I was more than curious as to what this class would involve for a couple of reasons.First, I was raised by a single mother and at times it was difficult financially and we saw many different pay scales as we grew up. I am also very fortunate that I have had the opportunity to have very close friends that originate from over the world- Asian, West Indian, African...the list goes on....-that have told me real life scenarios and stories from their lives in foreign countries.
(Question 1)When the question asked who did I think was poor domestically and internationally, I have to admit, it kind of scared me, and I have to approach that question delicately, nonetheless to read other peoples responses I have to take into consideration that all of us are raised differently and come from different situations. I think that it is very easy to judge someone from the outside in this country of whether they are poor or not. Someone may have on tattered or dirty clothes, have a dilapidated home, or drive a car that you can hear from a mile away smoking from every crevice. My biggest criteria of who is poor is first and foremost do they have money to eat and to have shelter. When you are below the poverty line or close to it, many things can depend on each other like dominoes...if one falls they all fall. If you are robbing Peter (the water company) to pay Paul (the rent) then at some point you will end up with no running water or no place to live....I think that those same conditions apply globally as well. Do they have a place to sleep, do they have food?
(2 & 3)I think that there are many reasons why people are poor all over the world.Different governments offer different programs (or no programs at all.) It is always interesting to me to hear the different backgrounds of some of my friends. One of my friends shared a 2 bedroom apartment with 11 people, another learned his ABCs in the dirt, and another was a child of two US diplomats and traveled the world living comfortably. Regardless of what country anyone comes from, we all have basic needs that we depend on for physical survival. If we go without food or water, we will die. If you live in Africa and aren't properly sheltered at night, you can be subjected to mosquitoes and malaria. I think that the United States continually strives to offer programs to help keep people from suffering the greatest impacts of poverty: lack of medical care, homelessness, starvation, etc. With that being said, there are many people who abuse the system (whether its selling their food stamps for money, or not getting a primary physician and using the ER for simple, common conditions,) and of course many people fall through the cracks. I think a MAJOR fault of our system is that it neglects to help minimize the crash from middle class to poverty level. So many middle class families struggle to pay everything, and are living check to check. That means within a week's time, if someone misses work, they could easily find themselves homeless, without food, etc. In other parts of the world, I think countries still very much ignore the struggle of those who are without. I was amazed at the level/conditions of the homeless I saw when I traveled to the Caribbean.They had no one. No place. No programs to help them become employed, no soup kitchens, no shelters. Literally building shacks out of feces and grass. Yet when I am in Atlanta/US, I see homeless people making hundreds of dollars a day collecting money off of an exit ramp. (I recall one time ordering a homeless man food and giving him an entire meal...two minutes later he sells it to someone else!)
(4)I think that solving the poverty problem will never end. Someone always has to earn more, someone always will live in a lower income neighborhood. I think that it is important to go into all communities, especially those whose poverty levels are higher, and educate the community on what can be people can done within their power to avoid becoming that statistic. Teach people how to budget, teach the statistics of gaining an education leads to more income, etc. As far as globally, I think that when a country like this is in a good place, we are more than able to help other people through money, support, education. The U.S. just needs to find that place first.
I agree with you whole-heartedly on the commentary in #4...it will never go away.
ReplyDeleteI too have friends who live in shacks, in run-down houses, in single-wide trailers that stink and are infested with roaches. Yet, they might be happy, some of my friends in those conditions do indeed consider themselves lucky, saying "some people do not even have what we have"). On the other end of things, I know people who live in the reservations in the midwest (Pine Ridge, Rosebud, and Cheyenne River Sioux reservations)...many of them do not feel so lucky....they have hard winters, they live hard lives.
Thank you for your thoughts
I enjoyed your analysis about US and global poverty. Our perspectives are based on our influences and you have heard, seen, and experience what seems to be a diverse collection of the US and more. I am excited to broaden my scope of poverty through this class too.
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