I'd put forth that these are also necessary to escape poverty:1. Lack of debt2. Time and financial stability to pursue education3. No dependents, be they children, sick grandparents, or other relatives in need of support4. Good health
2/11/2011 2:56:41 PM
"If they only would do what middle class white families do ...."57% of blacks are raised in single family homes (87% headed by women). That says to me it's a systematic problem - which increases the likelihood of poor education, instability, going to jail, etc."If they could just act like they were raised in a stable environment we wouldn't have these problems" ....[Edited on February 11, 2011 at 3:39 PM. Reason : *~<]BO]
2/11/2011 3:37:38 PM
2/11/2011 3:42:34 PM
I've never once mentioned government in this entire post ... Of course it's cultural ... I've only asked why people only talk about disadvantaged children, not advantaged ones. Wait, I know ... because being advantaged isn't a problem. In fact it's not even acknowledged ...
2/11/2011 3:48:48 PM
2/11/2011 5:14:37 PM
2/11/2011 6:57:10 PM
2/11/2011 7:00:21 PM
2/11/2011 7:52:43 PM
2/11/2011 8:30:20 PM
I think it's a little more complex than that. I think that when you're raised in a culture of intergenerational poverty there are a lot of other things in play. For instance, one psychology theory of motivation is called the IVE theory (one of many theories). This one says:Motivation = Is something worth the effort? X If yes, do I have the capability? X If I can do it and it's worth the effort, what are the odds that I will actually receive the desired outcome?You can see how big a part that efficacy plays in motivation. First of all, they don't think they can do it, and second, if they do do it they feel they just might get screwed out of it. That is just one factor. They have not had stable environments or good role models, etc.. eyedrb sent me a pm recommending a book called:A Framework for Understanding Povertyhttp://www.amazon.com/Framework-Understanding-Poverty-Ruby-Payne/dp/1929229488/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1297393155&sr=1-1I've scanned through that book before and found it enlightening. I think it's easy to minimize the effects of intergenerational poverty, especially when you haven't lived it, but I think it will take more than just saying, "Hey, just act like middle class white kids" ....
2/11/2011 9:46:06 PM
2/11/2011 9:58:50 PM
^^ all of those things are what I'm saying. Their disadvantage is mostly not due directly to a shortage of dollars.
2/11/2011 10:24:52 PM
^^^I found a copy at a Salvation Army about 12 years ago and it opened my eyes.
2/12/2011 2:34:58 AM
Admittedly, I haven't spent a lot of time studying this subject because...well, I'm a middle class white guy that can't comprehend it, but I know I've made a similar statement before when I have read these types of stories:http://sparkaction.org/node/149This woman needs to ditch her home and move in with extended family for however long it takes to save some money, get some training, and then strike out on her own. Yes, I realize that not every person that is on welfare/subsidized rent has an option to share housing space, but I'd be surprised if it isn't the majority that could do this. The benefits of moving in with family members are manifold. Rent is saved plus there are other people to help raise the children...you know, it takes a village and shit.I'm pretty sure our neighbors to the south do exactly this when they come here in search of a better life, why should those born here behave any differently?
2/12/2011 10:58:34 AM
2/12/2011 1:31:50 PM
The two factors are how hard you work and the expected value of the thing you are doing.Poor people work very hard at things that have a low expected value. They never realize that there is a smarter way to make your work pay off. They don't have the connections to get the opportunity to do high value work (the #1 way to be successful), and they don't know how to go about getting these connections.People who are well-off know or learn by osmosis what activities have a high expected value. The option to do something stupid simply never comes up. Since people who are well off intelligently invest their labor, they don't have to work as hard to get a good payoff.Finally, people who work hard and do highly valued activities make the most bank.
