Page 1 of 7 12345 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 152
  1. #1
    Five Rings... Kori Ellis's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Post Count
    64,671
    COMMENTARY: What We REALLY Learned from Katrina
    http://www.woai.com/news/local/story...4-260B37108B97


    by Jim Forsyth, WOAI Newsradio

    We all saw the images of the poorest residents of New Orleans left helpless during Hurricane Katrina, and we were all told to think about the lessons we learned during that storm. Here’s one lesson I learned: Don’t be poor.

    I know that sounds flippant, but it isn’t. In fact, James Madison University researchers have come up with almost a guarantee that you won’t be poor in America. If you do the following four things, there is more than a 95% chance you will not live in poverty:

    1) Attend High School, Pay Attention, and Graduate. You notice, they didn’t say you have to do well in high school, just don't drop out. They didn’t say you have to attend Harvard, or even attend college at all. They didn’t say you have to make the honor roll, be on the football team, or in the band. Just be furniture. Show up and graduate.

    2) Don’t Engage in Criminal Activity. There is perhaps no more widespread and pernicious urban legend in America than the myth of the wealthy criminal, especially the myth of the wealthy drug dealer, hanging around the projects with all his bling, treating people with honest jobs as suckers. However, as economist Steven Levitt points out in his wonderful book “Freakonomics,” it’s the drug dealer who is the sucker. The overwhelming majority of drug dealers make far less than the minimum wage, with the added disincentive of being potentially killed or arrested. And of those handful who do manage to make real money in the drug trade, most don’t succeed using the ‘skills’ they grunt about on rap videos, but employing many of the same traits which would have probably made them successful in legitimate business. In thirty years as a reporter, I have been inside the homes of countless criminals, and I have yet to see one who lives as well as I do.

    3) Take ANY Job. Any employment manager will tell you that the biggest challenge is not finding people with skills, it’s finding people who understand that 9AM isn't the same as 9:30, and “I don’t feel like it” or "I'm tired" isn’t a suitable excuse to miss work. And, as the father of a 16 year old, I find it’s amazing how many jobs teenagers feel are ‘beneath’ them. No, I’m not making this up.

    4) Don’t Have Children Before You’re Married, and Don’t Get Married Until You’re At Least 21. Twenty years ago, this was a handicap for women only, now it will drag down everybody. You’ve come a long way, dude.

    Nothing in there about the color of your skin, what your daddy does for a living, whether you go to, in the trendy Texas political parlance, a 'high wealth' school, or, in former Senator Tom Daschle’s ludicrous phrase, whether you ‘won life’s lottery.’ In fact, all of the things on this list are voluntary activities which individuals themselves control. As Judge Tom Rickhoff, one of the most astute observers of human nature in this city, once told me, “most people are poor because they made bad choices.”

    Now, following these four rules won’ make you wealthy, far from it, but it will go a long ways toward insuring that when the Category Five comes toward you, you will control your own fate, and won’t be helplessly begging for rescue from a rooftop, or tossed to the wolves in the Superdome.

    After that, hard work, initiative, advanced skills or education, and yes, a certain amount of good luck does begin to come into play. As the vastly under-appreciated Midwestern humorist Max Schulman, the creator of Dobie Gillis, once replied when asked the secret to success, ”Get rich. Then sleep ‘til noon and screw ‘em all.”

  2. #2
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Post Count
    32,408
    I've posted this before, but I guess it bears repeating...

    ..Which brings us to the other big lie told about the poor in New Orleans: one that has yet to be addressed in the media, despite how easily it can be disproved by a mere five minutes worth of research. It is one repeated daily for the past eight weeks by conservative talk show hosts and columnists, and one to which I am exposed many times a day in my email inbox, thanks to the efforts of right wing louts without the seeming desire to do their homework. Namely, it is the argument that the reason 130,000 poor black folks were unable to escape the flooding was because they had grown dependent on the government to save them, thanks to the "welfare state," and that was why they lacked the money and cars to get out before disaster struck.

    In other words, liberal social policy had rendered the black poor unable or unwilling to work, content to collect a government check, and thus, had made them incapable of saving themselves. This lie -- and it is just that, not an exaggeration or simplification or overstatement, but a flat-out falsehood -- has been parroted by the likes of Rush Limbaugh, S[ean] Hannity, Bill O'Reilly and Charles Murray (of "Bell Curve" fame), not to mention such viciously self-loathing black conservatives as Star Parker, John McWhorter and the Rev. Jesse Lee Peterson, all despite the lack of evidence to sustain it, and the amazing amount of evidence, both contemporary and historical, to refute it.

