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Marian Wright Edelman

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Tolerance of Poverty

Posted: 06/08/2012 5:52 pm

The latest edition of UNICEF's report on child poverty showed the United States ranks second out of 35 developed countries on the scale of what economists call “relative child poverty” with 23.1 percent of its children living in poverty. Only Romania ranked higher. It was another shameful reminder that, as economist Sheldon Danziger put it, “Among rich countries, the U.S. is exceptional. We are exceptional in our tolerance of poverty.”

For the Lynch family in Columbus, Ohio, headlines like this aren’t news. Lucille Lynch and her children Sarafina, 17, Timeeka, 14, Daisha, 11, and Elijah, 10, live on just slightly over half of the federal poverty level. The family’s only cash income is the combined $1,200 per month Social Security disability checks for Elijah, who has autism, and for Lucille, who suffers from a lung condition, along with occasional and minimal child support. Their family is a portrait of deep poverty in America. In 2010 20.5 million Americans were living on less than half of the federal poverty level.

The Lynches live in isolation in a dark house in a dangerous neighborhood between several main roads. A church that helps the family built a chain link fence around the house so Elijah can’t run out into the street. A block and a half away is a group home for sex offenders. Lucille gets advisory flyers in the mail with photographs of the men and their offenses -- rape and gross sexual imposition were listed on two of the flyers on the living room table the day Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Julia Cass met the family while on assignment for the Children’s Defense Fund. “It’s scary to know that,” Daisha said. “You don’t want to go out in the street because of them.”

Elijah Lynch

Elijah, 10, lives with his mother and three sisters. The family of five receives $583 a month in food stamps. They go to food pantries and raise tomatoes in pots but they often are down to peanut butter sandwiches at the end of the month.

Lucille, 47, considers herself lucky she has the house which she inherited from her parents. She left high school in the 11th grade -- “It was horrible and I couldn’t learn. There was too much violence.” Later she took classes and became certified as a nursing aide and for seven years she worked in nursing homes bathing, dressing, and diapering patients. But in 2006 she began feeling ill and by the next year, “I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t lift them anymore at all.” She was diagnosed with sarcoidosis, which causes inflammation of the lungs, and had to stop working. She’s done occasional babysitting since then.

One of the many sad consequences of deep poverty is that autism often goes undiagnosed longer, which is critical because many therapies for autism are most effective when they begin before age three. Elijah was diagnosed at five. Lucille said she knew something was wrong because “he wasn’t speaking. He wasn’t looking at people.” But pediatricians told her to wait and see if he improved and he wasn’t tested until he reached kindergarten age.

When Elijah was eight he began having problems in his special education classroom. Lucille eventually found out a child sitting behind him on the school bus was hitting him and another in his classroom was choking him. She said that school had one teacher and one aide trying to handle two classrooms full of children with different special needs. Lucille took him out of school and enrolled him in Buckeye Online -- a statewide private charter school that gives online instruction and receives money from the public education system.

The three girls experienced school violence, too, and now Sarafina and Daisha also stay at home and study with Buckeye Online, which provided two computers for the family to use. Sarafina was just starting middle school when she had a gun pulled on her. Daisha left school three years ago. “I didn’t really talk to other kids because they were so mean to me,” she said. “I got into a fight once but I didn’t want to fight but I had to because they kept hitting me. Nobody stopped them.” Online schooling means the children are isolated at home. Church is their major outside activity.

The family of five receives $583 a month in food stamps. They go to food pantries and raise tomatoes in pots but they often are down to peanut butter sandwiches at the end of the month and regularly eat filling, starchy foods like rice, pasta, and potatoes.

Lucille is hoping her children will “do better” than she did. She has the idea that art might help them get ahead because they all have the family talent for it. “There’s a lady who volunteers at the church, an artist,” Lucille said. “She’s going to help them make portfolios. Sarafina wants to present hers to the Columbus College of Art and Design.” Lucille is still holding onto the American Dream for her children -- but for now, the Lynches are living a much sadder American reality.

At the Children’s Defense Fund National Conference in Cincinnati July 22-25 we will have a series of plenaries, mini-plenaries, and workshops focused on economic inequality and child poverty. Join us to learn more about what we know works to reduce poverty -- and how we can work together to insist we do what works and set different national priorities. It’s time to end child poverty in rich America.

 

Follow Marian Wright Edelman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ChildDefender

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The latest edition of UNICEF's report on child poverty showed the United States ranks second out of 35 developed countries on the scale of what economists call “relative child poverty” wit...
The latest edition of UNICEF's report on child poverty showed the United States ranks second out of 35 developed countries on the scale of what economists call “relative child poverty” wit...
 
