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From: Portside <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Apr 25, 2026 at 5:38 PM
Subject: No Place Like Home(lessness)
To: <[email protected]>


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No Place Like Home
<https://portside.org/2026-04-25/no-place-home?utm_source=portside-general&utm_medium=email>


Norman Stockwell
April 21, 2026
The Progressive
<https://progressive.org/magazine/no-place-like-home-stockwell-20260421/>

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* “Today, there isn’t a single state, metropolitan area, or county in the
United States where a full-time worker earning the local minimum wage can
afford a two-bedroom apartment.” *

, Adam Papp/Unsplash

 In *There Is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America*
<https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/645871/there-is-no-place-for-us-by-brian-goldstone/>,
journalist Brian Goldstone showcases America’s “working homeless” by
sharing the lives of five families in Atlanta, Georgia. Through a series of
intimate portraits, Goldstone illustrates that “families are not ‘falling’
into homelessness, they are being pushed.”

The “2024 Annual Homelessness Assessment Report to Congress” by the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development cites
<https://www.huduser.gov/portal/sites/default/files/pdf/2024-AHAR-Part-1.pdf>
an
unhoused population of “771,480 people—or about twenty-three of every
10,000 people in the United States,” an increase of 18 percent from the
previous report. But Goldstone explains in the book’s introduction that
“recent research reveals that the actual number of those experiencing
homelessness in the United States, factoring in those living in cars or
hotel rooms, or doubled up with other people, is at least *six times* larger
than the official figure.”

Crown, 448 pages / Publication date: March 3, 2025

As Goldstone observes, through his own research and extensive sourcing
detailed in thirty-six pages of notes at the book’s end, the traditional
myth that “hard work will lead to stability” has been shattered in our
contemporary society. “Today, there isn’t a single state, metropolitan
area, or county in the United States where a full-time worker earning the
local minimum wage can afford a two-bedroom apartment,” he writes. In
showcasing the lives of these five Atlanta families, Goldstone welcomes the
reader into a new reality where the American dream of working hard to gain
stability and success simply no longer applies.

Much of our inability to recognize and deal with the growing unhoused
population in this country began in the 1980s, during the presidency of
Ronald Reagan. As Goldstone notes, “Discourses on poverty had already done
much to denigrate the urban poor, so it was a relatively small step to
present homelessness as a lifestyle choice, or the result of laziness, or
the product of any number of other personal vices. But the main strategy
was to link homelessness with mental illness and addiction.”

The narrowing and misidentification of causes and conditions of
homelessness, Goldstone argues, “has caused incalculable harm”—whether it
is the inability by families he interviewed to obtain services because
their particular form of homelessness did not meet the definition of
bureaucrats, or because investors are buying up much of the housing and
making it unaffordable. In one “insidious twist,” Wall Street firms “are
not only profiting off people’s desperation to remain housed. They are also
increasingly taking over the markets and industries designed to extract
revenue from those who have already lost their homes . . . . Homelessness
has now become big business.”

New York-based advocate for the homeless Patrick Markee takes the story
from here in *Placeless: Homelessness in the New Gilded Age*
<https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/774470/placeless-by-patrick-markee/>,
by looking at the “phenomenon of modern mass homelessness in our New Gilded
Age, an era defined, like its late-nineteenth-century namesake, by
exploding inequality and seismic shifts in the economic and urban
landscape.”



Melville House, 352 pages / Publication date: December 2, 2025

In examining what he terms “modern mass homelessness,” Markee goes to the
places where unhoused people seek and obtain shelter in the nation’s
largest city. “Among the 130,000 people homeless in New York each night,
around three-quarters of those in shelters were in families, including some
45,000 children,” he writes.

Markee explores the geography of homelessness by visiting a train tunnel,
an armory, an intake center, a park, and a former psychiatric wing at
Bellevue Hospital. Bringing together history, analysis, and personal
experience as an advocate and activist, he shows how we got here and how we
might begin to address the root issues that have created and exacerbated
this crisis. Markee cautions that this is a “harbinger of wider forms of
loss of place—a warning about the looming threat on the horizon [of this
New Gilded Age].”

However, he concludes, “over more than two decades I saw repeatedly how
homeless people, even while enduring the harshest circumstances, could
create community, banding together to struggle against hopelessness and for
something better.”

As Industrial Workers of the World organizer Joe Hill, writing shortly
after the end of the previous Gilded Age, was famously paraphrased
<https://youtu.be/VowR8RpYjoA?si=Mij-9A2GyqoXShxb> as writing, “Don’t
mourn, organize!”



*Norman Stockwell is publisher of The Progressive. He can be reached at
normstoc[at]progressive[dot]org*



*Since 1909, The Progressive has aimed to amplify voices of dissent
and those under-represented in the mainstream, with a goal of championing
grassroots progressive politics. Our bedrock values are nonviolence and
freedom of speech. Based in Madison, Wisconsin, we publish on national
politics, culture, and events including U.S. foreign policy; we also focus
on issues of particular importance to the heartland. Two flagship projects
of The Progressive include **Public School Shakedown*
<http://progressive.org/public-school-shakedown>*, which covers efforts to
resist the privatization of public education, and **The Progressive Media
Project* <http://progressive.org/op-eds>*, aiming to diversify our nation’s
op-ed pages. We are a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. *

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