I am an ignorant person. I have worked with poor folks for 30 years. My kids watched as heroin addicts to come down crashed on our couch. I have stood with a destitute mother of 4 who's partner just left her. I have seen cupboards as bare as a baby's butt. Or children who wear soiled diapers because there was no money to buy any. I have seen the trap of alcoholism where a parent buys a mickey instead of child's shoes. I know the deep darkness of depression and mental illness, exacerbated by stress. I have watched suicides be lowered 6 feet down.
This sort of poverty is very difficult. It tends to set up patterns that are hard to break. I have no beef with the wealthy. I am glad for those who can hire people struggling to stand up--and do so without taking advantage of them. I am glad we offer something to people scraping bottom. Though we raised 4 kids with a salary/living below the poverty line, there was always enough soup in the pot for someone in worse shape than we were.
Sometimes I think that the difference between a rich man, a comfortable man, and a poor man has a significant luck factor. If you are comfortable, and there is nothing wrong with that, it can be difficult to really understand the death-grip of poverty. I am not sure 20k cash would help most of these people. I can see the vampires moving in: the drug dealers, the payday cash places, and credit companies that specialize in gouging the poor with 40% interest rates. *All vampires* should be illegal. A lot of that money would pay off their debts..and give them a chance to get the monkey off their backs. Perhaps a couple mandatory financial orienteering classes before receiving the cash would help a lot, given many of them have never seen a 2000.00 cheque.
Studies from long ago realized that 100% of income received by the poor returns to the economy. So 56 billion dollars would be a shot in the arm to some aspects of the economy. And would ripple through it generating wealth and jobs for more Canadians--I suppose that is,
No comments:
Post a Comment