The USA has Stupendous Wealth. Able to borrow any amount on its GLOBAL HEGEMONY SCAM. And Lavishing over $$ 1,000,000,000,000 pa. on its War Machine. Yet even here Greedy Capitalists make it Impossible to Pay the Rent
Jill Dennison at Filosofa’s Word and Judd Legum at Popular Information via thefreeonline at https://wp.me/pIJl9-Faw Telegramt.me/thefreeonline

I have zero respect for wealthy people who don’t use at least a substantial portion of their wealth to help those less fortunate. Elon Musk, the world’s wealthiest person, tops the list of such people.
Needless to say, my hackles were raised when I heard him claim that homelessness doesn’t exist, that it is a that it is a “lie” and “propaganda”.
Musk has what I call “ivory tower wealth” … he lives so high above the rest of us that he is literally blind to the way we live. Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr …
I say let’s force Mr. Musk to live on the streets without access to his vast wealth for about 3 months!!![…]
F### Elon Musk!!! Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr …
Judd Legum over at Popular Information sets the record straight for Mr. Musk …
5 facts Elon Musk should learn about homelessness
By Judd Legum, Rebecca Crosby, and Noel Sims
11 December 2024

Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, has been appointed by President-elect Donald Trump as the co-chair of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Despite its name, DOGE is not a department or part of the federal government. But it appears that Trump will look to Musk and DOGE to determine what government programs are essential and what should be eliminated as unnecessary.
So it is notable that, on Tuesday, Musk posted on X that homelessness is a “lie” and a “propaganda word.” He suggested that most unhoused people are “violent drug addicts” who cannot be helped.
Musk was commenting favorably on a post that claimed providing shelter to unhoused people was counterproductive.
The post ostensibly cited a San Francisco Chronicle article published in April 2022. The article does not support the contention that providing shelter to people who need it is fruitless or that all unhoused people are criminals.
Rather, the article details how the converted hotels in San Francisco were “underfunded and understaffed,” leading to substandard living conditions. The city outsourced the management of the buildings to non-profit groups, but failed to provide any oversight. The safety issues resulted from inadequate maintenance and “a small group of tenants who do not receive the support they need.”
If Musk is going to advise the president on government spending, he should educate himself on the reality of homelessness. These are five key facts to get started.
17% of unhoused people are children
A reality that Musk did not mention in his post is that a significant percentage of unhoused people are children. According to the 2023 report by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), on a single night in 2023, “roughly 186,100 people” or almost “three of every 10 people experiencing homelessness” was “part of a family with children.” The same report found that in a single night in 2023, 17 percent of unhoused people were children under the age of 18, amounting to 111,620 unhoused children.
According to data from the National Center for Homeless Education, during the 2021-22 school year, “[n]early 1.2 million children were either literally homeless (living in a shelter, or in unsheltered locations such as a car or tent) or doubled-up (sharing housing with friends or family beyond a unit’s designated capacity)” nationwide. Studies have found that unhoused children are at greater risk for health conditions, including respiratory infections and asthma, and developmental delays.
Tens of thousands of unhoused people are veterans
Veterans also make up a significant portion of unhoused people. According to the HUD’s 2023 report, on a single night in 2023, “35,574 veterans were experiencing homelessness,” or “22 of every 10,000 veterans in the United States.” But, according to the report, the “actual number of veterans experiencing unsheltered homelessness could be larger than reported.” Black veterans were disproportionately affected, and “comprised 36 percent of veterans experiencing sheltered homelessness and 25 percent of veterans experiencing unsheltered homelessness,” despite making up “only 12 percent of all U.S. veterans.”
Veterans experience homelessness at a higher rate due to multiple factors. Frequent and extended deployment can make finding and maintaining stable, affordable housing more difficult. A large number of veterans also live with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and struggle with substance abuse. According to the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans, 70 percent of unhoused veterans have problems with substance abuse. Veterans can also be “at a disadvantage when competing for employment,” as specific military work and training do not always translate to civilian employment.
Unhoused people are much more likely to be crime victims than perpetrators
In Musk’s post, he calls unhoused people “violent.” But, in reality, unhoused people are more likely to be a victim of a violent crime than to commit a violent crime. According to the Washington State Department of Commerce, an unhoused person “is no more likely to be a criminal than a housed person,” with the exception of camping ordinances, as unhoused people “break that law merely by being homeless.” In 2023, the New York Times reported that it is “relatively rare” for “homeless, mentally ill people” to commit a violent attack.
According to the Washington State Department of Commerce, unhoused people are in fact “more likely to be the victim of a violent crime,” especially unhoused women, teens, and children. Research found that approximately “14% to 21% of unhoused people are estimated to have been the victim of violence, compared with around 2% of the general population,” ABC News reported.
The false perception pushed by Musk that unhoused people are more violent can lead to stereotyping and dehumanizing of unhoused people, contribute to violence against unhoused people, and hurt efforts to help the unhoused.
Many people lose housing to escape domestic violence
While Musk implies that homelessness is the result of a moral failure by people with a mental illness or substance abuse disorder, the facts show that there are many factors contributing to homelessness that can affect anyone.
One of those factors is domestic violence. Each year, more than 7 million people in the U.S. experience domestic violence and among those people, 500,000 need to find new housing as a result. It can be difficult to accurately track how many victims of domestic violence end up experiencing sheltered homelessness because shelters that exclusively house domestic violence victims do not report information about their clients.
According to HUD, 11 percent of all beds in shelters that do track client information were designated for domestic violence victims in 2022.
Affordable housing is scarce, even for people with jobs
Another factor driving homelessness in the U.S. is a severe shortage of affordable housing.
For people making extremely low wages (either at or below the federal poverty line or 30 percent of their area’s median income), there are only 34 affordable rental options per 100 families in need of housing.
Working full-time, even for higher than minimum wage, is no guarantee that permanent housing will be attainable. In fact, according to a report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, the average full-time worker would need to make over $32 per hour to afford to rent a modest two-bedroom home or over $26 per hour to afford a one-bedroom.
There is nowhere in the country where a full-time minimum wage worker can afford to rent a two-bedroom home at a regular market rate. Even accounting for states and localities that have set their minimum wage above the federal level, the average minimum wage worker would have to work 113 hours per week to afford a two-bedroom home or 95 hours to afford a one-bedroom home.