    But of course the media, having long ago decided not to challenge the mainstream public's view of folks on welfare -- and indeed to collaborate with the framing of such persons by politicians of both major parties -- has done nothing to set the record straight, suggesting either that they are incredibly inept at research, or just as incredibly craven in their at udes towards the poorest of this nation's citizens.

    But the facts, however unsettling they may be for conservative mythmakers, are clear.

    To begin with, as of 2004, according to the Census Bureau, there were only 4600 households in all of New Orleans receiving cash welfare from the nation's principal aid program, TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, formerly Aid to Families With Dependent Children, or AFDC). That is not a misprint: 4600 out of a total of 130,000 households in the black community alone. Which means that even if every welfare receiving household in Orleans Parish had been black (which was not in fact the case), this would have represented only a little more than four percent of black households in the city.

    According to the same Census data, the average household size in a welfare receiving family in New Orleans is the same as the citywide average for non-recipients: roughly 3.5 persons. So the number of individuals receiving welfare in New Orleans, by the time of Katrina would have been about 16,000.

    Thus, even if we assume that all of the 130,000 persons left behind were poor, and that no persons receiving welfare managed to escape before the flooding with friends or family, this would mean that at most, perhaps twelve percent of the persons left behind (and whose faces we may have been seeing on national TV) would have been welfare recipients at all, let alone persons who had been rendered dependent on such benefits for long periods of time.

    And speaking of dependence, or the notion that the city's welfare recipients had grown content to sit back and collect government checks instead of doing for self, this hardly seems likely when you consider that the average annual income received from TANF, for those small numbers actually getting any such benefits at all, was only a little more than $2,800 per year, in New Orleans prior to the catastrophe.

    Indeed, such paltry amounts explain why most of the poor in New Orleans, far from being happy to receive so-called handouts, work whenever they can find steady employment, which admittedly, is not often the case.

    ...

    [F]olks in this community were almost nine times more likely to earn their pay than to receive government benefits. Forty percent of workers from the community worked full-time, and the average commute time for Ninth Ward workers was over 45 minutes each day, suggesting that the work ethic was quite common to the folks who lived there, irrespective of commonly held and utterly false stereotypes.

    Wise offers additional evidence that undercuts these commonly believed myths. He then moves on to the subject of public housing developments. It is here that Wise provides critical facts that are barely known. In the wake of Katrina, many commentators of the Charles Murray kind would have had us believe that public housing is the root of all evil. Once again, this is a simple story -- and a false one.

    In fact, the reality, including the relevant history, is much more complex:

    Likewise, in the mid-90s, several public housing developments participated in a national Jobs Program, funded by the Annie B. Casey Foundation: a successful effort that matched low-income black residents with businesses looking for employees. In the former St. Thomas development -- the first public housing "project" funded by the federal government under the Roosevelt Administration -- residents had started their own coffee shop and bookstore, and had created innovative teen pregnancy prevention and safe sex initiatives.

    When St. Thomas was torn down a few years ago, residents were told there would be mixed-use economic development in its place, and although they mourned for the loss of their neighborhood, many looked forward to participating actively in the economic lifeblood of the community. Then the city reneged on its promises and offered the land to Wal-Mart, which then placed a superstore on the property--the very store whose gun supply was looted during the flooding (an ironic turn of events if ever there was one). Poor folks wanted economic opportunity and jobs; the city's elite (black and white alike) gave them a gun supply shop.

    Bottom line: the stereotype of poor blacks in New Orleans (and elsewhere) as lazy and dependent on government is false. ...
    Arthur Silbar, Power Of Narrative


  3. #3
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Post Count
    154,406
    I thought it was "Don't live below sea level."

  4. #4
    Boring = 4 Rings SA210's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Post Count
    14,286
    I learned that just a couple of months after Katrina, that people have already stopped caring about poverty. It's not so much in the news anymore, so it's not important.

  5. #5
    Basketball Expertise spurster's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 1999
    Post Count
    4,132
    It's more important to cut taxes for the wealthy and the upper middle class. Oh, yes, and cut programs for the poor, that will show them.

