Guest guest Posted October 12, 2003 Report Share Posted October 12, 2003 can you post the link heidi? thanks! Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2003 Report Share Posted October 12, 2003 >can you post the link heidi? thanks! I thought I did? You might need to register to get it. Here it is: http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/12/magazine/12WWLN.html Here is the one about poverty and " old age " : http://www.nytimes.com/pages/magazine/index.html?8dpc Read 'em quick though: they put stuff in archive and then you can't get them anymore without $$$$$. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2003 Report Share Posted October 12, 2003 >>>> http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/12/magazine/12WWLN.html Here is the one about poverty and " old age " : http://www.nytimes.com/pages/magazine/index.html?8dpc ----->thanks heidi, both are depressing as hell. my experience in poor urban neighborhoods mirrors the data in the second article...good luck finding someone over 30 yrs. old (or late 20s) in an impoverished innner city neighborhood who doesn't have a chronic or degenerative disease. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2003 Report Share Posted October 12, 2003 >----->thanks heidi, both are depressing as hell. my experience in poor urban >neighborhoods mirrors the data in the second article...good luck finding >someone over 30 yrs. old (or late 20s) in an impoverished innner city >neighborhood who doesn't have a chronic or degenerative disease. > >Suze Fisher I grew up in an area like that, and I agree. What got me is that my friends really had the same income, more or less, as us. I.e. it was " poor " but there was more to it than income, more like a state of mind. There were good jobs at the time where I lived, at an airplane plant, and most people seemed to work there. At my friend's house, they drove a really NICE car, had the latest stereo ... we wore hand me downs and had one old car the whole time we grew up. But they never had food in the house, and Mom always gave us protein with a meal. I think some kind of classes or groups could go a long way toward helping! I'm not saying poverty is just a matter of poor choices -- in LA the housing prices are through the roof and " service jobs " pay less than they did when I was a kid. But very few folks I've met in any economic level have the " depression/war era live off nothing " mentality my Mom had, and it is a useful skill. It's easy to get suckered in by the commercial " ya gotta buy stuff " message, and I think the commercials hit the young, poor, and less educated the hardest. But it's also a good test case. The docs keep saying things like " well, you have to expect arthritis at your age " . If arthritis hits a 20 year old, then it HAS to diet or lifestyle related. Which means it is not inevitable! -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 23, 2003 Report Share Posted October 23, 2003 On Sun, 12 Oct 2003 09:54:29 -0700 Heidi Schuppenhauer <heidis@...> wrote: > >>----->thanks heidi, both are depressing as hell. my experience in poor urban >>neighborhoods mirrors the data in the second article...good luck finding >>someone over 30 yrs. old (or late 20s) in an impoverished innner city >>neighborhood who doesn't have a chronic or degenerative disease. >> >>Suze Fisher > >I grew up in an area like that, and I agree. What got me is that my >friends really had the same income, more or less, as us. I.e. >it was " poor " but there was more to it than income, more >like a state of mind. There were good jobs at the time >where I lived, at an airplane plant, and most people >seemed to work there. > >At my friend's house, they drove >a really NICE car, had the latest stereo ... we wore hand me >downs and had one old car the whole time we grew up. But >they never had food in the house, and Mom always gave >us protein with a meal. I think some kind of classes or groups >could go a long way toward helping! > >I'm not saying poverty >is just a matter of poor choices -- in LA the housing prices >are through the roof and " service jobs " pay less than they did >when I was a kid. But very few folks I've met >in any economic level have the " depression/war >era live off nothing " mentality my Mom had, and it is >a useful skill. It's easy to get suckered in by the commercial > " ya gotta buy stuff " message, and I think the commercials >hit the young, poor, and less educated the hardest. Heidi, Poverty, particularly in the US, is not a question of cash but of culture. (It is also a question of gov't regulation in terms of skyrocketing housing costs but we have been down that thread before dealing with other issues). Our particular culture influences our prorities, and what you describe as a " state of mind " or mentality is actually a " state of culture " and it really has very little to do with being young, " poor " and less educated. This is why the typical approach to poverty simply doesn't work, because most poverty is not a question of money or education, and trying to solve it that way isn't the answer. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 23, 2003 Report Share Posted October 23, 2003 : >This is why the typical approach to poverty simply doesn't work, because >most poverty is not a question of money or education, and trying to >solve it that way isn't the answer. > > I really agree with this to a large extent. Esp. when I was a kid. But after confronting some of the issues in " nickle and diming " I think a lot of it is the *overall* culture. The decks are really stacked against some people, esp. the ones whose jobs can be taken by cheap foreign labor. Now that some of us higher paid folks are in competition with Indian programmers, the issues hit home! The current situation is very odd, historically. Historically NO ONE had to work every day and leave their babies, to pay for a house and food. People worked to gather or grow food, and to build the house, but there was a lot of 'off' time. My grandfather noted that some farmers did better than others, because they worked harder so got better crops, but he also complained about the current 'industry' kind of jobs, because every second was accounted for. He said he would work 16 hour days, but it wasn't nearly as bad as an 8 hour day in a factory -- they would talk and polish lamps for hours, for instance. Women worked the field with their babies, but if they were sick they could stay home. I think a lot of the cultures who end up " poor " are living by the old rules, maybe. But if a person DOES work 8 hours a day at a hard job, seems like they should be able to live in a decent house and buy food, which isn't actually true for a lot of jobs. I'm not trying to proposee a solution here -- I'm not sure what it is. But poverty is a weird state. A lot of those inner city " poor " kids have great skills running drugs (a very difficult job), and a lot of those underpaid Walmart workers could be in other positions and have nice houses. