Saturday, May 17, 2014

An Essay on Poverty

     I have never considered myself an academician. Throughout different parts of my life I have had desires to obtain the higher degrees. Throughout my life’s path there has always been this one sincere desire to know more. From a very young age when I began to read the fiction novels, not of the masters, but those of the horror and fantasy writers like Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Tolkien and Lewis. This voracious desire to read led me to the great writers, Hemingway, Salinger, Fitzgerald, Kerouac and others. Although the reading had led me to discover who I was becoming, they did not call me to look at the world around me. Looking at the world around me came from my desire to actually live my life. It is this University of Life that has brought me the “higher” degrees that I had dreamed of in my younger days.

     What does all that have to do with poverty you ask? Well in my time in the UL I have come in contact with many impoverished people. I believe that one of the greatest problems we face in this country today is poverty. There are many theories on how to vanquish poverty. The Neo-Left would have us throw off the shackles of capitalism so that all of could share equally in the great harvest that is the American dream. The Righteous-Right would have us create opportunities for all of us to get up and go to work and invest ourselves in creating that great harvest. I am however not convinced that either of these options will in fact help in the repair of a nation that is not so slowly becoming a nation of the impoverished.

     So what then is the answer? As with most problems in the world the symptoms are not the problem the problem is the problem. So in my studies in life as I work and live with the impoverished, I have found that for the most part there are two type of impoverished people. When we can help people to identify what type of person they are, then they can begin to change their circumstances. The two types of the impoverished are the poor in pocket and the poor in heart.

The Poor in Pocket

     The poor in pocket are perhaps the largest group of the impoverished. I relate most closely with this group of people perhaps because I too am part of the poor in pocket. This group, as Jesus predicted, has always been with us. This group has only expanded in the aftermath of the economic collapse that reached a crescendo in 2008. This is a group of people that has been marginalized by the Neo-Left because they don’t fit the image that is needed to push their true agenda which is to collapse capitalism and instill a socialistic order. This group is ignored by the Righteous-Right because they appear to be able to help themselves if they would just work a little harder or just not be so lazy.

      The big problem with the poor in pocket is that they are the working poor. The working poor are not going to be helped by raising their wages, which is a very popular idea right now. They will not be helped by getting more jobs. This group needs two things that will help them to step out of their poverty. The first thing they need is education. Now I lean toward a Liberal education, by that I mean a broad education not necessarily a job training education. I feel that a liberal education broadens the mind and helps to create people that are thinkers not drones. The second thing that most of the working poor could use is free medical for their children, and access to good healthy food.

     What hurts the working poor and keeps them from gaining access to programs that already exist is that they make too much money. So they are trapped. This trap keeps them from qualifying for federal, state, and local assistance. It creates in them a struggle to stay financially where they are hoping that perhaps they will get a raise or that a better job will come along.  Or it creates in them the second group of the impoverished.

The Poor in Heart

     The poor in heart are much more difficult to help. They are in need of a change of heart and a change of mind. The easy way to “fix” this group is to remove all help and aid. That however would only cause desperate measures and riots from a group of people that have made careers out being impoverished. Removing the aid would create in them a desperate need to survive, however because they are so entrenched in a system that keeps and enslaves them in their mind and heart they would actually not rise to the occasion but they would wither and die. Now to some in Righteous-Right that would be an acceptable outcome. To the Neo-Left this group is fodder for the cannons. Mostly minority by race, this group is in fact the poster child used to make the white wealthy feel guilty and to continue to pour money into systems that are actually enslaving the group making these well-meaning liberals the new plantation owners of this generation.  

     This group, the poor in heart, unfortunately live up to their stereotypes. They are the people that have no source of income save the welfare that they receive and will move around the country to take advantage of states that have easier or “better” systems of assistance. They buy all of their foods using food stamps and although they do not eat as well as the middle class or the rich they eat far better than the working poor. Most of the frustration you hear about this group comes from the working poor simply because they cannot receive the same assistance that the poor in heart receive.

     So what is the answer for this group? That is a tougher question. They don’t need a hand up, they don’t need a better education. What they need is a change of societal acceptability. Fraud needs to be curtailed not by jail time, that would only overwhelm our prison systems but by enforcing the standards that are already in the system. This group needs a change of heart, they need to understand that they are worthy humans capable of great and wonderful things. They need to understand that their financial status does not define who they are.

The Big Picture

     In this essay I do not attempt to solve the problem of poverty. I do not come to you like Jonathan Swift with a Modest Proposal. I do come to you and hope that you can better understand that the problem of poverty is only partially a problem of finance. If we do as the Neo-Left ask us to do the poor in the heart will become the majority ruled by an elite class. If we do as the Righteous-Right proclaim there will be conflict and wars and rumors of wars. So the answer does not rest in the hands of the political pundits or their croneys. The answer rests in the hands of the writers and educators, the priest and the preacher. We must change the hearts of men so that they strive to better themselves not because they can make more money but so they can make a difference. Our heroes need to be those that look out for the needs of others more than the needs of themselves. Our heroes do not need to be defined by their G6 or the size of the Escalade, 0ur heroes need to be the Lover’s not the famous.
 
- The Pastor

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