Diane

About Diane Pagen

Diane was born in Queens, New York and grew up in Woodside Houses and later in Bayside and Lefrak City. She is a social worker, a social policy researcher, analyst and writer. She has taught social welfare policy to first year graduate social work students. Diane is particularly passionate about implementing ideas to improve and repair the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families block grants and educating people on the diversion of these block grants by state welfare bureaucracies, a phenomenon that has been aggravating poverty nationally since the 1990s. She loves to read and to write, and watch Scandinavian police and crime series and political thrillers such as Wallender and Baron Noir. Diane is fluent in Spanish and pretty good in French thanks to having lived in Puerto Rico for five years. Diane has a special passion for México and Central America, and would like to help make better U.S./Latin America policy as these are our best neighbors. She enjoys gardening, and reading and writing, as well as discussing politics with her students, her friends, and with just about anyone who can talk. In 2021, Diane was illegally fired from her job as a public servant school social worker when she invoked her rights and refused to take a Covid vaccine in New York City. She has been protesting the Covid19 vaccine mandatesand its continued violation of the Civil Rights and Constitutional Rights of New York's workers since 2021, working hard to help NYC workers be reinstated to the jobs they were forced out of. Her favorite part of The Bible is Matthew. She is an activist for a Universal Basic Income and part of Basic Income NYC, a bunch of people who get together to spread Basic Income to others. She supports Andrew Yang for the U.S. Presidency in 2020. Diane is a graduate of the Universidad de Puerto Rico, where she studied for five years and graduated with honors, and has a Master of Social Work from Fordham University (2004). Thanks to the UPR, she has learned to speak Spanish. She has also lived in Spain and in France, and wants to retire to Colombia if the US continues to fall into the toilet. She is working on a bunch of things including a book chapter for a book about UBI coming out in 2020. Diane lives in Brooklyn.

Children of the Congressmen

Dear Mr. Kingston: Congratulations on your plan to have the destitute children of Georgia sweep their schools to earn their lunches! It is important for kids living in poverty to learn there is no such thing as a free lunch until they become Congressmen or bankers. Of course, since their families are super duper poor, [...]

By |2018-02-11T14:02:33-05:00December 20th, 2013|Poverty and income|0 Comments

“Doorbusters” and the American Way

I would like to remind people that the term "doorbusters," that is now used widely by Kohl's, JCPenney, and practically every retailer in their advertisements was created after the death of a Wal-Mart worker named Jdimytai Damour in 2008. He died on Black Friday, trampled to death by shoppers who cared about nothing but scoring [...]

By |2018-02-11T16:30:55-05:00November 30th, 2013|Incivility, bad manners|0 Comments

Policy leaders out to lunch on food policy and people

I feel great dismay at the Thanksgiving news that Governor Cuomo of New York is giving away $4.5 million to food banks. Even the food bank industry itself has said that the ultimate cost-efficient solution to starving New Yorkers is income and increasing the coverage of the Food Stamp program, as well as increasing the [...]

By |2018-02-11T14:05:03-05:00November 30th, 2013|Poverty and income|0 Comments

Food Stamp Bashing, Congressional Edition

by Diane R. Pagen, LMSW The Congressional Food Stamp bashers are at it again. I do wish they would call each other in the morning before telling rooms full of Americans what is wrong with Food Stamp users. In June we heard a Congressman from Texas, Louie Gohmert, say that it’s obvious poor Texas kids [...]

By |2018-11-23T18:47:32-05:00August 25th, 2013|Poverty and income|1 Comment

Childhood, Aborted.

In the first 75 years of the 20th century, the United States was really interested in tackling problems affecting children. The federal government consulted public figures. Women spoke of children’s well-being: Eleanor Roosevelt, Lillian Wald, Grace Abbott. Problems like child labor, poverty, juvenile delinquency and malnourishment led to the creation of the U.S. Children’s Bureau, [...]

By |2016-10-23T02:33:06-04:00August 9th, 2013|Poverty and income|0 Comments

What young men think

Yesterday I was walking out of the subway station in NYC behind two young men young enough to be my kid (if I'd had kids very young, but still). Their conversation caught my attention, because as is often the case, they were talking about fighting. One was telling the other that a guy he knows [...]

By |2016-05-07T09:34:34-04:00June 6th, 2013|Incivility, bad manners|0 Comments
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