Unhoused Publishes Just Enough For Coffee

Unhoused Publishes Just Enough For Coffee

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Solving the Homeless Crisis

📖 A New Anthology: Voices from the Edge of Home

I’m pleased to share that Prolific Pulse Press has published the anthology
Unhoused: Yearning for Home, a powerful exploration of homelessness in the United States and around the world.

My poem, “Just Enough for Coffee,” is included in the collection.

This anthology brings together poetry, flash prose, personal narratives, and artwork that speak to:

  • displacement
  • survival
  • invisibility
  • and the enduring human search for belonging

It reminds us that homelessness is not just a policy issue.

It is a deeply human one.

🧭 What Does It Mean to Be Unhoused?

 

Poetry, Memory, and a Crisis We Still Walk Past

We pass them every day.

On sidewalks.
Outside metro stations.
Under highway overpasses.

Most of us don’t stop.

We glance. We register.
And then—we move on.

In a country as wealthy as the United States, that simple act—walking past suffering—has become almost routine.

This blog post is, in part, an attempt to slow down that moment.

✍️ Why I Write About Homelessness

These poems were written over time—many inspired by encounters in Washington, D.C., where homelessness is not theoretical. It’s visible. It’s persistent.

It’s personal.

Some of the people I met had names, stories, even routines. One of them was a man I called Bob.

I still think about him.

Just Enough for Coffee (published in the Anthology)

 

coffee
coffee

 

A homeless man
Stood on the street
Counting his change
From panhandling all morning

Just had enough for a cup of coffee
All in all
A good start

He ambled off to his favorite coffee shop
Where the owner
Was kind to the homeless

Sometimes
Treating them to a meal
On the house

The man said
I was in your shoes
Once years ago

And you never forget
When you are down
And out

Everyone forgets your face
No one knows your name
For you are now
Invisible
Almost a ghost

The old man tried to pay
The owner said

Keep your change
You need it more than me

Have a meal with me
My friend
On the house

He ordered up
The homeless man’s favorite
Lumberjack special

Eggs, pancakes, sausage, bacon
Cornbread
Lots of hot black coffee
To wash it down

The old man
Often had just one meal a day
Usually, a late breakfast

Sometimes if he were lucky
He would have dinner

And on a red-letter day
He would have three meals

The homeless man
Had been on the streets
For too long

Barely remembered his life
Before early-onset Alzheimer’s

Robbed him of his job
His dignity
His wife

His life
His money

Now he drifted
Waiting for the grim reaper
To call him home

Any day now
He prayed nightly
To a god
That he no longer believed in

Also published on from addict to advocate

https://fromaddict2advocate.tumblr.com/post/641758534100533248/poetry-week-jake-cosmos-aller

Author’s Reflection

Based on a man I got to know who lived on the street near the Department of State. Bob used what little money he earned to survive with dignity—coffee, food, a gym membership for basic hygiene, and even a cell phone.

He had no safety net. No family. No future plan.

He had… a system.

I lost saw him in 2015.  To this day, I don’t know what happened to him.

⚖️ Compassion and Criminalization

Another poem in this collection reflects on a different reality:

Arrested for Feeding the Homeless

A man is arrested—not for theft, not for violence—but for feeding people on the street without a permit. It sounds absurd. But versions of this have happened The question the poem asks is simple:

When does helping become illegal? And more importantly: What does that say about us?

 

Arrested For Feeding The Homeless

90 year old man arrested for feeding the homeless

 

Sam Jones walking down the street
In a Florida City
Thinking that too many people
Ignore the homeless.

He thought,
But what would happen
If we began to act
Towards others as we should.

Sam began a campaign
Treating homeless people
To coffee and sandwiches.

Buying them tents,
Buying them clothing,
Asking their names
Telling their stories.

The city authorities
Were not amused
They arrested him
For violating a local law

Forbidding handing out food
Water and drinks
To people on the street
Without a proper city-issued permit.
As a food vendor.

The case went to trial
They found him guilty
Sentenced to five years
In prison.

For helping the homeless
Without the proper food vendor permits,
And for contempt of court,

When he asked the judge

 

“Your honor, are you a Christian?”

“Yes, I am. Why do you ask?”

 

“Well, if you are a Christian,

Should’nt you be joining me

in feeding the homeless?

As Jesus would no doubt approve?”

Based loosely on a true story about ten years ago – don’t know whether he went to prison or not. He was a 70 old man who one day started feeding the homeless and was arrested for doing so as he did not have a food vendor license. He called upon people to act on their professed Christian principles. It was a story for a week or so.

November 15 is National Philanthropy Day. This day signifies the importance of working together for the common good. Philanthropic deeds come in all different shapes and sizes — charitable giving, volunteering, etc. — and on National Philanthropy Day, no act of kindness goes unnoticed. In honor of National Philanthropy Day, write your STORY or POEM about someone doing a good deed for a needy stranger.

It can be something simple like adding money to a parking meter about to expire, or more consequential, like donating blood or paying someone’s rent for a month. Be creative and descriptive, perhaps sharing the motive behind the good deed (paying it forward, feeling generous, etc.).

