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| quote: | Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov
In the past decade, more Americans have fallen into poverty than have climbed out of it - a product of the widening gap between rich and poor dragging up the standard of living (and the poverty line).
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The fact that people are becoming impoverished because others are becoming wealthier seems to be a terribly weak argument. I find it difficult to believe that people who weren't technically below the poverty line before are now worse off because other people have made more money in the meantime.
Wealth disparities in countries like Saudi Arabia are much more problematic than wealth disparities in the US. Contrary to the belief of many in the democratic party (and i am a democrat), it is NOT more difficult to climb the proverbial economic ladder than it was when my grandparents came to the US in the early 1900s (At 27, I have accomplished more than any other person in my family). Achieving success in the US never came easily. The change that appears to make it more difficult is the attitude of entitlement to the so-called "american dream." Unfortunately, I think people have lost sight of the basic fundamental that the effort you put in directly reflects the outcome. There really are no short-cuts in life and many aren't willing to put in the effort (e.g., attending law school, med school, etc...).
Certain segments of the population idolize athletes and rappers who portray the fast money lifestyle. That happens to be the same segment of the population that find it difficult to claw out of poverty. If poverty is a result of personal choices, and not a systematic exclusion, I am not quite as concerned about it. I am not saying we should ignore poverty or that we shouldn't provide better education, etc... to these communities (because I firmly believe we should), but i dispute the claim that they can't rise out of poverty. More blame should be attributed directly on the person who can't climb out of poverty than the system in which we live.
And, before someone calls me some sort of elitist republican, while i was growing up my mother was a teacher's assistant and I was on the federally funded free lunch program (i.e., my family was teetering on being poor).
Last edited by jerZ07002 on Apr-14-2009 at 14:14
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