Posted on 01/19/2014 10:32:10 AM PST by Captain Peter Blood
It was 1964 and I was a liberal confident that society could be greatly improved by large infusions of money.
With all the talk currently being bruited about the 50th anniversary of the war on poverty, I am reminded that for a year, between 1964 and 1965, I was the director of the antipoverty program of Pulaski County, Ark., which included Little Rock, the adjoining city of North Little Rock and the surrounding rural area. I was then 27 years old, appropriately left-wing, and confident that society could be greatly improved with the help of large infusions of money and the serious thinking of people like myself.
(Excerpt) Read more at investorvillage.com ...
Do you know who Joseph Epstein is? No. Have you read anything else by Joseph Epstein? No.
That’s about right. The calculator at dollartimes.com shows $74,300 or thereabouts. Definitely not a shabby salary, especially for someone with virtually no qualifications for the position.
He learned little or nothing—people still are trying to force their way of thinking on to the poor. Poverty isn’t about lack of money—its a state of mind. Poor people do not think like rich people. To them its all instant gratification—thinking they can buy happyness. Buy things—TV sets, Big Screen, Music systems, feel good drugs, flashy clothes Bling, colorful cars—etc... I do not blame them. It is a different way of thinking—they can not or will not defer pleasure.
What this guy probably didn’t realize was that Trotsky probably never even paid for a meal to begin with, a la Hillary and Bill.
The gist of the article seems to be: Like Obama, I was unqualified, I didn’t know what I was doing, I worked there for a couple of months, I gave up, I never checked back, anti-poverty programs in the US are hopeless.
1965. So much for the current myth of an intact black family before the War on Poverty.
I do not know anything about Mr. Epstein except he is a writer.
Epstein is one of the finest conservative thinkers we’ve got today. Publishes often in the WSJ.
"The poor used legal aid, not to sue the city and the school board, as political-minded antipoverty workers had hoped, but mainly to sue one another:"...
...We really don't want to help the poor but enable them to harass state and local government with lawsuits...
So should I take that piece he wrote as some kind witty writing? If it was it wasn’t very clever or sophisticated.
Also I should assume he gave up his youthful Leftist ways and found conservatism which in itself is certainly not unheard of.
Was this the same Epstein who was so leftwing that when he ate in a small restaurant & left a 45 cent tip, his colleague chided him, “You do know, Joe, that Trotsky never tipped.”
“You’re right”, he replied and picked his coins up off the table.
The "root" cause of all problems in the world today is sin. Period.
Poverty is many times (but not always) a consequence of other sins: sexual immorality, debauchery, drunkenness, idolatry, fornication, sloth, etc.
The solution to sin is Christ.
I would rather subsidize a woman suing for child support than have my money replace that the father should be paying.
That, too me, is a proper use of legal aid.
So is someone suing for debt collections, because they should be repaid.
Strikes me as dishonest.
It was in the Saturday edition of The Wall Street Journal, editorial page. Look it up. I subscribe to the Journal and that is where I saw it. I could not get a link to the Journal but found the article posted somewhere else.
Nobody at the time was much of an expert on poverty.
This same folly of the elite hobbles our nation to this day. Somehow liberal, politically inclined people are convinced that somebody who writes and article or two, or gives a speech, is an expert. But they ignore all the people who actually are experts.
That's why when confronted with a leaking oil well the President suggested some academics to lead an effort to solve the problem. A better choice would have been some guys from Texas who had actually worked on sealing oil wells. But few politicians even know anybody that does that kind of work.
And that's why most anti-poverty and jobs programs fail too. Bureaucrats, lawyers, and teachers rarely have the mindset necessary to create jobs and reduce poverty. That's something that business owners and entrepreneurs do.
I believe you, of course. But I would credit the linked source and mention the WSJ connection in the comment. Just a nicety -- not calling for disciplinary action :)
Well the reason I could not is that the article would not come up as I do not subscribe to the Digital edition and also from the Free Republic List we cannot link directly to the WSJ.
Copy the WSJ article's title and paste it into the Google search bar. The entire article will show in the results for non-subscribers through an agreement between WSJ and Google. Again, I was only suggesting that the link cited be listed.
Now, go and enjoy the rest of MLK Day before it's too late!
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