Just Another Day in Paradise

 

Just another day

Another day in paradise

 

Where freedom reigns

 

And many people

Are a paycheck away

From being homeless

on the street,

 

guns
gun

And everyone can buy a gun

And settle their disputes

With guns

 

As their God would

No doubt, approve.

 

When Will This Madness End?

6/6/2022

 

When will this madness end?

More guns than people

Every day more gun mass murders

 

And more daily shootings

Everywhere it seems

The virus of gun violence

It is out of control

 

But no one can do a thing

Because

It is not about GUNS

 

It is about everything else

 

Abortion and the culture of death

A crisis for young men

 

Anti-gun laws that restrict people from

Buying guns for legitimate self-protection

 

Immigrant criminals

Muslim immigrants

Mental illness

 

Widespread homeless encampments

Homeless everywhere

 

Yes it is never

About Guns

 

And the NRA

And their glorification

Of guns.

 

And so this madness

That has infected our country’s soul

Will continue.

 

Just another day

 

In the American Paradise

As the wild west becomes

Once again the new normal.

 

 

Today is 6/6/2022 or 666 Day

 

 

Today is 6/6 2022

 

Add it up 6 6 6 day

 

Perhaps today

Is the day

That the anti-Christ

Will be born.

 

Perhaps today

Is when all hell breaks lose

Perhaps we are living

In the last days.

 

Gun violence everywhere

Covid still around

Widespread homelessness

Homeless encampments everywhere

 

Members of congress

Not mental patients

 

As being bat s… crazy

Is no longer a bar

To being elected.

 

In fact the crazies

Are taking over

The Republican party.

 

Violence everywhere

As the wild west

Becomes the new norm.

 

And the January 6 hearings

Reveal how close we came

To becoming a neo-fascist state.

 

And how so many of our fellow

Americans think that is the way

To go.

 

Storming the capitol

Was a patriotic duty

To overthrow the communists

Who have taken over

The democratic party.

 

Truly we live

In strange unsettling times

On 6 6 6 Day.

 

Nobody Knows You When You Are Down And Out

 

 

nobody knows you

when you are down and out

friends, you have none

when you are down and out

 

when you are homeless

no one knows your name

or even cares

when you are down and out

 

living on the streets

waiting for the grim reaper

to take you away

when you are down and out

 

“Strangers Sleeping On The Streets” –

 

In these sad days of the pandemic
We see the homeless people
Men, women, and children.

The strangers sleeping on the streets
In the richest country
In the planet

Millions were driven homeless
The strangers sleeping on the streets
As rents go up and up

Jobs disappearing
Coronavirus spreading
The strangers sleeping in the streets

Social safety nets unraveling
Forcing more people
Into dire poverty

There but for the grace of God
We do not say to the Strangers
sleeping in the streets

As we walk by
The nameless men, women, children
The strangers sleeping in the streets

We seldom wonder
How they got there
And whether we can help them
The strangers sleeping on the streets

All too often
We walk on by
Consumed by own problems
Having little empathy
For the strangers
sleeping on the street

 

🧭 Can the Crisis Be Solved?

The homelessness crisis is no longer marginal—it is central to who we are as a society.

Any meaningful solution must begin with a simple premise:

Housing is a basic human right.

We already know the structural issues:

  • lack of affordable housing
  • rising inequality
  • insufficient mental health and addiction services

We also know the policy tensions:

  • enforcement vs. civil liberties
  • shelter vs. autonomy

There are no easy answers.

But ignoring the problem is not an answer at all.

 

Solving the Homeless Crisis 

The homelessness crisis in the United States is no longer a marginal issue—it is a defining challenge of our time.

Any serious response must begin with a simple principle:

Housing is a basic human right.

No one in a nation as wealthy as the United States should have to live on the streets.

To move toward that goal, a comprehensive strategy must include the following elements:

  1. Massive Expansion of Affordable Housing

The core driver of homelessness is the shortage of affordable housing.

We must:

  • build significantly more multi-family housing
  • expand low-cost single-room occupancy (SRO) units
  • revive boarding houses and alternative housing models
  • incentivize development of below-market-rate housing

Zoning laws must be modernized

 

  • mixed-use development
  • higher-density housing near transit
  • conversion of single-family homes into multi-unit dwellings
  1. Housing Stability and Income Support

For low-income individuals and families:

  • Authorities should increase the availability of housing vouchers.
  • eligibility thresholds should better reflect real cost-of-living conditions

Housing costs should not exclude anyone earning near or below the poverty line.

  1. Transitional and Supportive Housing Systems

Temporary housing must provide:

  • safety
  • dignity
  • healthcare access
  • job training
  • pathways to permanent housing

The goal is not warehousing people— but helping them stabilize and rebuild.

  1. Structured Community-Based Housing Programs

A modern adaptation of programs like the Civilian Conservation Corps could:

  • provide housing
  • offer employment and skills training
  • engage participants in public works and conservation

In exchange:

  • residents receive stability, structure, and purpose
  1. A Difficult but Necessary Debate

Some proposals—such as requiring individuals to move from street encampments into shelters—raise serious civil liberties concerns.

