It seems as though the book "The Working Poor," was leading us the reader somewhere. With hundreds of pages detailing how miserable life is, and how stupid poor people are, etc, etc. The only feasible ending, seemed to be to make the ending lighthearted and show that there is hope. The author, David Shipler, however, decided to go the opposite route and ended the book saying that we should "Be ashamed." This single phrase pretty much summed up the whole book. It seems as though the author's main point of the book is to shame the readers. To shame the readers into thinking that life in America his horrible for poor people, and there's rich capitalists that are going around taking advantage of everyone against their wills. We should all be ashamed of ourselves for allowing this to happen, is the overall theme of the book. But that's the thing, should "WE" be ashamed because other people are stupid/poor/lazy? Shipler wants the reader to feel bad because people become drug addicts. He wants people to feel bad that not everyone's motivated to work hard. He wants everyone to feel bad that they've got an extra helping of rice on their plates, while a mother with fourteen kids, has to live off government welfare.
The book details so many people who are poor, and who only survive off of government care, welfare, healthcare, etc. The author, however, is trying to guilt the reader to believe that even though these poor people's rent is paid for, even though they get free food (for doing nothing) that we should still give them more, so they can be even wealthier and healthier poor people, and still not have to lift a single finger.
The main thing that I've gotten from this book is that there are poor people in America. Poor people tend to have lots of kids, they tend to be uneducated, they tend to be minorities, and the patterns seem to persist through the generations.
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Mid-Term Website
Link to the Mid-Term website that I needed to create.
http://www.wix.com/michaelruehrwein/journalisticessay
http://www.wix.com/michaelruehrwein/journalisticessay
Friday, October 15, 2010
Next Part of the book.
I never knew that so many people were molested as children. In the book, The Working Poor, the author gives a statistic that says that as high as 1 in 4 people in a low income family have been molested. Case in point, the author quotes a little girl who is surprised when her case worker hadn't been raped, the little girl had assumed everyone had been raped. According to latest statistics, there are around 50 million Americans considered, 'low income' if we do the math with the afore mentioned statistics, this means that 12.5 million Americans have been molested as children. Additionally this means that a seperate 12.5 million Americans have molested someone. Holy Shit! Those are high numbers.
This part of the book we read really made poor people seem sub-human. As if all they do is rape or be raped by one another. Although it did seem to give a reason for so many people being poor. I mean, who could expect someone to work hard, or have goals, when they've been raped since ten years old.
This book seems to be a literary form of the movie Prescious. Poor begets poor, and molestation begets molestation?
This part of the book we read really made poor people seem sub-human. As if all they do is rape or be raped by one another. Although it did seem to give a reason for so many people being poor. I mean, who could expect someone to work hard, or have goals, when they've been raped since ten years old.
This book seems to be a literary form of the movie Prescious. Poor begets poor, and molestation begets molestation?
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