Whenever I travel the length of the East Bay via Bart to the last station on the line, which is in San Jose., along the route I see homeless encampments here and there, little clusters of tents with clotheslines, shopping carts, bicycles, and people cooking over campfires.
You're right, David. Homelessness strikes me as something central to what is wrong with our society as currently arranged. And the increased power and cultural clout of billionaires is the opposite side of the homelessness coin. As billionaires' power increases, the power and human significance of almost everyone else seems to shrink in corresponding fashion. The only solution is to rebalance the equation.
You're right, David. Homelessness strikes me as something central to what is wrong with our society as currently arranged. And the increased power and cultural clout of billionaires is the opposite side of the homelessness coin. As billionaires' power increases, the power and human significance of almost everyone else seems to shrink in corresponding fashion. The only solution is to rebalance the equation.