  6. #6
    Seek True Love, within. bigzak25's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Post Count
    11,293
    it's important for people realize that they have to depend on themselves 1st, last, and foremost.

    and it's also important to remember to get the out of the way when they say a mutha of a hurricane is bearing down...

  7. #7
    Believe. George W. Bush's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Post Count
    103
    Who is this Katrina you guys talkin bout?

    She sounds like a real cat.

  8. #8
    Boring = 4 Rings SA210's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Post Count
    14,286
    it's important for people realize that they have to depend on themselves 1st, last, and foremost.

    and it's also important to remember to get the out of the way when they say a mutha of a hurricane is bearing down...

  9. #9
    Believe. gtownspur's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Post Count
    3,906
    ^People need to start taking accountability. THe president ordered a mandatory evacuation for NO 3 days before landfall. It was the people who didnt have transportation because they couldnt afford it even though they had jobs because they made stupid decicions in having their priorities straight. If they had they're priorities straight, they would of bought a junky old car instead of an Xbox and a flat panel in their federaly subsidized home. I have heard of many peoples account of how a good portion of the people who were evacuees were ungrateful of the help they recieved in houston texas. THey would about the quality of the food, and they would complain after already recieving a 2000 dollar debit card about the govt's ineptness to treat them like kings. In austin, one Cable tv salesman told me off how some of the evacuees were complaining about their installation of their flat panel tv they bought from the FEMA issued debit cards.

    If people like NBaDan and the rest think that people don't take advantage of charity by not helping themselves alwhile playing the guilt card to perfection, then they need to return their limited gold collection "Little House on the Prarie" DVD and wake up. GO to the projects and tell me that many of those people don't have their priorities straight.

  10. #10
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Post Count
    32,408
    THe president ordered a mandatory evacuation for NO 3 days before landfall.
    So did Governor Blanco, and the Mayor of New Orleans. FEMA was supposed to step in and 'assist' in coordinating Federal, State and local emergency evacuation efforts at this point. Those efforts, obviously, fell well short of expectations. Ex-FEMA head Michael Brown now runs his own emergency planning company.

  11. #11
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Post Count
    32,408
    If people like NBaDan and the rest think that people don't take advantage of charity by not helping themselves alwhile playing the guilt card to perfection, then they need to return their limited gold collection "Little House on the Prarie" DVD and wake up. GO to the projects and tell me that many of those people don't have their priorities straight
    Eh, the people who couldn't afford to evacuate from New Orleans weren't any different than thousands of hard-working San Antonio residents who live from paycheck to paycheck. Nationally, the savings rate, not including mutual fund contributions, has gone into negative numbers. This implies that there are millions of people, thousands of San Antonians, who are living off their credit cards. Payday in New Orleans was on Friday, the hurricane hit Friday.

  12. #12
    Believe. gtownspur's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Post Count
    3,906
    ^THe federal govt could not intervene without blanco's permission, even Mayor Ray Nagin got after Blanco for refusing to use the state guard and not allowing FeMa to take over. According to the Texas National Guard, THe Texas Guard was there before the Lousiana branch because of Blanco's stupidity. THe TExas Guard and the national Guard aswell as as the COast Guard where already on the scene that Monday to help out. It was the inep ude of the State and lOcal govt. Had they had their act together, there wouldnt of been this bad of tragedy. There's no excuse for the mayor not busing out their poor.

  13. #13
    Believe. gtownspur's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Post Count
    3,906
    Eh, the people who couldn't afford to evacuate from New Orleans weren't any different than thousands of hard-working San Antonio residents who live from paycheck to paycheck. Nationally, the savings rate, not including mutual fund contributions, has gone into negative numbers. This implies that there are millions of people, thousands of San Antonians, who are living off their credit cards. Payday in New Orleans was on Friday, the hurricane hit Friday.
    Your delusional if you think that that payday the people would of used their meager 350 dollar paycheck to buy a car off the lot.

    Please stop using dumb excuses. People who live paycheck to paycheck either have a car or no somebody who does. It's their probolem they were dependent on the govt to be their final option. Even at that, Mayor Ray nagin had the power to bus them out. NO is not orlando florida or tampa bay. They knew they were in a ditch and that evacuation after the flooding would break down communications and everything else.

