‘Deep Poverty’
The Age-Old Tradition of Not Caring
By Lawrence Davidson
October 06, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - In the assessment
of poverty in the United States there is a category known as “deep
poverty,” defined in a recent article in the Philadelphia Inquirer
as: “income of 50% or less of the poverty rate.” In other words, the
current poverty level income for a U.S. family of four is $24,000 a
year, which means that the same family receiving only $12,000 is in
deep poverty. At this level, hopelessness prevails and one’s
day-to-day goal is just staying alive.
The deep poverty rate for the United States as a whole is 6.8
percent of the population. Using the rounded-off 2014 census figure
of 322 million residents, that comes to about 22 million men, women
and children in deep poverty. This is a pretty shocking figure for
what most regard as the richest country on earth.
It should come as no surprise that, according to the
article, “deep poverty increased nationwide after 1996, when the
welfare system was changed. … The number of people on cash welfare
was drastically reduced and the amount of time people could receive
benefits was limited.” This was a public policy decision taken by
elected officials at the national level. All at once, the “safety
net” for the poor, and particularly for those at this deep level of
poverty, all but disappeared.
Tradition of Not Caring
The Inquirer article of Sept. 30 goes on to state
that “most Americans cannot fathom the level of privation that deep
poverty represents.”
I am not sure this is the case. Deep poverty is
very visible. Consider that at present 81 percent of Americans live
in urban environments. In such environments it is easy to encounter
the homeless and the beggers, most of whom are in deep poverty. So
ubiquitous are they that a Hollywood movie has recently been made
about them, entitled “Time Out of Mind” and starring Richard Gere.
Here is a quote from the Philadelphia Inquirer’s
Oct. 2 film review, “People talk on cell phones, run for the bus,
head for meals – almost uniformly indifferent” to the fate of the
homeless man Gere portrays.
Also keep in mind that it was not that long ago
that people had older relatives who lived through the Great
Depression, a time when deep poverty was even more visible. That
story is a big part of the nation’s modern history.
Rather than pretending that Americans “cannot
fathom” deep poverty, it is better to argue that popular perception
is more complex. When the non-poor see that homeless person, they
probably feel a bit of worry and disgust all at once. In the end,
they turn aside and pretend not to see. And this denotes a
collective sentiment of not caring enough about the problem to push
for the policies needed to correct it – policies which go way beyond
welfare.
Why would this be the case? Here are a couple of
reasons:
First, there is the fact that the people of the
United States, perhaps more than any other Western country, are
still influenced by the primitive outlook of Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Century capitalism. In those centuries both the middle
and upper classes favored government restricted to three functions:
1. defense of the realm; 2. police, courts and the enforcement of
contracts; 3. and upholding the sanctity of private property. Care
for the poor was the responsibility of the churches.
This entire setup was designed to maximize
individual freedom by keeping government small in both power and
scope. Maintaining this status would also hold taxes down to a
minimum.
You can easily see this attitude toward government
in the ideology of the Tea Party and the conservative politicians
who cater to that group’s complaints. For instance, take the reason
given by Ben Shapiro, a journalist and Tea Party advocate, why the
Republican Party was successful in the 2010 congressional elections:
“In 2010, Republicans soared to historic victory because the
much-maligned Tea Party spearheaded mass resistance to Obama’s
takeover of the healthcare industry.”
The statement is a gross exaggeration, at least as
to the claim that the government had taken over the healthcare
industry. It did no such thing, but rather moved to work with
private insurance companies so as to facilitate healthcare for the
poor and uninsured. However, spending tax money on the poor only fed
into the paranoia over big government that afflicts Shapiro and his
lot.
Another angle on this sentiment can be found in
the declaration of Michele Bachmann, another Tea Party advocate,
that the Tea Party “stands for the fact that we are taxed enough
already.” This statement is misleading at best. While it is true
that those of moderate or low income are often highly taxed, those
of high income are definitely not. In the U.S., the wealthy pay
lower taxes than those of moderate income.
Finally, Elizabeth Warren, a liberal Democrat, has
correctly concluded that the Tea Party is dedicated to “unraveling
just about everything the federal government had ever built.” That
is straight out of the playbook of primitive Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Century capitalism.
Looking Out for Number One
There is a second reason why many non-poor
Americans do not actively concern themselves with poverty, deep or
not, and that has to do with what I call “natural localness” – the
generic tendency for all of us to concentrate foremost on our local
sphere. Thus, caring, like charity, begins at home and usually does
not go far beyond it.
We care for our family and friends, sometimes
(though not always) for our neighbors, local co-religionists,
co-workers or others in local social groups we might identify with.
But we rarely actively care about strangers.
The primitive, yet still extant, capitalist
ideology referred to above comes in here and reinforces this space
between us and the stranger who happens to also be poor. This
ideology teaches that poverty is a personal failing with moral
implications. That is, if you are poor, it is your fault. It is
because you are lazy and otherwise morally deficient.
The possibility that poverty, and particularly
deep poverty, could be a structural problem of both capitalist and
racial or ethnically biased economies is never considered in this
interpretation. And, tax-wise, it is cheaper to blame the victim in
this case, than pay out adequate welfare.
The argument given here, that not caring is an
age-old tradition, should not be taken to mean that there are no
individuals out there who do in fact actively care and advocate for
strangers who are poor, oppressed and otherwise mistreated. These
folks do exist.
There are individuals who actively advocate for
the ultimate strangers – people suffering on other continents. There
are even those who dedicate their lives to giving solace to
incarcerated murderers. The point is that these folks are a small
minority amidst a sea of ultimate indifference. They are, if you
will, counter-cultural, despite occasionally getting good press.
It might be the case that we could, over time,
teach the nation’s youth to be more caring of strangers in need.
After all, being human means that we are not necessarily slaves to
evolution-rooted tendencies like natural localness. But to do this
would be to challenge tradition and wage a political struggle
against narrow-minded school boards.
So, the odds are against it. It is easier to go
with the indifference that just comes naturally.
Lawrence Davidson is a retired professor of
history from West Chester University in West Chester PA. His
academic research focused on the history of American foreign
relations with the Middle East. He taught courses in Middle East
history, the history of science and modern European intellectual
history.
http://www.tothepointanalyses.com/