
Earlier this week I posted humorously about homeless people, but now I want to address this seriously. Have you ever just sat back and thought about what it would be like to not have a home. Well, I have. I imagined what it would be like for my children and I to have to live on the streets and have nothing. No food, no place to lay our heads, and no money. None of the comforts that we have now. A nice warm bed, a refrigerator full of food, clean clothing as well as the ability to bathe and all the necessary things that we do every day. Now just imagine that being homeless is the reality for some people.
In Los Angeles alone I recently heard a statistic that said there are some 90,000 homeless people. Could you imagine? LA is just one place. All over this country and further yet all over this world there are people who are homeless. While most picture homeless people as vagrants, druggies and low lifes who due to some vice put themselves in their own predicament and don’t deserve a thought that is not always the case. And even when it is the case there is absolutely no reason that in a world that boasts of one person having an eighteen room mansion anyone should be without a home.
In some areas there are apartments that barely have any occupants why couldn’t someone allow homeless people to live there? When homeless people are found staying in abandoned homes, these are homes that are dilapidated and falling down, deemed uninhabitable, but they are forced to leave. What kind of world is this? What kind of people are we? We don’t care about other humans beyond what money can provide. In a post entitled Am I Not Human?: World Hunger over at the blog Electronic Village it commented that “…the world’s poorest people could be met for an additional $13 billion a year. Animal lovers in the United States and Europe spend more than that on pet food each year.” Doesn’t that speak to you about the fact that some people appear to be lower than a domestic animal that their most basic needs cannot be cared for.
While I personally am not in a position to help homeless people monetarily and I truly truly wish I was I do try to give them the comfort that God cares about their plight and he does. Some humans are selfish and those in positions of power fight to keep homeless people oppressed through laws that will no doubt only make the statistic of homelessness continue to rise. God does see. He see’s and has promised to bring a solution to this problem. So let us not turn a blind eye to the problems that plague other people who may seem insignificant in our own eyes. We are all humans. We are all fighting under the same conditions. And regardless of our state whether homeless or wealthy we all have the same destiny so let us always remember and show empathy to those who are less fortunate than we are.
Roots of Humanity feels that each of us can fight against human rights abuses in the world. We simply need to do something. Protest. Meditate. Pray. In the case of bloggers … we want you to blog on the 27th of each month. Just share information on behalf of our human siblings in all suffering areas who are either barred from communication by their governments, or lacking in technology to ask: Am I Not Human?

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Toya Bryant
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View Comments to Am I Not Human?: The Case for Homelessness
Gigi Karma
October 28th, 2009 at 9:00 am
I was reflective after reading your article on homelessness. I don’t often think of the homeless. Only when it is so cold outside that my teet are chattering as I unlock the door to my house, and once inside, proclaim “I’m glad I’m not homeless.” I can at least volunteer at a soup kitchen this holiday season. Its the least I can do. Thanks, Gigi
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Toya
October 29th, 2009 at 7:34 am
@Jennifer Thank you so much for the comment. I enjoyed your post as well on http://reedwhatmatters.com/2009/10/am-i-not-human-homelessness-sacramentos-anti-camping-ordinances/readwhatmatters.com. It’s unfortunate that we live in such an uncaring world that people don’t look after the needs of other. It is a basic right for people to occupy certain places when they have no where else to go. This is a grave injustice.
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Toya
October 29th, 2009 at 7:37 am
@PurpleZoe Thank you so much for presenting such a forum as “Am I Not Human” to bring awareness to the terrible things that are not in the fore front of the news. And sadly while the homeless population grows attention to their plight seems to be diminishing.
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Toya
October 29th, 2009 at 7:39 am
@Dhiman Hey Dhiman! Thanks for the comment. It seems like some people in power just choose to ignore this issue which is easy to do when they have never considered what it is like to be one of them. How is this issue addressed where you live?
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Toya
October 29th, 2009 at 7:43 am
@Cheri Paris Edwards Your personal experience touched me. No doubt it has made you a much more empathetic person. And your case goes to show that the homeless are not always people who have put themselves in this situation or just vagrants who don’t care to work. It literally could happen to any of us. I think if more people realized this they would be a lot more considerate of other peoples situations.
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Toya
October 29th, 2009 at 7:46 am
@Gigi Karma Hey GiGi thank you for the comment. And like I mentioned I can’t contribute very much but I try to offering something. Volunteering is a great idea. That is something all of us could try to do. It would definitely make us more appreciate of what we have by seeing first hand what others experience.
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Villager
October 30th, 2009 at 8:32 pm
Jennifer — I’ve added your mayor (KJ) as my Village Hero this week on my blog based on the SafeGround Sacramento project. I hope that other cities take it up as a ‘best practice’.
Toya — Thank you very much for sharing this blog post with us. I recall a very good novel by James Gresham that focused on the plight of the homeless in the Washington DC area. It is one of those issues that is easy to ignore. However, I must admit that I think about it … miss a few months of client contracts and I would be in bad shape.
Anyhow, I hope that others join us on the 27th of each month for this online activism effort.
peace, Villager
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Toya
October 30th, 2009 at 8:41 pm
@Villager Thank you for bringing “Am I Not Human” to my attention. Homelessness is one of those issues that can get lost in all the other issues in this world. But, I feel like you I could easily be in that position.
The project in Sacramento is wonderful and the mayor is definitely worthy of honor for actually trying to help people going through this.
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