The other day, a friend of mine voiced the opinion on
Facebook that America is the ultimate land of opportunity, and that people who
are in poverty are at fault for blaming others for their plight. It was, he
argued, a question of perspective. If people are poor, he argued, they should
take more responsibility for their circumstances.
My friend isn’t a greedy or hurtful person. Though
we haven’t seen each other in almost two decades, based on the pictures of his
beautiful, happy family, he strikes me as somebody who has his priorities in
order. But this statement got under my skin and has been itching. I’ve been scratching at this for a little over a week now, and I’m not quite sure how to
express why this irritates me so much.
Should I begin on purely factual grounds? He states,
without evidence, that the United States is one of the foremost countries which
provides its people with the ability to raise themselves out of poverty. “Unlike nearly any
other country, you can start in poverty and move into the middle or upper
income bracket within a few short years...definitely into a generation.”
What he’s describing is something economists call "social mobility." It’s
measurable. And he’s simply wrong. At
best, we rank 4th. When other factors are included, like unemployment,
inflation, and respondents’ satisfaction to standard-of-living and employment opportunities,
the U.S. comes in 18th. Of the 195 countries our government recognizes, that
means we’re not even in the top 5%. That hardly sounds like “unlike nearly any
other country” to me.
Or should I challenge his notion that income inequality
is irrelevant? He claims that we don’t have “haves” and “have nots”, but “has”
and “has more.” This sounds like merely
bit of optimistic semantics. It’s all in one’s perspective, he claims. But that’s
wrong, too. The distance between the “have nots” and the “has mores” produces
real world consequences. According to economists, it impedes growth in a number
of ways. It doesn’t take a lot of economics training to imagine why this would
be. People who are far down the economic ladder can’t demand higher salaries.
Beggars don’t haggle. When they have lower salaries, they can’t buy as many
goods. The ultra-wealthy still live very well, thank you, but they store their
money in accounts rather than investing in businesses which sell goods to
people on the bottom of the income spectrum because that’s a better investment.
If you reduce the buying power of the poor, you reduce the selling
opportunities for the rich. This leads to less sales, less employment, less of
what economists call “churning”: money growing because it’s changing hands in
exchange for real goods and services. Widening income inequality makes some
people much richer, and creates the illusion of economic growth when the total
GDP is divided to become the Per Capita GDP, but in truth the standard of
living of the vast majority of people decreases.
But this kind of sunny optimism is worse than just
bad economics. In my friend’s defense of his position, he cites Christian
scripture, pointing out that people have an obligation to use the talents they’ve
been given to achieve success. He cites the parable in Matthew about the bags
of gold entrusted to servants, Matthew 25:14-30.
This is what an English teacher would call “bad reading.” The passage is
clearly not about money, it’s about faith.
The master says, quite clearly, “You have been
faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and
share your master’s happiness!” If the parable were about money, one
would have to imagine that the “things” Jesus is teaching his disciples to take
care of are quantities of money. This from a man who told people that they
should take all they have and give it to the poor? This from a man who told
people to give Caesar his coins back? This from a man who told people that
wealth would make it more difficult to get into heaven? This from a man who
told people not to store up their treasures on earth? This from a man who, at
least according to scripture, was aware that his death was imminent and yet
spent more time talking about concern for the poor than any other single topic
during the limited time of his ministry? It’s certainly a convenient
interpretation to use when one is trying to justify an investment strategy, but
it cannot be justified by the text as a whole.
That’s not what bothers me, either,
though. I’m not a Christian. If Christians want to pick apart their scripture
to justify widening income inequality and callous disregard for the plight of
the poor, that’s their business. They can write a new translation which
actually includes the phrase “pull yourselves up by your bootstraps,” stick it
into the Sermon on the Mount, and shove those words into Jesus’ mouth, and if
that’s what they all decide they believe, who am I to argue? I could point out
that it’s a very different interpretation of scripture than other Christians
have had before, tantamount to a different religion, something earlier
Christians would have called a heresy, but they could quite correctly retort
that Christianity has changed a lot over the years. Some have learned to read
around the misogyny. Most have learned to stop using scripture as a
justification for racism and slavery. A growing number are even learning to get
around the bigotry towards homosexuals that’s clearly in the text. So if they
want to decide that all the commands to care for the poor, to suffer with those
who suffer, and to recognize worldy wealth as a threat to their salvation are
just cultural relics of a time gone by and scold the poor for having bad
attitudes, it is absolutely within their 1st amendment rights to do
so, and they can take that up with their god when they get to the end of the
road. That’s no longer my business.
Except…
Except I have to live with these
people. And not just this particularly venal and callous kind of Christian, but
with a greedy and self-defeating kind of American. This kind of attitude has
real-world policy implications which harm my country, my community, my family.
No, that’s
not it, either. I can abide people I disagree with, even when their beliefs
harm me and mine. I can live with people who deny evolution even though their
beliefs hurt our country’s international reputation and our scientific
competitiveness. I can live with people who have regressive beliefs about
immigration even though their selective notions of law enforcement will split
up families, hurt our own economy, and ultimately fail to do anything but align
them with racists. I can live with people who deny the reality of global climate
change even though their intransigence will have dramatic and disastrous
effects on the economic, political, and even physical health of their fellow
citizens. I can live with people I find to be wrong. Why? Because I am sure I’m
wrong about some things, too, and I’m sure the ways I’m wrong will injure
others. Of course, I don’t know how I’m wrong. As Wittgenstien pointed out, “If there
were a verb meaning ‘to believe falsely,’ it would not have any significant
first person, present indicative.” If I’m wrong about something, I can’t know
it at the time. But I can assume I am wrong because I know I’ve been wrong
before, and because I know that being wrong about some things has always
appeared to be an essential characteristic of every other human being with whom
I’ve come into contact, including those people who are far smarter and far
wiser than I am. I try to surround myself with the kind of people who can tell
me how I am wrong, and I’ll bet this post may motivate a few of them. I may not know what god to believe in, but I
do believe in people, complete with all their absurdity and outright folly. Sartre
said “Hell is other people,” but I think other people are the point of
existence. Without them, including all their multifaceted wrong-ness, life would
be meaningless. An un-observed tree falling in a forest may or may not make a
sound, but a man in a crowd who doesn’t care about any of the people around him
makes no difference.
