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Falling [IASC-Culture.org]

The rich are all alike, to revise Tolstoy’s famous words, but the poor are poor in their own particular ways. 

Any reasonably intelligent reader could blow that generalization apart in the time it takes to write it. But as with most generalizations, a truth lies behind it. Ultimately, what binds the rich together is that they have more money, lots more. For one reason or another, the poor don’t have enough of it. But poverty doesn’t bind the poor together as much as wealth and the need to protect it bind the rich. If it did, we would hear the rattle of tumbrels in the streets. One hears mutterings, but the chains have not yet been shed.

I have some personal experience here. Like a lot of other people, I started life comfortably middle-class, maybe upper-middle class; now, like a lot of other people walking the streets of America today, I am poor. To put it directly, I have no money. Does this embarrass me? Of course, it embarrasses me—and a lot of other things as well. It’s humiliating to be poor, to be dependent on the kindness of family and friends and government subsidies. But it sure is an education.

Social classes are relative and definitions vary, but if money defines class, the sociologists would say I was not among the wretched of the earth but probably at the higher end of the lower classes. I’m not working class because I don’t have what most people consider a job. I’m a writer, although I don’t grind out the words the way I once did. Which is one reason I’m poor.

 

[For more of this story, written by William McPherson, go to http://www.iasc-culture.org/TH...4_Fall_McPherson.php]

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     Some years back, a client told me: "I'm not homeless, I'm residentially challenged".

     After serving two terms as a VISTA Volunteer-the first term we weren't eligible for food stamps, so my "Food and Lodging [and living] Allowance" of $57.00 per week in 1972, made my life "socially challenging" due to "limited financial resources", but I was one of 47 volunteers, in what some claimed was the biggest VISTA "project" in the U.S. at the time. We would gather on holidays, at one or another's house/apartment/dwelling for a shared meal, or whatever.

     I had my own "less than" affirming descriptors for myself,but I hadn't really examined the Culture of Individualism's impact on my "World View", and how the "Medical Model of thinking" was different from the "Public Health model".  Recently, my old friend (Philip Zimbardo) from those VISTA days published a new book: "The Lucifer Effect: Understanding how Good People Turn Evil", and he addresses that aspect of our Culture in the introduction and first chapter. I suspect some of our challenges with "The Most Under-Reported Public Health Study ever done, may warrant our looking seriously at our "Culture"....

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