 
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07:25 PM on 06/10/2012
The Lynch family's total income is from the taxpayers (money that I earned for my family) and they are not getting enough? Wow, that really is too bad.
Maybe she should have a few more children, it would increase the benefits. Of course those benefits would be paid for with money that I expended my life earning for my family. But who cares about any families that carry their own weight in society. We are only supposed to be concerned about the breeders that "just can't work" but still manage to have a bunch of kids.
12:10 PM on 06/10/2012
“Among rich countries, the U.S. is exceptional. We are exceptional in our tolerance of poverty.” And such a country may soon be presided over by someone who has said publicly that the is not concerned by the very poor. Mr. Romney can probably affirm his lack of concern in French also.
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ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
04:24 AM on 06/10/2012
But it's a principled poverty...not!

"The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to ... provide for the ... general Welfare of the United States"

Socialism? Or Article I, section 8, clause 1 of the United States Constitution?

It doesn't mean a welfare state, but it doesn't mean tolerating systemic poverty either.
Rollin McKim
Circular File
03:29 AM on 06/10/2012
"Their" poverty level: ?????????????????????????

"Our" poverty level: stove, oven, microwave, refrigerator, tv(s), car, cellphone, often air conditioning, housing, food stamps, stereo, running water, heated water, etc etc.

Most of the impoverished of the world would love to be impoverished in America.
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darlnitsme
Independent and Proud of it
09:56 AM on 06/10/2012
Is there gas or electric to turh the stove on. Is there electricity for the microwave or refrigerator or televisions. Is there power to run the air or the stereo or to heat the water. IS there money for gas for the car or even for bus fare?

We rank the 2nd worst in the world among what's called rich nations beat only by Romania by the way I'm of Romanian heritage.

There is a little somethig called empathy that god gave us. Not having empathy doesn't make a better human, it detracts from what god would have us be.

Very calous remarks from someone who doesn't really know, except for opinion, about how the rest of the impoverished world might think. Oh by the way, we weren't talking about rankings among the impoverished world, we were talking about rankings among the rich nations.
11:47 AM on 06/10/2012
we have free heating programs in this country that keeps the lights on. most other countries you're on your own. we even help the able bodied when the able bodied don't want to help themselves. most countries in the world won't do that. yes we do have the most fortunate poor people in the world.
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stettin
lux et veritas
11:55 PM on 06/09/2012
"erroneous opinions" regarding the poor

1.that every man, woman and grown child able and willing to work may find employment.

2.that the poor, by industry, prudence and economy, may, at all times, support themselves
comfortably, without depending upon eleemosanary aid, and as a consequence it follows

3.that their sufferings and distresses chiefly, if not wholly,,arise from their idleness, their
dissipation, and their extravagance

4.that taxes for the support of the poor, and aid afforded them by charitable individuals, or
benevolent societies, are pernicious, as by encouraging the poor to depend on them,
they foster their idleness and improvidence, and thus produce, or at least increase, the
poverty and distress they are intended to relieve.

"Appeal to the Wealthy of the Land" by Matthew Carey, Philadelphia; 1829

a summary of the thinking of the rich in 1829 and 2012
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
10:20 PM on 06/09/2012
Poverty is a lifestyle choice in many cases:

- Income has a high correlation with educational levels. In 2007, the median earnings of household headed by individuals with less than a 9th grade education was $20,805 while households headed by high school graduates received $40,456, households headed holders of bachelor’s degree earned $77,605, and families headed by individuals with professional degrees earned $100,000.

- In 1997, 8.3% of children in two-parent families were likely to live in poverty; 19.6% of children lived with father in single parent family; and 47.1% in single parent family headed by mother.
11:10 PM on 06/09/2012
How dare this woman make the choice to get ill....how dare she have the nerve to have a child with autism....she made some pretty crappy "life choices" didn't she.....
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stettin
lux et veritas
11:15 PM on 06/09/2012
how you can conclude that "poverty is a lifestyle choice in many cases" from your following

2 paragraphs is totally illogical. ask the poor if theirs is a lifesrtyle choice if you really wish

to know the reality.
09:11 AM on 06/10/2012
She probably did not chose to be in poverty, but she made the choices that ensured she would be:

