The United Nations
monitor on extreme poverty and human rights has embarked on a
coast-to-coast tour of the US to hold the world’s richest nation – and
its president – to account for the hardships endured by America’s most
vulnerable citizens.
The tour, which kicked off on Friday morning, will make stops in four
states as well as Washington DC and the US territory of Puerto Rico. It
will focus on several of the social and economic barriers that render
the American dream merely a pipe dream to millions – from homelessness
in California to racial discrimination in the Deep South, cumulative
neglect in Puerto Rico and the decline of industrial jobs in West
Virginia.
With 41 million Americans officially
in poverty according to the US Census Bureau (other estimates put that
figure much higher), one aim of the UN mission will be to demonstrate
that no country, however wealthy, is immune from human suffering induced
by growing inequality. Nor is any nation, however powerful, beyond the
reach of human rights law – a message that the US government and Donald
Trump might find hard to stomach given their tendency to regard internal
affairs as sacrosanct.
The U.N. point man is Philip Alston, an Aussie known for skinning those who have done such a good job of skinning others. I'm not sure why, but Aussies reassure me: They speak English, laugh and are not above punching your lights out.
The tax overhaul just passed will no doubt make it worse.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/02/opinion/editorials/a-historic-tax-heist.html