look at what this kid did:http://abcnews.go.com/Business/Economy/story?id=4298321&page=1
2/19/2008 10:28:40 AM
I'd say 50% out of purely laziness35% due to lack of opportunity / knowing any better to strive 15% victim of circumstance (accidents, tramatized, mentally fucked up)
2/19/2008 10:35:02 AM
2/19/2008 10:53:21 AM
Interesting story. I believe you can pull yourself up if you really want to, and if you're a single, able-bodied man with no children you have no excuse. A single mom who has made some bad choices is facing a different situation though.But let's not pretend he's on the same playing field as the average bum. He had a good upbringing (I assume) and graduated from college. If he actually had a druggy mom and alcoholic dad, his story would be remarkable. Even if he never told anyone, his intellect would get noticed and come across in interviews. Things he takes for granted (what most of us would consider 'common sense' because our parents taught us that) might not come as easily to less educated people with a tumultuous childhood.
2/19/2008 10:55:28 AM
^Agreed. Saying that he was disadvantaged because he was brought up in a well-off family with budget knowledge is just silly. To many middle-class people, budgeting and savings are very common sense things, and it is assumed that savings happens, while many families who have seen nothing but poverty may have never heard or seen anything about budgeting and savings...Not to say that they couldn't learn it in a day if they tried, but I'm just saying this guy had more of an advantage than he claims.[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 11:11 AM. Reason : .]
2/19/2008 10:58:48 AM
I agree 100% with his conclusions from his experiment. I can't say much about poverty in other countries, but in America, there are very few excuses to be poor. My parents came to the U.S. with $0 dollars and no gym bag... as political refugees and genocide targets after the Vietnam war. Look at where they are now. They own homes, land, and a farming business.It has little to do with education. Look at my parents. They couldn't speak a lick of english for their first 5 years in America. It has more to do with will, drive, passion, (insert your motivational word of choice here)...[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 11:10 AM. Reason : just do it]
2/19/2008 11:07:09 AM
I heard this on Boortz the other day and I wholly agree with the premise. Our society practically teaches people to be reliant on others/government instead of taking their own destiney and being responsible for it...From "The Bad Boy of Baltimore" a biography of H L Mencken "By the mid-1930's, thanks to the New Deal, all that self-reliance had changed, prompting Mencken to declare: 'There is no genuine justice in any scheme of feeding and coddling the loafer whose only ponderable energies are devoted wholly to reproduction. Nine-tenths of the rights he bellows for are really privileges and he does nothing to deserve them.' Despite the billions spent on an individual, 'he can be lifted transiently but always slips back again.' Thus, the New Deal had been 'the most stupendous digenetic enterprise ever undertaken by man.... We not only acquired a vast population of morons, we have inculcated all morons, old or young, with the doctrine that the decent and industrious people of the country are bound to support them for all time. The effects of that doctrine are bound to be disastrous soon or late.'When someone asked, "And what, Mr. Mencken, would you do about the unemployed?" He looked up with a bland expression. "We could start by taking away their vote," he said, deadpan. Mencken was not surprised when the majority disagreed. "There can be nothing even remotely approaching a rational solution of the fundamental national problems until we face them in a realistic spirit," he later reflected, and that was impossible so long as educated Americans remained responsive "to the Roosevelt buncombe."
2/19/2008 11:17:59 AM
it also doesn't help when we also live in an "instant gratification" society leaning heavily on fast food, tv, and credit cards and cell phoneshumans just can't get enough[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 11:30 AM. Reason : ]
2/19/2008 11:20:38 AM
I don't know what most people consider "poor" but this guy was still possibly under the poverty line, and he certainly wasn't well off or middle class by any means. Sure, if a healthy single man with no kids can't afford to support himself then it's probably laziness. But what if he had kids? It doesn't mention health insurance, what if he got injured or ill?
2/19/2008 11:34:36 AM
2/19/2008 11:36:50 AM
there's nothing wrong with instant gratification as long as personal responsibility comes along with it.
2/19/2008 12:17:36 PM
2/19/2008 12:23:47 PM
^what do you expect him to do, die for a principle?
2/19/2008 12:27:12 PM
Awesome thread title.Much prefer it to "Why are people poor?"
2/19/2008 12:33:48 PM
There is a direct correlation to poor people and laziness. However, some people with money are lazy too because they had money all their life and never had to work for much of anything.
