if these prices keep ballooning?

Donald Trump can remove some sanctions, but this is not easy, since congressional knuckleheads are involved. The law, you see, was changed under Biden precisely for such a situation as this – to cripple a president who might want to end the idiotic economic warfare against non-NATO nations. (Don’t get me wrong – the U.S. wages economic combat against its NATO allies, too, but direct sanctions usually aim at Moscow, Beijing, Tehran, places like that.)

So in his last days in office, Biden put the screws to the American people, in addition to lying that he left the U.S. with no foreign wars. Hello? Gaza? Ukraine? Our imbecilic proxy war in Ukraine that cost us hundreds of billions of dollars while FEMA’s broke and hurricane victims in North Carolina sleep in tents for months on end? While L.A. burns and the newly homeless have no shelter and get little help from the feds because – oops! the dementia-addled maniac who just left the white house sent all the money to Kiev, and was too busy to work things out for the Gazans and the Israeli hostages, while Trump, even before in office, ended the carnage, for which Biden unsurprisingly took credit. The only credit he gets is for prolonging the iniquity.

The phrase the Biden presidency brings to mind is Hannah Arendt’s: the banality of evil. Right out the gate, from the first, insidious lie – which Biden may well have even believed – that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was unprovoked, to the slaughter that followed, it was as if a strange, wicked spell of lies had been cast over the west. “Unprovoked,” as Swiss military analyst Jacques Baud suggested, led to a narrative of falsehoods about Ukraine. Biden tried to pull something similar with Gaza, how his hands were tied, how he couldn’t get Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to accept a hostage/ceasefire deal, when in fact that was Biden’s CHOICE, as Trump immediately proved by using the leverage the U.S. has always had over Jerusalem to get such a truce. So now the veil finally lifts. We see face to face. Washington has been wading through a necropolis of corpses since February 2022, through October 2023 to the present, something Biden either outright prevaricated about in his farewell speech or, pathetically, forgot.

The American people foot the bill. We can’t do that anymore. Many Americans are broke, sick of the propaganda miasma and just, well, can’t. We need to tend to our own problems, and we got plenty. We can’t afford 47 new military bases in Scandinavia. We can’t even afford the 800-plus military bases we pay for all over the globe and that are easy, stationary targets in the event of any major war. We’ve likely got millions of homeless, if the statistics lie, which they demonstrably do. And we’ve got over one hundred million more just scraping by. Joe “War Is My Legacy” Biden made all that worse, by subsidizing slaughter abroad. Biden taking credit for peace or reducing poverty or debt serfdom would be laughable, if it weren’t such a sick joke.

Eve Ottenberg is a novelist and journalist. Her latest novel is Booby Prize. She can be reached at her website.