- 4 kids

- No father in the picture

- Not working
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Mac Howard
Thank god we got convicts, you got the puritans
10:09 PM on 06/09/2012
Dealing with poverty is something that requires compassion and empathy for the poor which your exceptional (among 1st world countries) commitment to religion should encourage. But for some reason the Christian leader's concern for the underprivileged seems to be missing from the particular version of his teachings that thrives here. A little less righteousness and a little more compassion needs to be the order of the day.
07:49 AM on 06/10/2012
Mac, you are spot on!!! If Jesus returned today and saw the riches the Churches accumulate, while the poor suffer, I believe He would ask....."What was it about, 'That which you do to the least of these, you do to Me also", that you didn't understand?
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Mac Howard
Thank god we got convicts, you got the puritans
08:13 AM on 06/10/2012
There is a special bible published for a certain section of the Christian community that has the Sermon on the Mount removed and the good guys in the story of the Good Samaritan are those who pass by on the other side :)
11:13 AM on 06/10/2012
not righteousness, but guidance.
09:45 PM on 06/09/2012
Republicans believe that people who benefit from government hand-outs do so because they like it that way. The fact that even government hand-out keep millions living in poverty clearly contradicts that belief. If Republicans gain the presidency, the number of people living in poverty will almost certainly increase and those who are already suffering will suffer even more. And most of these Republicans claim to be righteous Christians.
10:21 PM on 06/09/2012
"Republicans believe that people who benefit from government hand-outs do so because they like it that way"

We have created an entire generation of folks who live off of the Government.
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Electriq
A haiku would have been a bit showy.
11:23 PM on 06/09/2012
Agreed. Something needs to be done about Wall Street's bloodsuckers.
07:50 AM on 06/10/2012
Viking, you are right. We have created an entire generation of folks who live off the Government. They are predominantly in RED states. Look it up!!!
10:23 PM on 06/09/2012
Republicans do NOT believe that people who benefit from government hand-outs do so because they like it that way. You most likely heard that from one person and then labeled the entire group because you don't like them. You are right in fact that government hand-outs do keep millions living in poverty because it teaches them and their children that the government exists to give them something for free. This works great to create an entire group of people who never will vote to get less Obama money. Republicans will increase the number of people who live in "poverty" and make the suffering, suffer more? NONSENSE! No Republican wants to increase the number of poor or make people suffer. C'mon MAN. You know that. You think that by cutting government entitlements all these people will just roll over and die, and you couldn't be more wrong. The above family gets $1200 a month in cash, plus some child support, and $583 in food stamps. That equals over $20,000 a year!!! Why in the world would someone have ANY incentive to get off the government gravy train with that coming in? They wouldn't. They aren't. We are broke. Bankrupt. Outta dough. I am a Christian and there is nothing Christian about perpetually giving people money they don't work for. Don't assume you have the patent on what it means to be a Christian and look down your nose at those who disagree with your socialist views.
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stettin
lux et veritas
11:20 PM on 06/09/2012
to forcefox: 'sell what you have, give to the poor and come follow me:"

words purportedly said by one Jesus Christ.
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Electriq
A haiku would have been a bit showy.
11:23 PM on 06/09/2012
"Republicans do NOT believe that people who benefit from government hand-outs do so because they like it that way."

Nonsense. Almost everyday I read posts from republicans saying pretty much exactly that. You might want to have a get-together with them so you can at least get your stories straight.
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Konnie
Really South Carolina??
09:40 PM on 06/09/2012
i don't think it's tolerance. i think its a singularly american judgementalism. americans judge others not for what they are today, but the decisions in the past that brought the poor to where they are today. i've heard this one more than once: why did poor people have children in the first place if they were incapable to lifting themselves out of poverty first. the poor are only there because of their own personal failures. never society, never the economy, never prejudice. i am appalled at the lack of empathy. i am also shocked at how little it would actually take to tackle the most glaring problems, probably less than a hedge fund manager makes in an hour................
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nettwench
Dedicated Truther!
11:55 PM on 06/09/2012
They blame these people for not having jobs, when they know very well that the economic crash means there are not enough jobs for anyone who wants to work. That is a contradiction, yet they completely ignore it in their judgement of others' poor economic situations. They also ignore that the kind of jobs available to the poor and uneducated pay next to nothing, and have no benefits. And they also ignore the fact that when people are so poor, even if they are working, they don't make enough to afford health care, or save any money for the future. The slightest problem can turn into a major calamity for them, because they have NO resources whatsoever - no family to help them, no money to put gas in the car or fix it when it breaks down, no money to pay for a sick child, or any medication they might need.

Poor people need help, even if they ARE working. Denying that, and just pretending that they have the same resources as the middle class, is just not accepting reality.