2/19/2008 12:48:55 PM
Correlations occur between two variables, not to two variables.One-week ban on using big words for you![Edited on February 19, 2008 at 12:56 PM. Reason : 2 or more]
2/19/2008 12:55:19 PM
Yeah I've done a derivation of this experiment myself. In one of the most expensive areas in the country, I lived off of what amounted to minimum wage + food stamps for about a year. The reality is that if you work hard, save every penny you can and watch your expenses, it is very possible to get out of poverty quickly. And contrary to what others will tell you, you CAN live off of minimum wage even in expensive areas.I almost advocate a forced savings plan (separate from SS) for low-income workers, since as a group it seems like they stubbornly refuse any type of financial planning or advice. But it clashes too much with my libertarian roots.[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 1:21 PM. Reason : 2]
2/19/2008 1:12:15 PM
2/19/2008 1:15:59 PM
^^ That's tough... maybe not a forced savings plan, but a pay as you go welfare program. If you receive government aid, then your wages get garnished and put into an account for that person. I think it is completely fair as a society to say that we won't support you forever. You can have now, but you have to work for tomorrow.[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 1:16 PM. Reason : .]
2/19/2008 1:16:11 PM
Why not reduce the standard deduction for those who choose not to participate in any kind of retirement savings?"Pay now since you'll cost later."
2/19/2008 1:22:32 PM
because that is socialist. its not up the government to take care of your ass. it is up to YOU! take care of your own shit.
2/19/2008 1:26:42 PM
Some are. Some are not.
2/19/2008 1:36:35 PM
^^so what exactly IS the role of government?
2/19/2008 1:42:08 PM
2/19/2008 1:48:59 PM
2/19/2008 2:18:06 PM
2/19/2008 2:25:02 PM
2/19/2008 2:25:46 PM
^^that actually doesn't sound like a terrible idea. it might hurt in the short term as far as paying for social security. but i think the idea is worthy of investigation.[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 2:28 PM. Reason : it would have to have a good name. forced savings is not the most immediately attractive idea.]
2/19/2008 2:28:04 PM
Also, double the tax penalty for making early withdrawals from 401(k)s except in hardship withdrawal circumstances.
2/19/2008 2:32:10 PM
I forgot to add my serious 2 cents.
2/19/2008 2:32:31 PM
i still say this thread would be more viable if it was "are poor people lazy and/or not intelligent"i have met many people working lowly service jobs and members of the working poor who honestly just are not smart enough to get themselves after poverty. No i do not think its the governments job to redistribute wealth necessarily but we shouldn't forget that not everyone is a bright college bound student.Going back to on Dabirds statement idealistically i agree. From my libertarian viewpoint i think gov't needs to be hands off and shouldn't tell me what to do with my hard earned money. Unfortunately a lot of people are not responsible or smart enough to handle this. If you look back in history this was Hoover's attitude during the start of the great depression; "Gov't should not get involved and the capitalistic market will correct itself." Look what happened there.... FDR took over put the income tax on steroids and over 50 years the government has become increasingly a big safety hammock instead of safety net for those not smart or too lazy to achieve.Gov't needs to point people in the right direction (i.e tax breaks, credits) but not necessarily micro-mange everything for people. [Edited on February 19, 2008 at 2:41 PM. Reason : a][Edited on February 19, 2008 at 2:44 PM. Reason : aa]
2/19/2008 2:37:06 PM
not everyone can be a Betaam i rite HUR?
2/19/2008 2:38:49 PM
huh?
2/19/2008 2:41:59 PM
its a personality thing some people refuse to do anything for themselves these people of course end of being poor and thus cause the lazy poor stereotype. some people have a run of bad luck. like a house burning down or something that causes them to lose everything they have. The people who have the will to move on and rebuild don't stay poor long enough to change this stereotype and as such the stereotype is propogated.
2/19/2008 2:45:20 PM
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!I'm glad SOMEONE finally debunked that shitty "experiment" that Barbara Enreich did and then wrote this huge, overly-dramatic book about. "Nickel and Dimed" if you've ever heard of it. If you read what Barbara did, she kept intentionaly sabotaging herself, by shirking away from the best jobs she could get, or when she finally did get some money, blowing it on pot, instead of using it to feed herself. The idea that anyone would make the exact same choices as she did in that situation is laughable.So, someone finally had the guts to put his ass on the line and debunk it. Even if he did have a safety net, doesn't matter. He actually did it, and that takes a lot of courage.
