Hard times usually result in an overwhelming number of people who:
1. Do not have a job of any kind, and
2. Have no steady income from any source, and
3. Are usually either homeless or are living with close relatives.
During hard times these individuals need almost everything, including food,
shelter, clothing, and basic medical care. During really hard times the large
and growing number of homeless individuals greatly exceeds the carrying capacity
of the local community in terms of voluntary charitable donations. There are
just not enough homeless shelters and free food/soup kitchens that provide
one meal per day to accommodate everyone. To survive during hard times these
homeless individuals must choose between becoming thieves or beggars or both.
Therefore, during hard times the crime rate increases significantly. Since
God was expelled from our school systems and our work places many decades ago,
there are now a large number of people who have little or no respect for any
type of authority, or for the rights of anyone other than themselves. These
individuals do not evaluate their actions on any moral or ethical principles
other than whether or not their action results in an improvement in their own
personal welfare.
As our current hard times tragedy continues to unfold, any family
that still has a home that contains a wage earner will quickly learn that if
they are going to continue to survive they must not make themselves an obvious
or easy target for thieves or a target for a continuous stream of beggars.
Each individual family will need to make their own decision on whether or not
they can afford to be charitable. Some families are already in such serious
financial difficulty that they are barely able to meet their own basic survival
needs and charity is simply not an option. Other families may be a little better
off and they may be able to afford a little charity every now and then. The
difficulty is that homeless families do not need help every now and then; they
need it continuously.
If a person or family makes the decision to dispense charity directly from
their home or apartment, then they may experience the following problems:
1. Having anyone and everyone knocking on your door at any time of the day
or night.
2. Receiving verbal abuse, or something worse, when you honestly have no charity
to give away at the current time.
3. Experiencing the occasional angry face-to-face confrontation with an individual
or family that is not grateful for what you do offer to give to them, and they
accuse you of being able to give more and they demand that you do so or suffer
the consequences.
For these reasons, among others, a prudent family will need to determine how
they can be charitable without putting the safety of their own family at risk.
Fortunately, there is a simple solution to this charity question. After determining
what they can actually afford to give away, each family can make donations
of money, food, clothing, and/or medicine to a local food bank, homeless shelter,
orphanage, or local church with the stipulation that the gift be used to help
the needy families in the local area.
The donation may be made to one of these organizations that is located close
to the donating family, or to one that is a reasonable distance away if anonymity
is considered a prudent course of action. The advantage of donating to a nearby
establishment is that the donating family can direct any beggars to its location.
The family would not have to mention whether or not they personally donated
anything of value to the charitable organization; they could simply say they
heard that food was available there.
During hard times the beggar (hobo) information network works extremely well
and everyone knows which homes always say “no” and which ones sometimes
say “yes” and which ones always “give directions to the nearest
charitable organization.” A family can put a simple note and a directions
map on their front door (or gate) to help reduce the number of beggars who
actually knock on their door. The note could be written in English and Spanish.
Without opening the door, the family could ask who is knocking and what their
business is, and then give directions through the closed door. Remember that
an innocent looking beggar could also be a very skilled thief and/or killer.
Always keep your doors closed and bolted during hard times and ask and answer
questions through the door. Do not open your door even to those who pretend
to have or who actually do have hearing deficiencies. The note on your front
door should be adequate to answer any question the hard of hearing may have.
During serious hard times the local churches and their leaders will be confronted
with an increasing and overwhelming number of requests for help. Many churches
will respond by setting up committees to oversee the collection, storing, and
distribution of food, clothing, and other supplies to needy families. Some
churches already perform this function in their communities on an ongoing basis.
The advantage of making your charitable donations to a church or other charitable
organization is that they can more equally distribute the available charity
to everyone who is in need. And when the charity is all gone, those who received
it will know that more will not be available until some future time, whether
it is a free hot meal the following day, or a few more free groceries one week
or one month from now.
A nearby local church or other charitable organization is a superior method
for equitably distributing charity to everyone who is need. The reasons are
as follows:
1. They will receive charitable donations from anyone regardless of whether
or not the individual is a member of the organization or church.
2. They are usually located within a reasonable distance of the families who
are donating the charity.
3. They are usually within walking distance or bicycle distance of the needy
families.
4. They distribute charity to local residents and individuals passing through
the community and therefore they help to relieve local suffering and reduce
the local crime rate.
5. They minimize the chance of one family receiving more charitable assistance
than another family.
6. The local charitable organization usually knows if any work is available
locally and they will pass that information on to the welfare recipients. This
helps those in charge of dispensing charity to identify the families who have
members who could work but chose not to. Families who accept work assignments
and faithfully discharge those work duties will also usually be told where
they can rent a meager but simple room to live in.
7. The recipients of the charity quickly learn where the charity is being given
and it helps to minimize their investment of time and energy in receiving assistance.
8. It provides everyone in the local area with an immediate and helpful answer
to anyone who is in need of assistance. No one ever has to say, “No,
I can’t help you.” Instead everyone can provide directions to the
nearest charitable organization.
9. Beggars will quickly learn that it is fruitless to beg door-to-door in a
local area because anyone who has anything to give has already donated it to
the local charitable organization.
10. When the total amount of available charity in an area is not adequate to
sustain all the families in that area that need charity assistance, then some
of those families will realize it is time to move on to another area where
the overall conditions might be more favorable.
In closing may I suggest you read the book written by Pitirim A. Sorokin called “Man
and Society in Calamity.” It contains historical information
about how starving individuals have actually behaved during previous hard times.
A condensed summary of his book can be read at my web site: Man
and Society in Calamity - Summary.
Respectfully, - Grandpappy
JWR Adds: It is noteworthy that there are many stories dating back to the Great Depression about the methods that hobos used to "mark" the property of families and businesses that were willing to give charity to strangers. The recent upsurge in "warchalking" of free wireless access locations is reminiscent of this practice.
I do recommend being charitable, but like Grandpappy, for your own safety, I recommend that you be charitable at arm's length. Working through a church as an intermediary is a time-proven method.