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 23, 2003 Report Share Posted October 23, 2003 In a message dated 10/23/03 3:42:31 AM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > I'm not trying to proposee a solution here -- I'm not sure > what it is. But poverty is a weird state. A lot of those inner city > " poor " kids have great skills running drugs (a very difficult > job), and a lot of those underpaid Walmart workers could > be in other positions and have nice houses. They should get another job then. Truth be told, the few times I've shopped at Wal Mart, I've never gotten the impression the people who worked there could work anywhere else, but hopefully my experience isn't representative. I come from a pretty moniless background, and grew up in one of the towns that was featured in a gigantic series in the Boston Globe with some funny overdramatic name like " The Unseen Dark Underbelly of Rural Massachusetts " or something like that. I knew quite a few homeless people growing up, all of whom were and are homeless because they choose to be. (I am well aware this is not the case with many a hard-working job-seeking family-heading parent). Most people got out of there if they were smart, went on to college, did something with their lives, and every single person who had any desire whatsoever to go to college had all the opportunity in the world to do so. The ONLY two reasons anyone didn't go to college were 1) they got pregnant or, usually, 2) they didn't want to. All of the poor people I knew who really fit the description of poor were living the life they *wanted* to live. If they got their heat or phone shut off, it was because they chose to pay the cable bill instead. (not to mention buy cigarettes, beer, pot, and some cocaine here and there). It continually baffled me that my best friend had to heat his house by opening the oven and putting it on high, that I couldn't call him and couldn't call out of his house except by collect, yet the entire time they had cable. While there might be some areas and some reasons where people really have institutional obstacles to heating their home, in THIS particular scenario, the reason I had heat and he didn't had nothing to do with unequal access to resources, but had everything to do with the fact that my mother wasn't stupid and his parents were, or, more diplomatically, my mother chose to pay the pills, and his parents choose to pay their dealer and the cable company. I know people who are homeless now and knew people who were homeless growing up-- they had a philosophical objection to being part of " the system. " I knew people who went to jail once a year for years and years. There were no gangs, there was no violence, they just choose to do heroin, get drunk and get into fights, etc. Lots of people did crack and cocaine and all of that, but it was cyclical, so none of these people were addicted. It would come around once every couple months and be around for a week. They knew enough about what it was by the 20th time, and they weren't addicts, but they *choose* to do it anwyay, because they simply had more interest it smoking crack and tripping out than they did in, say, economic success or a college education. They were not victims of anything-- the people I grew up around-- and they were not incapable of anything, and they certainly weren't brain dead (many of them were very, very smart). Whether they were throwing their life away is a value judgment. To them, they weren't. To them, they were doing the opposite. And then there were the folks who thought it more noble to cheat unemployment and collect while skipping from temp job to temp job than to get a real job. And the... etc, etc. I know real people have real problems. But that's just my experience. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2003 Report Share Posted October 24, 2003 I do know people like that, and frankly I think there should be a place for them -- people who don't want to be part of the system. I also know people who really TRY to have a life, running two jobs etc. What I'm saying is that our society is skewed ... in a " tribal " life everyone could be cyclical, poor, happy, and socially accepted. Or at least most people. Even people without college or ability to read. If they were nice and willing to cook and clean and gather food or go hunting, they were ok. We've raised the bar a LOT for humans, now you have to read, write, do math, attend a job daily, know what jobs to get and hope your company doesn't ship your job overseas. Things the average Okinawan just didn't worry about (now maybe they are!). -- Heidi >They were not victims of anything-- the people I grew up around-- and they >were not incapable of anything, and they certainly weren't brain dead (many of >them were very, very smart). Whether they were throwing their life away is a >value judgment. To them, they weren't. To them, they were doing the opposite. > >And then there were the folks who thought it more noble to cheat unemployment >and collect while skipping from temp job to temp job than to get a real job. >And the... etc, etc. > >I know real people have real problems. But that's just my experience. > >Chris > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2003 Report Share Posted October 25, 2003 >>> both are depressing as hell. my experience in poor urban >>>neighborhoods mirrors the data in the second article...good luck finding >>>someone over 30 yrs. old (or late 20s) in an impoverished innner city >>>neighborhood who doesn't have a chronic or degenerative disease. >>> >>>Suze Fisher >Poverty, particularly in the US, is not a question of cash but of >culture. (It is also a question of gov't regulation in terms of >skyrocketing housing costs but we have been down that thread before >dealing with other issues). > >This is why the typical approach to poverty simply doesn't work, because >most poverty is not a question of money or education, and trying to >solve it that way isn't the answer. > > Found your suggested reading, Suze, Amazing Grace at a library book sale last week. The author, Kozol notes, Mrs. Washington's only show of indignation (in a long heartbreaking first interview) with the fact that she cannot get the New York Times in the South Bronx. He can get it in a Boston suburb. , housing is a determining and major issue, when culture is segregated according to housing cost. In some areas like the South Bronx skin color and homelessness are your only ticket to what a 12 yr, old child described in this book as like being put away in someone's garage, knowing whatever it is is still there then forgetting about it. Wanita Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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