  14. #14
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Post Count
    32,408
    THe federal govt could not intervene without blanco's permission, even Mayor Ray Nagin got after Blanco for refusing to use the state guard and not allowing FeMa to take over
    What the ? FEMA was on the ground in New Orleans. It was their plan to put those people in the Superdome. They told everyone to bring enough food and water for their families for two days, but many people didn't, and when the power failed, so did the toilets.

  15. #15
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Post Count
    32,408
    Your delusional if you think that that payday the people would of used their meager 350 dollar paycheck to buy a car off the lot
    That's not what I said. Look, people were facing getting a ride from a strangers, or riding Gray-hound. The trains stopped in the area two days before the hurricane hit, so these claims that Amtrak offered to evacuate people from NO were completely bogus. For those lucky enough to find a ride out of town, they didn't know where they would wind up, how they would survive if and when they got there, nor if they could even afford to ever come back again. , with no bread in your pocket, you might as well be dead.

  16. #16
    Believe. gtownspur's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Post Count
    3,906
    It wasn't their responsibility to ship people out. You have selective hearing. It was Ray Nagin himself who instructed everyone with his ing words that they should go to the superdome. Your poinltess to argue with. According to you, FEMA, a governmental agency, overrides state govt and local govt at their own whim without approval. Your delusional, Mike Brown has no marshall law powers. Only the military and Law enforcement do.You obviously have no conscience to your beliefs. You'll believe anything to damage Bush. If there was an article saying that Barbara and jenna were seducing little 4 year old boys into sex; you johnny marzetti, boutons, and all the nuts would demand an immediate independent investigation without thinking whether any of you would be duped by a spoof article.

  17. #17
    Believe. gtownspur's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Post Count
    3,906
    That's not what I said. Look, people were facing getting a ride from a strangers, or riding Gray-hound. The trains stopped in the area two days before the hurricane hit, so these claims that Amtrak offered to evacuate people from NO were completely bogus. For those lucky enough to find a ride out of town, they didn't know where they would wind up, how they would survive if and when they got there, nor if they could even afford to ever come back again. , with no bread in your pocket, you might as well be dead.
    If there would of been a free hip hop concert or a juneteenth parade, i guarantee you 70% percent of those stranded would of found a ride, people just didnt take the matter seriously. IF there would of been elections held, i guarandamntee you ray nagin and Blanco would of found bus drivers.

  18. #18
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Post Count
    32,408
    If there would of been a free hip hop concert or a juneteenth parade, i guarantee you 70% percent of those stranded would of found a ride, people just didnt take the matter seriously. IF there would of been elections held, i guarandamntee you ray nagin and Blanco would of found bus drivers.


    This post has got to go into the 'best quotes of gtownspurs' thread.

  19. #19
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Post Count
    32,408
    It was Ray Nagin himself who instructed everyone with his ing words that they should go to the superdome.
    Yes it was, but the emergency plan was always to put people in the Superdome. It was FEMA's responsibility to get them out after two days.

  20. #20
    Boring = 4 Rings SA210's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Post Count
    14,286
    GO to the projects and tell me that many of those people don't have their priorities straight.
    I don't need to go to the projects as if I've never been there before. Maybe you just pass by and judge them or maybe just go on with what the stereotype is.

    I grew up in the projects and I do alot of non profit work for people in the projects today. You wanna know the real story about people who live in the projects, have some guts to keep an open mind and really know who alot of these ppl really are. If you did that, you would understand that ALL of them shouldn't be punished for the bad ones.

    You obviously have this stereotype in your head and you refuse to let it go. Say what you want about who's responsibilty it was or who wasn't responsible. You obviously don't know what it's like to be poor and how sometimes ppls prior ies aren't why they are poor. Sometimes they get into a cir stance they can't help. I hope you never get into a cir stance you can't help.

    But there are people like you, and it's sad. People that think,"Hmmm, why can't those poor people just get there families and pack there Lexus and get the outa there, or get a plane and get to the hotel?

    I wish it were that simple. But you know what, some people, some elderly for instance who were ill or bed ridden, single parents with no help, and poor ppl don't always have all the options u may have. No matter how you try and paint the picture. And to defend the other poster about pay day, if you knew anything about being poor you would know what a difference one payday check could make when it came to this cir stance.

    So some people used there debit cards for plasma screens, ppl looted and stole leaking damaged radios. What else can you come up with to justify why ALL these ppl got what they deserved? Poor people ARE people. It's everyones responsibility to help anyway they can. How selfish to say the things that you say. Actually, it's just plain sad. I say these things because I care, I really care about people. You say so many things from hate.