2/12/2011 2:21:51 PM
There is actually a lot of good commentary in this thread. I actually learned a few things.I never did really think poor people were that way for a 'simple' reason, but I'd be prone to chalk it up to 'environment' and note that it's 'complicated'. For issues like this that are very impactful, sensitive, and multi-faceted, people like myself tread carefully to avoid claiming more than what we know. But there's another take on this, which is that we all are members of the American community, and we all have responsibility regarding the issue to some extent.If everyone just stays in their castle, the issue will only become progressively swamped deeper in misinformation and mutual misunderstanding and spite. I suppose this is where I show some degree of pride in being American. Throughout the history of our society we have small empires grow and collapse, and I think it's the most that we can ask for that our civil society itself endures and outlasts the ebb and flow of class lines. I believe this perspective should only strengthen our nature to ultimately tear down walls, and trying to make money while doing it.It might have been nice had the civil rights movement given way to a real movement to address the underpinnings of generational poverty, but I believe that something larger is afoot that, at minimum, delay such an evolution. Globalization I think throws a wrench in all of this, although it's a temporary one. I believe what we've done is to import the middle class (or their labor) from less developed nations (not the same as poor) and this has given us all-too-much kindle to add to the fire of class hostility in the US. The middle class looks at other like middle class folk who "made it" by supplanting the labor of the historically poor and repressed blacks (with some whites) in our nation, while the poor has more reason than ever to cry foul at greater income inequality, stagnant wages, and abuse of the system by the powerful.Too much of the US population is marginalized, but they are in an unfortunate situation where they can't really hope to reach a critical mass, allowing them to demand structural changes that could change things - not that they even know what the issue is in the first place, or that I do. Things look hopeless, but unless we're on the cusp of dark ages, I don't believe it can stay that way.
2/12/2011 4:55:59 PM
^^^I'm ready to legalize drugs! I've also taken to a couple of your other ideas.What would you do with the tax code?
2/13/2011 12:34:17 AM
BridgetSPK, don't take d357r0y3r too seriously. His thinking generally runs the gamut from "A" to "A" - i.e. government is the cause of all our problems, and business can do no wrong.[Edited on February 13, 2011 at 9:51 AM. Reason : *~<]BO]
2/13/2011 9:48:46 AM
I still want to see this magical school where the remedial class is all respectful. ---There's been a lot of talk about some causes of the problems with our schools -- poverty, absent parents, etc. I wonder if it would do us some good to consider the proximal cause, the one that, from what I can tell, is directly responsible for most of what's wrong with the school system.An attitude that manifests itself in various ways is that proximal cause. I guess the most commonly studied variant is the attitude of "don't act white," which has its own flavors, but anybody who was a good student and got attacked or made fun of by bad students has seen something similar. Somehow a broad section of society has gotten it into its head that excelling at school and not acting like an asshole is desirable. It's not lack of opportunity or means. It's an active opposition to pursuing legitimate success.This is what we should be studying. We should have started a while ago, because by now it's so entrenched in this country that it will be very difficult to identify the causes and possible solutions. It's not just money -- rich people appalled at the idea of hard work or studying are nothing new. Look at Paris Hilton. More to the point, look at the fact that there are apparently people who idolize and want to emulate Paris Hilton.It's not stupidity. At least, not in the way we generally think about. I'll mention again the several students I've encountered who clearly understood their material better than anybody else in the room but still acted like colossal jackasses because appearing to do well would bring the derision of their peers.The school system can't do much of anything to fix the problem, because the whole issue centers around ignoring and resisting authority. Appealing to the parents won't do much, because most of the time they have the same attitude. Hell, even providing up-close-and-personal experience with what can happen when you have this attitude -- jail, poverty, death -- appears to be doing approximately shit.
2/14/2011 12:12:04 AM
Fuck 'em, then. When you put it that way, it sounds like we don't even have a problem. I've gotta have somebody to pay a few bucks to for them to do menial tasks that I don't feel like fucking with, and you're describing a bunch of volunteers.
2/14/2011 12:24:17 AM
Believe me, I always want to say "Fuck 'em" as well. But it's not sustainable in the long term. A teeming mass of deadbeats is not going to maintain a superpower. We need to figure out how to neutralize this problem. We do that, and we've got the world's third largest population combined with its largest economy combined with an education system that wouldn't be half bad if the students gave a shit, and we get to rule the world for the next 500 years.I believe it can be done. It may require significant paradigm shifts in educational thought. It may require mandatory military service and fucking cages for bad students, for all I know. But it can be solved. What I fear is that ultimately it may require separating problem students almost completely from their parents and neighborhoods, which could prove...problematic.
