February 8, 2012

Americans Demonstrate Changed Attitudes Towards Poverty Since the 2008 Economic Crisis

Written by Marianne Møllman for RH Reality Check. This diary is cross-posted; commenters wishing to engage directly with the author should do so at the original post.
If you are poor, chances are it is your own fault. At least that’s what Americans thought in 2001. In a National Public Radio poll from that year, about half of [...]


Related Stories

  • Murmuration & Occupation – Why We Shut Down the Ports
  • Doctor to Ohio Senate: I Do Not Want To Tell My Patients I Cannot Help Them
  • Will Blackwater Ever Do Right?

AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed

When did it become the governments responsibility to take care of Americans consumer debt?

Question by RewireD (Retarded): When did it become the governments responsibility to take care of Americans consumer debt?
And at the same time Americans claim that they’re stealing our money?!

Best answer:

Answer by PIXIE
when progressives out numbered the sane and rational people in our congress..

Give your answer to this question below!

Video: Cantor: “Most Americans Don’t Like the Health Care Bill”

Video: Cantor: “Most Americans Don’t Like the Health Care Bill”
New House Majority Leader, Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.) talks to Erica Hill about the GOP agenda in Congress.
Read more on CBS News

Video: Ted Williams’ New “Golden” Life
Offers for Ted Williams are pouring in after a Youtube video made the homeless man famous. Chris Wragge reports.
Read more on CBS News

Ex-lawmakers among picks for insurance staff
Three former Republican legislators, including former GOP gubernatorial candidate Randy Brogdon of Owasso, have been named to top spots in the state Insurance Department by incoming Insurance Commissioner …
Read more on Tulsa World

Americans offer suggestions for fixing economy

Americans offer suggestions for fixing economy
WASHINGTON #8212; It seems Washington is all ears these days.
Read more on Fort Wayne News-Sentinel

Beware debit cards’ dark side: Overdraft fees
What’s in a name? That’s what Juliet asks Romeo in William Shakespeare’s classic love story. Juliet knew that what matters is not what you’re called, but what you are at your core. “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet,” she says.
Read more on Everett Herald

National Soda Tax Would Make Americans 4% Less Fat

Cross-posted from Treehugger.
The USDA has recently been delving into the potential benefits of enacting a tax on sugary beverages like sodas and fruit juices. Clearly, there’s plenty to debate about such a tax — whether it would raise soda prices enough to discourage consumption, whether it would unfairly impact the poor, [...]

AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed

National Soda Tax Would Make Americans 4% Less Fat

the hand of a poor gecko
poor

Image by bernat…
the hand of this poor gecko

la ma d’un pobre dragó
la mà d’aquest pobre dragó

Please, consider to view my most interesting shots acording to flickr and my photos on explore

Safe Creative. If you want to use this image please add in a visible place near the photo: "Photo: Bernat Casero" (link included, please)

take a look at your contacts activity or at your recent photos in explore front page

?

EXPLORE #343 thank you very much for your comments and favorites…

Cross-posted from Treehugger.
The USDA has recently been delving into the potential benefits of enacting a tax on sugary beverages like sodas and fruit juices. Clearly, there’s plenty to debate about such a tax — whether it would raise soda prices enough to discourage consumption, whether it would unfairly impact the poor, [...]

AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed

National Soda Tax Would Make Americans 4% Less Fat

pOOr…. buT hAppY…
poor

Image by poonomo
i saw her while i visited neyyar dam during my last kerala trip… portraits aint really my cuppa tea, but this grandma trying to sell a few fruits and some packets of peanuts, sittin under the scorching april sun, moved me a lot… n for a few seconds, my mind wandered over to those days ven my grandma was alive, about the life she led during her old age and the comforts she was given… and i was thinking about how miserable this granny’s situation mite be at home, that at this age, she has to try and sell a few packets of peanuts to satisfy her hunger and maybe of all those back home waiting for her to come back with some food or money…

n while she was busy handing over a packet of peanuts to my dad, i clikd my first shot, and maybe hearing the shutter sound, she turned around n looked at me… am not sure if she understood what i was doing, but ven she heard my dad tell her what am up to, she smiled at me… n for a moment, i felt glad… we gave her another 20-rupee note and told her to keep it, but this poor soul thot we were asking for more peanuts… :o ) … finally, somehow my dad convinced her to keep that extra money n we left the place…

there are many who are still living amidst poverty, but we hardly ever notice them… rather we dont want to (me included) … n while i was browsing the net on various topics related to poverty, i came across this very powerful quote – The poverty of our century is unlike that of any other. It is not, as poverty was before, the result of natural scarcity, but of a set of priorities imposed upon the rest of the world by the rich. Consequently, the modern poor are not pitied…but written off as trash. The twentieth-century consumer economy has produced the first culture for which a beggar is a reminder of nothing. ~John Berger

maybe its the money we gave her that brot about this smile on her face… maybe its the thot of food, what this money can get her, that brot about this smile on her face… maybe its the thot of what she can take home for her grandchildren that brot about this smile on her face… or maybe its the fact that she was fotografed that brot about this smile on her face… whatever may the reason be, all i know is i left that place with a smile on my face… :)

Cross-posted from Treehugger.
The USDA has recently been delving into the potential benefits of enacting a tax on sugary beverages like sodas and fruit juices. Clearly, there’s plenty to debate about such a tax — whether it would raise soda prices enough to discourage consumption, whether it would unfairly impact the poor, [...]

AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed

Powered by Yahoo! Answers