2/19/2008 3:55:39 PM
^ I think you underestimate the psychological effect of a safety net on someone's motivation.And if he got sick, he would have pretty much been screwed.The idea that motivated people can do well is not new. The trick is to get people to be motivated.
2/19/2008 5:26:27 PM
^^I read Nickel and Dimed, and I think it had a few interesting insights without being too offensive. Maybe more insights if you're completely new to the issue.I don't know much about this book, but I hope it's not just, "People are poor because they have bad attitudes and eat out instead of eating Rice-A-Roni." I mean, the life he painted was one of happiness in spite of tremendous sacrifice. I really hope there's a lot more to the book than that.I think most of us at one time or another have imagined how we would handle things if all of sudden the carpet was pulled out from under us. It's something I've thought about trying myself but would never do because homelessness is dangerous.Anyway, these experiments inevitably come off as shallow. If you agree with the "conclusions," you're likely to embrace the experiment. But if you want real insight, the real deal, it's best to look to people who did it for real, not somebody who just went out and pretended they were on a long camping trip.[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 5:43 PM. Reason : sss]
2/19/2008 5:43:07 PM
2/19/2008 5:48:46 PM
^For sure.Just being able to speak close to standard English can make a big difference.That alone is critical, and it concerns me that he didn't address that.He just kept reemphasizing having a good attitude and not getting a Cadillac with rims.
2/19/2008 6:02:45 PM
2/19/2008 6:32:01 PM
^You misunderstood his point. He's saying that it was easier for Adam Shepard to keep a good attitude and keep his spirits/motivation up because he knew that after a year, he could go back to his comfortable lifestyle and he knew that if something disastrous happened, he would have some amount of protection.I mean, "Look at me! I'm happy and having fun eating Rice-A-Roni with my new pals!" is a really shallow way of looking at the issue. It's easy to lose sight of your goal when you're stressed out/depressed.And he made a big mistake when he quit after only ten months because of a family illness. His super-fun adventure in poverty land came to a halt the instant real life came into play...[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 6:45 PM. Reason : sss]
2/19/2008 6:44:57 PM
Shit, I'd probably have more money now if I hadn't gone to college than I do now. At the very least I should have waited a couple of years and sorted my shit out rather than jumping right in.Look, in this country in this time period there is no excuse for being poor. I've got 2 jobs, not because I fucking have to have them to support myself, but because I want to buy nice shit and save up money. I'm not even driven by need in this case, I could easily live off of what I make at my primary job, but the 20 hours a week I put in at my other job will let me retire young enough to really enjoy it.I cannot fathom why it is that people with no education past the most basic (and frankly a HS education can be very worthwhile if you pay the fuck attention) or any skills to speak of (again, if you didn't have the brains to go to a university perhaps you should have taken some vocational training like apprenticing to a brick mason or taking welding classes) believe that they are entitle to a comfortable living when they spend more time sleeping than they do working (40 hrs/week vs. 56 hrs/week). The world doesn't owe you shit and there is opportunity aplenty if you are willing to look for it and you're willing to put in a little bit of effort.No, no everyone can make six figures as an architect, but there's no reason you can't make 40-50 grand by taking available overtime and having a weekend job.
2/19/2008 7:12:56 PM
2/19/2008 7:16:35 PM
I don't see how it can be anything but an indictment of the poor. I sometimes wonder if the people who claim to be so empathetic towards the homeless or the working poor have ever actually worked with them or along side them. I've had several shitty to mediocre jobs and I can tell you that the vast majority of the people I worked with in those jobs had no ambition past their current state. There's nothing wrong with that in and of itself, but if that's the position you choose to take then you don't get to whine about your state of affairs or demand that other people pay for your laziness or shitty decisions.
2/19/2008 7:24:07 PM
Alternatively, how about an economic system that doesn't require ambition? We have plenty of material wealth. There's no need to divide abundance based on favored personal qualities.That said, I'll agree that Americans are much better off than many humans. I could see the argument for economic growth in the developing world over revolution here.
2/19/2008 7:34:34 PM
2/19/2008 7:38:06 PM
2/19/2008 7:41:43 PM
I'd like to see THIS on college required reading lists instead of Nickel and Dimed.
2/19/2008 8:08:08 PM
how about both?
2/19/2008 8:11:51 PM
2/19/2008 8:13:56 PM