Do we want people in this country to fail?
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DMDAY44
12:10 AM on 06/10/2012
Obama says the private sector is doing fine.
09:36 PM on 06/09/2012
This might sound harsh but....dont breed 'em if you can't feed 'em. Really very simple.
Too many people have kids because they can. Sad really.
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hazyafternoonsunshine
Life's a ball, buster!
10:06 PM on 06/09/2012
If poor people did not "breed", then the humanity would have gone extinct a long time ago. Your comment is not only harsh, it is silly, and at its core, mean spirited and snobbish. The idea that only economically advantaged people should reproduce is elitist and morally bankrupt. Shameful.
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DMDAY44
12:12 AM on 06/10/2012
So the idea that someone should behave responsibly and only have children when they can support them is "silly, and at its core, mean spirited and snobbish"?
11:14 PM on 06/09/2012
you don't know what her circumstances were when she had her children....it's pretty judgmental to assume anything without knowing what happened in her life to bring her to this point....so many people who think they are sitting in the cat bird seat are just one illness, or one divorce away from poverty....I think that's what makes so many people turn a blind eye to poverty....they fear it so much and know it can happen to them
11:58 AM on 06/10/2012
thats why we do what we have to do to not let that happen. making good decisions and not being irresponsible. I've just upped my odds so none of those "bad" options don't happen to me.
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cornelison
College grad. Life-long liberal.
09:31 PM on 06/09/2012
One only need to look at the lethal corruption in politics to find the answer. When conservatives cancel breakfast programs for children in favor of tax cuts for the rich, Americans still vote for them! The moral bankruptcy of the country doesn't end with the rich & powerful but is shared with conservative voters.
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Liz Wilson 2
“a small group can change the world
10:40 PM on 06/09/2012
well said
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nettwench
Dedicated Truther!
11:57 PM on 06/09/2012
Not me! No way!
09:26 PM on 06/09/2012
Some time ago President Johnson wanted a great society, but that is a long time ago. We are a different society now, we now believe greed and gluttony are good, to help the needy is bad and immoral, the moral thing to do is tell them, you are on your own, help is bad for you, look at me, I did it.

We have very fortunate people who were born to wealth, healthy and good looking and smart, they received the best education money can buy, had excellent connections to make lots of money with little effort, life was more than fair to them. Yet they whine about how unfair it is for them to have to pay taxes to support the food stamp program for people less fortunate

Ask Romney, he is doing well, but Ann never thought she is wealthy, does she know the definition of poor and what it feels like? I doubt it.

When people go to church tomorrow, please say a prayer for them, they need it. They have heard of envy but never of social justice and compassion.
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Hacim Obmed
10:00 PM on 06/09/2012
gimmi greed
12:23 AM on 06/10/2012
well said
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wayne the pain
09:03 PM on 06/09/2012
The USA tolerate more poverty than any other industrial country. The Republicans want Americans to tolerate much, much more!
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Hacim Obmed
10:01 PM on 06/09/2012
Its not the republican, its called natural selection. Darwinian selection.
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stettin
lux et veritas
12:53 AM on 06/10/2012
no hacim, it is the republicans. they refuse to recognize Darwin's theories. they

manage to think these things up by themselves with their greedy little minds.
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08:49 PM on 06/09/2012
Tolerance of poverty and the acceptance of massive wealth inequality is the downfall of every society in History. It's just true. America
used to be special because unlike many places it believed poverty was war worthy it was a thing to try and change.
Wealth inequality was considered in to large a margin unhealthy. Thinking about the better good was considered a virtue. Now? It's totally opposite. A man running for POTUS can say without any real problems I don't worry about the poor. Our historic wealth gap is seen as a virtue and poverty is something to be punished.
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Hacim Obmed
10:13 PM on 06/09/2012
When did poverty and wealth inequality become the same thing. remember that 50% of humanity lives on less than $2 per day. Here in american we play word games and pretend that someone is exceedingly poor if the family of 5 "only" has a cash hand out of $1200 per month. That does not include their food stamps, their medicaid expenses, their head start and free K-12 education, their public housing and subsidized utilities, buss passes. To say these people are poor is a joke. We essentially say they are poor because they don't have two color TV's and an internet connection. These so-called poor people would be in the upper middle class in Haiti or Colombia or India or Pakistan or Egypt or sub-Saharan Africa.
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DMDAY44
12:15 AM on 06/10/2012
Nailed it! Amen brother!
01:12 AM on 06/10/2012
Yes, Hacim Obmed, a better choice for subjects in this article would be a married couple with four children living on two service industry incomes without medical coverage and needing transportation to two different workplaces.Their schools assess fees for extracurricular activities from sports to band participation.