But the current reality is also unacceptable:

  • people dying on the streets
  • untreated mental illness
  • addiction without support

We must confront this tension honestly and humanely.

 

📊 The Numbers Behind the Poems

  • Over 770,000 people experienced homelessness in the U.S. in 2024—the highest recorded level
  • Washington, D.C. alone has 5,000+ individuals experiencing homelessness
  • Family homelessness has been rising again in recent years

Behind each number is a story.

Many of those stories look like Bob’s.

Point: The “War on Homelessness”?

Recent years may signal a shift.

After the 2024 Supreme Court decision in City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, cities are now allowed to ban sleeping outside—even when there is no available shelter.

Since then:

  • hundreds of cities have expanded camping bans
  • encampment sweeps have increased
  • enforcement has taken center stage

Supporters say:

  • this restores public order

Critics argue:

  • it criminalizes poverty
  • displaces people without housing them
  • treats symptoms, not causes
  • States is entering a new phase—sometimes described as a “war on homelessness”—marked by increased enforcement, encampment sweeps, and criminal penalties for living outdoors. This shift was accelerated by the Supreme Court’s 2024 decision in City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, which allows cities to ban camping even when no shelter is available. Since then, hundreds of municipalities have expanded restrictions on public sleeping, while federal policy has increasingly encouraged clearing encampments and prioritizing treatment or institutional placement. Supporters argue these policies restore public order and safety. Critics counter that they criminalize poverty, displace people without solving the underlying housing shortage, and risk deepening the homelessness crisis.

📚 Key Reading List: “War on Homelessness” — Policy, Law, and Criticism

⚖️ 1) Supreme Court Ruling (Grants Pass)

🔹 Core legal decision

🔹 Plain-language explanation

✅ Key takeaway you can summarize in your blog:

  • The Supreme Court ruled that cities can enforce bans on sleeping or camping on public property, even for people with nowhere else to go. Wikipedia

👉 This overturned earlier protections (from Martin v. Boise) that limited enforcement when shelter beds were unavailable.humanrightsresearch

🔹 Analysis of the ruling’s consequences

✅ Framing:

  • Many analysts call this the most important homelessness decision in decades, because it shifts policy power back to states and cities.berkeley

🏛️ 2) Federal Policy & Presidential Statements

🔹 Executive order and policy shift

✅ Key framing:

  • The order prioritizes:
    • removal of encampments
    • institutional or treatment-based responses
    • public safety enforcementwhitehouse

🔹 News coverage and criticism

✅ Key points:

  • Federal policy explicitly encourages cities to:
    • clear encampments
    • move people into treatment
  • Advocates argue this approach:
    • is punitive
    • risks criminalizing homelessnessusnews+1

🔹 Presidential statements on DC encampments

✅ Key quotes/themes:

  • Encampments must be removed to “clean up” the capital
  • People may be:
    • moved to shelters or treatment
    • or face fines or jail if they refusenbcnews

🏙️ 3) Nationwide Crackdowns and Encampment Policies

🔹 Expansion of camping bans

✅ Key data point:

  • After Grants Pass~150 cities in 32 states expanded or adopted bans on public camping.stateline

🔹 State-level enforcement (California example)

✅ Key theme:

  • Even traditionally liberal states are shifting toward:
    • removal of encampments
    • enforcement + services hybrid models

🔹 On-the-ground reporting

✅ Key finding:

  • Sweeps often result in:
    • loss of personal items
    • disrupted access to services
    • relocation rather than resolutionkqed

⚠️ 4) Criticism: “Criminalization” and Displacement

🔹 Academic and policy critique

✅ Key argument:

  • Enforcement-based approaches:
    • displace people rather than house them
    • increase instability and contact with the criminal systemendhomelessness

🔹 Reporting on encampment sweeps

✅ Key observation:

  • Sweeps often:
    • move people from one location to another
    • do not reduce overall homelessness
    • can worsen health and stability

🔁 5) Pushback and Alternative Approaches

✅ Key theme:

  • After Grants Pass, policies diverge:
    • some cities intensify enforcement
    • others attempt non-criminalization approaches

 

 Endnotes (Current Context)

  • The United States recorded over 770,000 people experiencing homelessness in 2024, the highest number on record. [politico.com]
  • Washington, D.C. reported over 5,000 individuals experiencing homelessness in recent counts, with increases again in 2026. [usatoday.com], [earthtimes.org]

Family homelessness in D.C. rose significantly in 2026, reflecting ongoing housing pressures. [lansinginstitute.org]

 

🪶 Final Thought

Poetry cannot solve homelessness.

But it can do something important:

It can make us stop.
It can make us look.
It can make us feel.

And sometimes—

that is where change begins.

We pass them every day.
The question is:
will we keep passing them?

📊Some background reading

  • In recent years, critics have argued that the United

The End

 

 

 

 

 

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