Tagged with poverty RSS

I just got a call saying the government was giving me $7,000!

And the reason was something like “you pay your taxes on time”—which immediately made me suspicious, because I don’t pay taxes*—but I couldn’t understand, because the woman’s accent was so thick. Anyway, so the woman continued about not using the money on illegal things (how would she know?) and as I was listening, I was thinking, “She’s going to ask me for my bank account number. I can feel it. This is, of course, a scam—because my government would never give me this money.” I kept listening, though, because some part of me wanted a small miracle to happen in my bank account. But when the lady on the phone said “this is once in a lifetime,” I finally snapped out of my delusions and became rational. I told her I wasn’t interested and she hung up on me. How rude.

*I make so little as a grad student (and pay so, so much of it out in student fees and health insurance) that last year I qualified for not one but two credits (“Making Work Pay” and “Earned Income Credit”) from the government. That’s right: the government is paying me (a pittance) to be so poor. An approximation goes like this: I earn $9,000 a year and have to pay about $1500 in yearly mandatory (and absolutely crappy) healthcare from Pearson & Pearson and then I have to pay about $2,000 in yearly student fees. Which leaves me with less than $6,000 to live on. Of course I have loans.

Our system is broken at every level. More than 25 million Americans are unemployed. More than 50 million live without health insurance. And perhaps 100 million Americans are mired in poverty, using realistic measures. Yet the fat cats continue to get tax breaks and reap billions while politicians compete to turn the austerity screws on all of us. At some point the number of people occupying Wall Street – whether that’s five thousand, ten thousand or fifty thousand – will force the powers that be to offer concessions. No one can say how many people it will take or even how things will change exactly, but there is a real potential for bypassing a corrupt political process and to begin realizing a society based on human needs not hedge fund profits.

azspot:

Deep Poverty on the Rise
azspot:

Pat Bagley

Poverty looks grim to grown people; still more so to children: they have not much idea of industrious, working, respectable poverty; they think of the word only as connected with ragged clothes, scanty food, fireless grates, rude manners, and debasing vices: poverty for me was synonymous with degradation.

‘No; I should not like to belong to poor people,’ was my reply.

‘Not even if they were kind to you?’

I shook my head: I could not see how poor people had the means of being kind; and then to learn to speak like them, to adopt their manners, to be uneducated, to grow up like one of the poor women I saw sometimes nursing their children or washing their clothes at the cottage doors of the village of Gateshead: no, I was not heroic enough to purchase liberty at the price of caste.

Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre

I finally started reading Jane Eyre, which was on my list of things I was embarrassed not to have read (also on the list: The Odyssey, which I just finished). I’m already in love with the book for Jane’s views on poverty because I do not think these views are relegated to children. Americans are still deeply concerned with being poor—and as GOOD noted, with being thought of as taking a government handout.

Mlle Hazelwood

Reader & Writer, Master of Fine Arts, Collaborator on Structure and Style, a new poetry blog.

 

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