One of the many important issues that have been beaten off the front pages
by the drums of war is welfare reauthorization. On Monday, September 30,
welfare reform expired. With much of Congress busy figuring out how to
sit on the fence about Iraq, they didn‚t take action on the
really vicious House bill, or a less bad Senate version. So they've
passed a
three
month extension, with Republicans hoping to sneak in something awful by
Christmas. Many people who are on welfare right now will
reach their
welfare time limits by then, and the folks with the least ability to make
it on their own will be without any support at all. Why aren't the
mainstream and alternative media paying attention?
The upcoming Break the Media Blackout
Conference in Philadelphia declares "The increasing concentration of
corporate ownership of our media not only threatens democracy, it also
threatens the very survival of poor people in the US and globally. The
media isolation of the poor has virtually disappeared large segments of the
population." This conference, supported by the kick-ass
Kensington Welfare Rights Union aims to think about
new strategies to address and reveal poverty through media.
Other advocacy groups, from the grassroots Every Mother is a Working Mother, ACORN, to the National Campaign for Jobs and Income Support are organizing poor people to stand up for their rights. They are supported by a network of policy-oriented groups, from the Oakland-based National Economic Development and Law Center to DC-based Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. There's not a lack of information out there, it's a lack of interest.
From the newswire, local activist and writer c.j. macq addresses the abilty for poor people to get representation in "The Left". He evaluates in essays 1, and 2 the ways poor and non-PHD'd class are disenfranchised through unspoken elitisms of most institutions, alternative and mainstream. His ideas, in line with the McLuhan statement that the medium is the message, goes deep to critique local leftist media
relationships to the hopefully more than passive audience. He asks
ontological questions to media and policy makers about how they can know
poverty if they don't trust and deal with poor and uneducated's cogent
voices. He calls for a revival with poor and left activists nailing
non-profits, corporations and government on constitutionally given equal
access laws to both courts and media.