And that, ultimately, is why my
friend’s point bothers me so much. It’s the callous disregard for others that I
cannot abide. I cannot claim to be an expert on poverty from personal
experience. As the Everclear song says, I’ve “never had the joy of a welfare Christmas.”
I wish I could explain poverty as eloquently as Sherman Alexie does early in his novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian. (If you haven't read it, do so forthwith.) I just don't have the skill. But, in my experience, that kind of personal history doesn’t always give people a whole
lot of insight into the nature of poverty anyway. I know too many people who
raised themselves out of poverty, sometimes terrible, tragic poverty, and their
response has been to look back over their shoulders with contempt and say, “I
did it. Why can’t they?” I’m starting to recognize that I understand poverty
better than some people who experienced it more acutely because, though I might
be exactly as middle class as my parents (American social mobility, right?),
like them, I’ve chosen to work for people who haven’t escaped poverty. That’s
taught me about more than the path out. It’s taught me about the people who are
stuck inside.
I came across a great
illustration of this today. There's a powerful if unsurprising
relationship between effects of dyslexia and the wealth of the dyslexic.
Dyslexic children born to wealthy families are identified earlier and are able
to get more interventions. As one would expect, they are far more likely to
overcome their disability. Now, we could say to a dyslexic, as my friend does, “If you're working has[sic] hard as you can and not getting
anywhere....change what you're working at. You need a new perspective or a new
path.” But, in this case, we’d be saying, “If
you are working hard to learn to read and it’s difficult, you really should
have started working hard with a specialist when you were much younger, and in
order to do that, you should have been born richer. Choose that path.”
I think
my friend doesn’t understand poverty (and again, he is in the company of my
middle class friends who climbed out of it themselves). Poverty is an abusive
father who beats his children. He stands in the foyer of his house, punching
them and kicking them, and they cower in the corner, curled up into tight
little balls, trying to protect themselves. Every day his blows rain down on
them, but while he beats them, he tells them to get out of his house. Behind
him, the door is open. For some, it’s open wide. They are gifted with
intelligence, athletic ability, good looks, resilience, perhaps an indomitable
will. For others, the door is open just a tiny crack, smaller even than their
little bodies. Maybe they are not exceptionally smart or brave or beautiful.
Maybe they are afraid to leave the house that at least protects them from the
weather. For whatever reason, some of these children remain cowering in the
corner, while others make a break for it, scrambling for the door. Some of
these escaping children run and don’t look back. “I made it out. Why can’t they?
It’s their fault.” Others stay inside all their lives. But here’s the greatest atrocity:
We are standing out on the sidewalk, and we can always see into the door, at
least a little. We can see Poverty beating down the poor. And, to my amazement,
many of us say, “It is their fault. Why don’t they take responsibility for
their circumstances? Look at the way their choices keep
them inside the house of Poverty?” But we stay out on the sidewalk. I want to
ask my friend and anyone else talking about taking personal responsibility for
poverty: Who is supposed to take responsibility for where you stand while the
poor suffer? Isn’t that up to you?
9 comments:
It is unfortunate, but generally the only way out of poverty is to do it yourself, probably because confidence and skill, which are required factors, can only be gained through the experience of accomplishment.
The Christian scriptures, particularly Jesus and Paul, are not misogynistic, but rather radically feminist. As to homosexuality, they are at best ambiguous, but probably more agnostic on the subject.
I think it's a bit presumptuous to say the scriptures simply are one thing or another. Reasonable people disagree about their interpretations of the texts. Unreasonable people: more-so.
Sorry, but isn't that what you did with the misogyny comment?
Touche! I do think it's hard for reasonable people to argue that there isn't any misogyny in the Bible. I can be persuaded by arguments that look toward broader themes of God's love for His children as justifications of egalitarian feminism, and I can be persuaded that descriptions of gender roles in the Pauline Church were radically feminist for their day, but even those progressive moves were not depictions of or advocacy of true gender equality, and most of the descriptions of gender roles in the text are not what any modern feminist would accept. The prescriptive vs descriptive distinction has some merit, but the descriptions of regressive gender roles are far clearer than the prescriptions of gender equality.
Definitely, misogyny in the Bible. But I would be intrigued to hear how the Pauline Church was not a depiction of true gender equality, nor what any modern feminist would accept. I find they go further than what many modern feminists advocate, and for other modern feminists fit exactly what they advocate.
1 Timothy 2:14-15
New International Version (NIV)
14 And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner. 15 But women will be saved through childbearing—if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety.
1 Corinthians 14:34-35
New International Version (NIV)
34 Women[a] should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the law says. 35 If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church.
This is one of the many problems with the NIV. It's crap.
Greek is different. I Timothy is the end bit referring to the passage before, and discussing how the man is more responsible.
I Corinthians states, "The woman should be in meditative silence. They should not speak, but give up themselves of their own volition, as the law says. If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home, for it is disgraceful for a woman to prattle in the church."
It can be easy to look at texts in scriptures as normative for all time, ignoring the cultural milieu and context. Paul is writing to a particular church with particular issues. Yes, his thoughts have wider implications- but we must first understand what the primary implication was before we look at the more general application.
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