2/14/2011 1:08:18 AM
2/14/2011 1:48:00 AM
2/14/2011 3:32:23 AM
GrumpyGOP, I thought you would relate to disaffected people who don't buy in to the system. ?^I agree with you that the system is not horrible the way people make it out to be.But the image and commentary you've provided don't really make sense. Why would they divide the US up by race but not all the other countries that have mixed populations of their own? And why did they include Muslim as a category while everything else is done by some notion of race?
2/14/2011 5:04:19 AM
2/14/2011 8:15:00 AM
^ so true.
2/14/2011 8:32:20 AM
^^This applies to University level education as well. I wouldn't be surprised if this is why we have stupid ass attendance policies.
2/14/2011 8:45:30 AM
2/14/2011 1:51:15 PM
^ but in those other countries, their achievement gaps are based around those cultural/heritage differences. It's the same way sunnis/shiites hate each other, because the minority group feels discriminated against (and they may be).Obviously the goal of VDARE is to confuse the issue with their poor analysis, but all that chart shows is that we have lots of room for improvement.Just because the immigrants that have to come here on airplanes and the entrenched majority group is doing well doesn't mean there aren't fundamental flaws in our system.
2/14/2011 2:29:27 PM
2/14/2011 6:15:04 PM
2/14/2011 7:07:21 PM
2/14/2011 7:20:05 PM
That's what I always thought. Once you break down the numbers though, you can see that any large employer (50-100+, I'd say) has an incentive to purchase a group plan. Would you rather pay someone 10,000 in wages over a year which is still taxed, or pay 10,000 dollars worth of health care that you don't have to pay taxes on? Large businesses stand to save a very substantial amount under the current tax code.
2/14/2011 10:41:04 PM
2/14/2011 11:06:53 PM
Back in HS, it was way easier to cheat in honors or AP classes and if caught, nothing happened, because you were going to go to college.....now for the standard classes, not so much......I mean in some cases it was obvious cheating and the teacher did nothing because it might hurt his/her chances in getting into a good college.
2/14/2011 11:18:30 PM
You're right, health care comes out of pretax income. I guess I was thrown off by it being described as a "write off".
2/14/2011 11:21:49 PM
Yep, for the life of me, I can't figure out why divorcing healthcare from employment (or rather, getting rid of the tax structure that causes this) wasn't really brought to the table during all the healthcare debate.
2/14/2011 11:26:30 PM
I imagine one of the main drawbacks would be the large number of people who would no longer have healthcare would probably be a bit upset.
2/14/2011 11:28:37 PM
^^ It was. There were two options proposed: the democrats opposed putting individuals on equal footing with employers (they both get the tax cut) because it was a tax cut for the rich while the republicans opposed taxing employer provided healthcare because it was a tax increase on employers during a recession.
2/15/2011 1:28:52 AM
2/15/2011 2:29:20 AM
I'm having a hard time coming to terms with why conservatives/libertarians itt are opposing#1) Taxing employers less#2) Caring one iota how they choose to conduct businessI don't see how divorcing insurance from the employer helps much. If I lose my job, having the ability to continue paying my insurance doesn't look like such a grand benefit when the income stream dries up.
2/15/2011 6:24:23 AM
2/15/2011 8:05:10 AM
^Couldn't your end result be just as well achieved by someone simply burning $800 when they are employed?
2/15/2011 9:56:07 AM
2/15/2011 10:37:34 AM
^^^ True that. Most people don't understand the fragility of their employer sponsored health insurance. It really isn't insurance, and it's amazing what they can get away with. There are government mandates that they may, for instance, have to continue to offer the same plan to the individual after leaving but then they can just charge whatever they want at that point, so FML, what good did that do.You could make the argument (and I'm sure the companies see it this way) that loosing employment correlates with having health issues. But insurance companies acting in their own self-interest shouldn't be surprising. I mean, if they can drop you when a life event happens, then why bother paying when someone gets severely sick in the first place, right? This is all simply absurdity.^^ That seems... pretty irrelevant
2/15/2011 12:11:39 PM
2/15/2011 12:12:44 PM
2/15/2011 1:00:29 PM
2/15/2011 3:22:07 PM
2/15/2011 5:11:51 PM