    Sad.

  21. #21
    Lottery Pick Mr. Defense's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Post Count
    454
    So did Governor Blanco, and the Mayor of New Orleans. FEMA was supposed to step in and 'assist' in coordinating Federal, State and local emergency evacuation efforts at this point. Those efforts, obviously, fell well short of expectations. Ex-FEMA head Michael Brown now runs his own emergency planning company.


    i'm gonna have to call bull on the assistance.

    if the worst case person had just been told they won the lottery and had to get to anycity usa to collect?

    their ass would have been crawling, hitchhiking, whatever the it took.

    so spare the drama.

    Cowards make excuses. Men and Women come up with solutions.

  22. #22
    Displaced 101A's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Post Count
    7,711
    Kori,

    The initial article posted was enlightening.

    Is James Madison University a hotbead of radical right-wing nuts? I looked at their homepage, and there were absolutely NO swastikas! Go figure.

    The rest of the thread was ridiculous

  23. #23
    Believe. gtownspur's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Post Count
    3,906
    I don't need to go to the projects as if I've never been there before. Maybe you just pass by and judge them or maybe just go on with what the stereotype is.

    I grew up in the projects and I do alot of non profit work for people in the projects today. You wanna know the real story about people who live in the projects, have some guts to keep an open mind and really know who alot of these ppl really are. If you did that, you would understand that ALL of them shouldn't be punished for the bad ones.

    You obviously have this stereotype in your head and you refuse to let it go. Say what you want about who's responsibilty it was or who wasn't responsible. You obviously don't know what it's like to be poor and how sometimes ppls prior ies aren't why they are poor. Sometimes they get into a cir stance they can't help. I hope you never get into a cir stance you can't help.

    But there are people like you, and it's sad. People that think,"Hmmm, why can't those poor people just get there families and pack there Lexus and get the outa there, or get a plane and get to the hotel?

    I wish it were that simple. But you know what, some people, some elderly for instance who were ill or bed ridden, single parents with no help, and poor ppl don't always have all the options u may have. No matter how you try and paint the picture. And to defend the other poster about pay day, if you knew anything about being poor you would know what a difference one payday check could make when it came to this cir stance.

    So some people used there debit cards for plasma screens, ppl looted and stole leaking damaged radios. What else can you come up with to justify why ALL these ppl got what they deserved? Poor people ARE people. It's everyones responsibility to help anyway they can. How selfish to say the things that you say. Actually, it's just plain sad. I say these things because I care, I really care about people. You say so many things from hate.

    Sad.

    For all your high horse riding and pontificating, where's your Nobel Peace Prize?

    You're a fool for one to think I don't know personally of any people who are in poverty. My immediate family are all immigrants from mexico. For years alot of them struggled to rise above Govt housing and food stamps. My mom worked full time for a cleaners as a seamstress and tailor, my dad worked all his life between barely over minimum wage jobs. Without formal education, my parents managed to reign in on their expenses and pay off their first home which they now rent out, and all their vehicles. With the exception of the current house they live in, they owe no expenses and own everything they possess and some land off the outskirts of the city. We were always last in our families to have the latest technologies, or fads. Yet we managed to do well by being conservative in spending and focusing on what was important to purchase. Many of my relatives, God bless them, didnt have any discipline with their checkbooks. Many of them had better income than my parents and yet they are still struggling to pay off their homes and cars. Their kids always had better shoes and clothes than my siblings, and they were usually the first to have nintendos and other cool luxury items. But their money just went towards the wrong things and they were always living in borderline poverty to straight poverty becuase of their parents misuse of money.

    My point is that as long as people are able bodied to get a job, they will do fine. Money does not solve poverty. Just look at the lottery winners who were in poverty before they hit the jackpot to return back to their previous condition in 8 years. Not all people can succeed in this world. But if one can walk and count, theres nothing stopping them from being free from poverty in this country.

  24. #24
    Boring = 4 Rings SA210's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Post Count
    14,286
    For all your high horse riding and pontificating, where's your Nobel Peace Prize?

