I enjoyed this article that shows the nouveau poor are not as - TopicsExpress



          

I enjoyed this article that shows the nouveau poor are not as easily demonized for their poverty. Here are some good snippets I wish I had had under my belt this past week when someone almost 20 years older than I blamed me -- a teacher who voted Democrat -- for the cycle of poverty: The Great Recession should have put the victim-blaming theory of poverty to rest. In the space of only a few months, millions of people entered the ranks of the officially poor—not only laid-off blue-collar workers, but also downsized tech workers, managers, lawyers, and other once-comfortable professionals. No one could accuse these “nouveau poor” Americans of having made bad choices or bad lifestyle decisions. They were educated, hardworking, and ambitious, and now they were also poor—applying for food stamps, showing up in shelters, lining up for entry-level jobs in retail. This would have been the moment for the pundits to finally admit the truth: Poverty is not a character failing or a lack of motivation. Poverty is a shortage of money. If anything, the criminalization of poverty has accelerated since the recession, with growing numbers of states drug testing applicants for temporary assistance, imposing steep fines for school truancy, and imprisoning people for debt. Such measures constitute a cruel inversion of the Johnson-era principle that it is the responsibility of government to extend a helping hand to the poor. Sadly, this has become the means by which the wealthiest country in the world manages to remain complacent in the face of alarmingly high levels of poverty: by continuing to blame poverty not on the economy or inadequate social supports, but on the poor themselves. theatlantic/business/archive/2014/01/it-is-expensive-to-be-poor/282979/2/
Posted on: Sun, 26 Oct 2014 19:12:40 +0000

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