I volunteer with the working poor and unemployed at my church. \
Yes, we don't live in huts and we are not living like the poor folks in Ethiopia but I have to wonder, is that now some sort of standard we are aspiring to before we solve any of our problems? Are we really saying we want children to have bloated stomaches and flies in their eyes before we deal with childhood hunger or food insecurity? why do we have a rush to the bottom?
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I work with the food pantry as well, and no I don't go around judging them. You can TELL that it doesn't occur to them. My point is rather that we need to invest in educating young people so they CAN think this way-oh and stop smoking too as that's where a ton of cash goes in 90% of the families we help. Many of them grew up in a lifestyle of government/charity support and think it's normal, and we can't continue to support that indefinitely as a society- esp. as most of these families have many children.
We're also not saying that we have to be in Ethiopia like conditions but rather that it's ridiculous to refer to people with big screen TVs, xboxes, and air conditioning as living in poverty. I read a news article the other day about a man who had been to a casino, won $10,000, and was robbed of it in the parking lot of his government subsidized apartment. His son was railing against the government because the security cameras in the building weren't working - completely oblivious to how ridiculous it was for his father to be at the casino to begin with.