First Annual International Week
Stop the War on the Poor, July 14-20
Join the Pots & Pans Protest outside the White House –
Mon July 14th, 11am – 12:30pm
Pennsylvania Ave between 15th and 17th Sts.
Take action in your city, town or rural area.
Background to Stop the War on the Poor
Stop the War on the Poor commemorates Martin Luther King Jr’s Poor People’s Campaign (PPC). In 1968, just prior to his assassination, Martin Luther King Jr condemned the Vietnam War and called for the PPC culminating in a Poor People’s March in DC in June, demanding a living wage and a guaranteed income. He said Congress had shown “hostility to the poor” by spending “military funds with alacrity andgenerosity”. Coretta Scott King spoke out against poverty and in support of welfare mothers.
King learnt from welfare mothers. They had been calling for a poor people’s campaign and urging his organization, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), to oppose “anti-welfare” legislation and support their right to welfare. As a result of their leadership, King became anti-capitalist and anti-war. * Source: Michael Eric Dyson
Actions in the US, Ireland and England!
What are we demanding?
$ Passage and implementation of the RISE Out of Poverty Act (H.R. 814, Rep Gwen Moore D-WI) that makes the elimination of child poverty central to welfare legislation and recognizes caregiving and education as work Sign petition online
$ Passage and implementation of the Social Security caregivers Credit Act (H.R. 5024, Rep Nita Lowey D-NY), another step toward recognizing caregiving as work.
$ Child welfare agencies stop removing children from families because of poverty, racism, sexism or other bias rather than abuse or neglect.
$ A living wage for mothers and other caregivers – we are launching an international petition.
$ Resources for the care of people and the planet, not war and occupation.
Why do we need it? While one in two people in the US lives at or near poverty and the planet is on the brink, the US spends $682 billion on the military – nearly half the world’s total.
For more information, contact
Welfare Warriors: 414-342-6662 wmvoice@att.net www.welfarewarriors.org Facebook page
Global Women’s Strike (GWS) and Women of Color/GWS: 215-848-1120 philly@globalwomenstrike.net
Every Mother is a Working Mother Network: 215-848-1120 philly@allwomencount.net everymothernetwork.net
Co-sponsored by:
Alexandria House, LA; Black Health Coalition of Wisconsin; California Families Against Solitary Confinement; Dallas 6 Campaign, Pennsylvania; DHS/DCFS Give Us Back Our Children, Philadelphia and LA; F*Word, Santa Cruz, CA; Human Rights Coalition-Fed Up, Pittsburgh; LA No More Jails; Martin Luther King Coalition of Greater LA; Military Families Speak Out – Orange County, CA; 9 to 5 Wisconsin; Parents Organizing For Welfare and Economic Rights (POWER), Olympia, WA; Payday Men’s Network; Queer Strike; RAC-LA; KidVillage@OccupyLA; Sin Baras, Santa Cruz, CA; Women and Trans Prisoner Defense Committee, Pittsburgh; USPROStitutes Collective; Veterans for Peace, LA Chapter; Voces de la Frontera, Milwaukee, WI
Stop the War on the Poor!!
Militarization Are Prioritized over Survival & Caring
· MLK said “War is the enemy of the poor.”
· The US continues to wage war around the world, causing death and destruction, and costing $3 trillion since 2001.
· Globally $1 trillion a year on green energy could stop climate change.
· In the US, 146.4 million people, or 1 in 2, are below or near the poverty line; 20.5 m in extreme poverty (below half of the poverty line).
· Globally 1 in 3 people live on less than $2/day; a billion on less than $1.25/day – similar to what many Native American communities are forced to live on.
Impact on Mothers & Families
· The work of mothers is tokenized, devalued and unpaid. 41% of women-headed families with children live in poverty. The years we spend raising children are called zero years and we get no social security credit.
· The most impoverished mothers are penalized by welfare “reform” (TANF) – it denies that every mother is a working mother and forces mothers out to waged work.
· Welfare “reform” has increased poverty. Welfare spending has gone up while the number of families receiving welfare has gone down – from 82 % of poor families in 1979 to 25% now – and benefits have been cut to below 50% of the poverty line in all states.
· Welfare “reform” benefits professionals at the expense of families. Money that used to go to low income mothers caring for children was shifted into “services” including childcare and child welfare agencies.
· Homelessness is up 35%. Women and children are the fastest growing section of the homeless.
· Single mothers are the fastest growing population going to prison, and there are more Black men in prison than were enslaved in 1857. The US has the largest prison population in the world.
Nearly 1 in 4 young children in the US lived with insufficient food in 2012.
Children are 36 % of the poor. In 2010, 16.4 million US children (22%) were poor. Black, Latino and Native American children are most likely to live in poverty.
More and more children are being detained by child welfare agencies, a $29 billion industry generating income to millions of professionals and big Pharma, and placed in foster care due to poverty, homelessness, racism, sexism.
The US is the only rich country with no federal paid maternity leave policy and no universal child or family allowance.
47.6% of immigrants and their US born children live in or near poverty. Immigration laws force separation of children from their families.
The impact on older people & people with disabilities
· In 2010, 8.3 million US people over 60 faced the threat of hunger – up 78% from a decade ago.
· In the US people with disabilities are twice as likely to live below the poverty line. 72% of women with disabilities live below the poverty line.
Impact on wages for women & men
· When welfare benefits drop so do wages. Wages (adjusted for inflation) have dropped from 1979 to today.
· Domestic and homecare workers, along with farm workers, commonly make less than the minimum wage.
· Women earn only 77% of what white men earn; Black and Latina women earn even less.
· Men’s income has dropped by 19% since 1970; by 41% for those with a high school diploma and no college.
· Almost 40% of Alzheimer’s caregivers are men, often caring for their partners, without pay. Men are increasingly echoing women’s demand for time and resources to care for their loved ones.
The 1% is getting richer, much richer
· 95 % of all income growth between 2009 and 2012 went to the 1%.
· The top 400 wealthiest are worth more than $2 trillion, more than the bottom half of the US population.