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dipsydoodle

(42,239 posts)
Thu Feb 16, 2012, 06:19 AM Feb 2012

Instead of being disgusted by poverty, we are disgusted by poor people themselves

She is there whenever I go the shops. Every time I think she can't get any more skeletal, she manages it. Wild eyes staring in different directions, she must have been pretty once. I try not to look, for she is often aggressive. Sometimes, though, she is in my face and asking me to go into the shop, from which she has been banned, to buy her something. A scratchcard. She feels lucky. "Maybe some food?" I suggest pointlessly, but food is not what she craves. Food is not crack. Or luck. She has already lost every lottery going.

An addict is the author of their own misfortune. Her poverty is self-inflicted. All these hopeless people: where do they all come from? It is, of course, possible never to really see them, as their distress is so distressing. Who needs it? Poverty, we are often told, is not "actual", because people have TVs. This gradual erosion of empathy is the triumph of an economic climate in which everyone, addicted or not, is personally responsible for their own lack of achievement. Poor people are not simply people like us, but with less money: they are an entirely different species. Their poverty is a personal failing. They have let themselves go. This now applies not just to individuals but to entire countries. Look at the Greeks! What were they thinking with their pensions and minimum wage? That they were like us? Out of the flames, they are now told to rise, phoenix–like, by a rich political elite. Perhaps they can grow money on trees?

Meanwhile, in the US, as this week's shocking Panorama showed, people are living in tents or underground in drains. These ugly people, with ulcers, hernias and bad teeth, are the flipside of the American dream. Trees twist through abandoned civic buildings and factories, while the Republican candidates, an ID parade of Grecian 2000 suspects, bang on about tax cuts for the 1% who own a fifth of America's wealth. To see the Grapes of Wrath recast among post-apocalyptic cityscapes is scary. Huge cognitive dissonance is required to cheerlead for the rich while 47 million citizens live in conditions close to those in the developing world.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/feb/16/suzanne-moore-disgusted-by-poor

edit to add : Stockholmer has posted the program referred to here : http://www.democraticunderground.com/101712299

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Instead of being disgusted by poverty, we are disgusted by poor people themselves (Original Post) dipsydoodle Feb 2012 OP
We shouldn't be disgusted by poverty, either Scootaloo Feb 2012 #1
 

Scootaloo

(25,699 posts)
1. We shouldn't be disgusted by poverty, either
Thu Feb 16, 2012, 06:34 AM
Feb 2012

What is disgusting is that this situation exists amid some of the greatest wealth mankind has ever known - and knowing that the acquisition of that wealth contributes to poverty's spread.

Poverty is simply a symptom of a much worse disease. Curse the disease - exploitation in the name of greed - and the symptom can be treated. Allow the disease to persist and poverty will only grow worse, no matter what treatments you try to give it.

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