    You're a fool for one to think I don't know personally of any people who are in poverty. My immediate family are all immigrants from mexico. For years alot of them struggled to rise above Govt housing and food stamps. My mom worked full time for a cleaners as a seamstress and tailor, my dad worked all his life between barely over minimum wage jobs. Without formal education, my parents managed to reign in on their expenses and pay off their first home which they now rent out, and all their vehicles. With the exception of the current house they live in, they owe no expenses and own everything they possess and some land off the outskirts of the city. We were always last in our families to have the latest technologies, or fads. Yet we managed to do well by being conservative in spending and focusing on what was important to purchase. Many of my relatives, God bless them, didnt have any discipline with their checkbooks. Many of them had better income than my parents and yet they are still struggling to pay off their homes and cars. Their kids always had better shoes and clothes than my siblings, and they were usually the first to have nintendos and other cool luxury items. But their money just went towards the wrong things and they were always living in borderline poverty to straight poverty becuase of their parents misuse of money.

    My point is that as long as people are able bodied to get a job, they will do fine. Money does not solve poverty. Just look at the lottery winners who were in poverty before they hit the jackpot to return back to their previous condition in 8 years. Not all people can succeed in this world. But if one can walk and count, theres nothing stopping them from being free from poverty in this country.
    No need for a nobel prize, I certainly love people. That's just me, no need for you to insult me for it. I can't help but want to make a difference.

    Now you are making a good point, but alot of people have bad situations, some parents aren't even educated enough to show their kids in what path to go, because they themselves were never taught any better. It's not the kids fault entirely when they grew up a certain way. And that's just one example. Not everyone has both a mother and a father. And some ppl have only a mother or only a father, but are not born to it in poverty. So someone born to an uneducated single parent in the projects will not have or even see the same advantages. They need help and guidance.

    It's hard enough for a single parent who isn't on public assistance of any sort, myself included to make a living. Individual stories of ppl in poverty count for something, and those individual stories add up to a bigger picture. On the other end, the bad screw it up for the good ones on assistance, and I don't think they should suffer for it, whether it be cuts in assistance or just stereotypical garbage.

    We probably all know someone who is taking advantage of the system, but alot aren't. In my civil litigation against SAHA (San Antonio Housing Authority) and HUD to save Victoria Courts, we found that monies granted to SAHA for drug elimination, crime, and other issues for their developments were misused for new cars and vacations to Hawaii. There is alot of blame to go around whether it be Democrats, Republicans or even just the regular Joe who doesn't care about the issue. I don't think that because many abuse the system, that we should just forget that poverty is a problem. I know first hand what it's like to not have a home, be evicted or going hungry.

    When you go through that and see others go through that, and you actually know why some of these people really are in those situations, ppl would understand.

    For someone to know this and still persecute poor ppl just better explains what's actually going on in their own heart.

    And I hear critism alot about, "those ppl have money when the ice cream man comes around, or those ppl have a dvd player"...

    I guess because they are poor, their kids shouldn't watch TV, I guess their kids shouldn't be treated to an ice cream, I guess they shouldn't have cars to get to "work" because they should be punished for being poor. As long as they get food stamps and live in public housing, they should all live in "time out" I guess.

    No, they shouldn't be treated this way. People don't understand that a good percentage in public housing actually do work, as much as many ppl might not want to believe it.

    People in housing have to pay 30% of their income for rent. 30% of their income is alot to them. 30% is just about what you or I would pay to get into an apartment today. You have to make 3x's the rent. So they have to pay about 1/3 of their income. So when you get a single mother trying to work, taking the bus and managing to work out how to have her kid taken to school, picked up from school, daycare, and alot of other expenses, and then gets paid a ridicuolous wage and gets home after working just as hard as you or me, she gets paid nothing and noone there to help her find better avenues, because all that's on her mind is to keep that roof over her kids head and pay that 30% for rent and figure out how they are going to do it tomorrow.

    On top of that, when she goes outside her area, she gets insulted by ppl for taking adavantage of the system and being a deadbeat. Now there is the confidence she needs.

    But it's Christmas time now, the holidays, usually the time of year that the homeless are rediscovered and the time of year that alot of ppl actaully care about them, only because it's the holidays. Wow, come January it's back to normal. Homeless and poor ppl, and anyone on public assistance are lazy, live off of my tax dollars, they use drugs, kill, rape, and they bring down our property values. Knock down their homes, knock all the projects down, move em out, MOVE THEM ALL OUT, relocate them, put them elswhere,

    But not in "my" backyard.

    Merry Christmas.

  25. #25
    SW: Hot As Hell
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Post Count
    7,069
    Good article Kori. As for many of the responses, point missed.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •