Katrina has opened public awareness, in a farily direct fashion, to just how many people are existing by an economic thread. Per the linked story below Katrina has handed poverty activists and social justice types a huge crowbar. Will they use it (stupidly) to smash Bush & Co or use it (intelligently) to pry open tired American moral consciences that were hermetically sealed by the poorly managed federal and state squandering and excesses of poorly manged welfare & related poverty programs in the past.
What the best strategy for using this powerful moral lever. Will they likely squander it on Bush bashing?
They may have to use it to beat back those who will argue that the condition of the poor in NO is final proof of intrinsic uselessness of government welfare and poverty programs (or of counting on government to save you at all).
Or the “poverty pimps” could use said crowbar to open their own “moral consciences” and realize that the cause of welfare families with half a dozen or more kids is truly a lost one. Government welfare programs are a total failure. The problem they need to focus on now is very well articulated in the OP: why is anyone with an honest job living in poverty? Why is anyone who is employed forced to live a substandard existence in inadequate housing? Until the profit-taking of the 80s, I don’t recall ever hearing the term “working poor”. And in recent years, the relentless profiteering of the oil companies and the real-estate interests have placed a decent life out of reach of a large number of hard-working people. I am no fan of Mr. Bush, but this isn’t his fault any more than it is yours or mine. In fact, it is probably * more* our fault because we have let the powers that be convince us that the vague threat of terrorism is somehow more threatening to the “American way of life” than the very real economic conditions that exist today. I don’t know what the solution is. I am certainly no proponent of government intervention. I am simply saying that the so-called “activists” need to redirect their energies toward improving the lot of people who are actually contributing to society and the economy rather than those who simply leech off it.