Blog Catalog

Showing posts with label hunger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hunger. Show all posts

Friday, December 4, 2020

Quotes of the Day -- On Rich and Poor

 I just discovered this writer.


“All charities would disappear from earth once the governments start taxing the rich 90% of their income and investing that revenue in public essentials – such as, groceries, housing, healthcare and education.”

“Till luxury becomes a thing of the past, equality will remain a thing of the future.”

“In a truly civilized society there wouldn't be any billionaire, nor will there be any homeless, for all the revenue generated through taxing the rich would be distributed among the people through welfare initiatives.”


And the rich would still be rich, rest assured. 
They would do without nothing.


Saturday, November 28, 2020

A Great Question Today

And here it is, that great question coming as it does from none other than the Wall Street Journal in Friday's edition.

Trump with Senate Republicans



The economy can’t wait until January for more help for states, businesses and the unemployed.

Except...will Trump deliver?

I'd have to say, from the looks of it, Mr. Trump is far too self-absorbed---yeah, imagine that--with fighting his having been rejected by us, the electorate. He seems to be fighting his loss in the ballot box, no way doing what's right or what's needed for the nation and people.

After that, after questioning wither Trump, will Mitch McConnell deliver? Will the Republicans in the Senate deliver?

Again, but this time nearly inexplicably, Senator Moscow Mitch and the Republicans seem to be missing in action. Or, rather, missing in inaction. I guess they're what? on one of their "recesses." Sure, they'll tell you they're concerned about business and businesses and business leaders and business people but when it comes down to it, just now? Gone. Doing nothing. Nothing whatever. I don't get it.

We'd love to know. Heck, we'd like to see the aid so people, Americans, citizens, have enough to eat and don't get evicted from their homes.

I'll never forget this from Senator McConnell.


Mitch McConnell showed his true colors in a Kentucky Senate debate against Amy McGrath

Meanwhile, back in America.


So happy Thanksgiving, Mr. President. Happy Thanksgiving, Senator McConnell and all Republican Party Senators and Congress members. Thanks so very much for your hard work. And support.

We'd love to see some.


Monday, January 2, 2017

The Already-Wealthy Really Do Owe the Poor


I was reading the Sunday edition of the New York Times yesterday when I ran across this article:

Things We Learned in 2016


It listed 45 different items that readers of the newspaper might have learned in the last year. I thought number 22 very instructing and insightful:

Sixth graders in the richest school districts are four grade levels ahead of children in the poorest districts.

It was from this article:

Money, Race and Success: 

How Your School District Compares


This statement/fact has so many ramifications for people, individually, but for societies as a whole, it's difficult to know where to begin or end but I'll try.

First, it proves the idea of noblesse oblige quickly, firmly and completely. The idea that the wealthy, the already-wealthy have an obligation to help those with less is driven home here totally. The formal definition is 
"the inferred responsibility of privileged people to act with generosity and nobility toward those less privileged."

Since those "privileged" or again, wealthy have much, they rather "owe it" to the "less privileged" to assist. Part of that is just due to quantities---quantities of wealthy, of money, in our modern societies. If a person is "loaded" and has more than they could possibly spend, it seems easy, obvious and incumbent on them to help those who are of small means and struggling. This is especially true, it would seem clear, if that "struggling" includes being homeless, starving, sick or what have you.

This also seems easy and true if the person is both wealthy and either a moralist--as I'd think we all should be--or, more, a Christian or Jew or of any religion that believes in helping the poor. Sure, again, this seems easy and obvious.

But it's more than that. It's much more than that.

What becomes true, just from that one, brief sentence and fact is that the already-wealthy have many, many advantages--financial, social, educational, etc.--given to them, and from birth up, that if they didn't assist the less fortunate, the poor or what have you, it would only perpetuate horribly the divisions between the two groups of people, those "haves" and "have nots." This seems self-evident, too.

This makes it easy to see why those with money keep piling on more and more, frequently, if not usually, while those of lesser means get less, to begin with, but then also are able to save and keep less, over time. It's what makes the "1%" of a nation, of a society, grow and grow their wealth.

Offers and possibilities snowball up for the wealthy by virtue of money and education and contacts, at least, while the costs of being less fortunate snowball against "the little guy." It's a system built to go for the wealthy and against the poor. And sure, to an extent it's just human nature but it's not right and we need to acknowledge it and correct for it, each of us, let alone as a people, as a nation, again, as societies.

This isn't about the poor mooching off the wealthy or not pulling their own weight or their expecting, demanding easy things from those that have, either. As the old saying goes, if only work made people wealthy, African women would be the wealthiest of the world.

One of the great things about all this, though, about the fortunate helping the unfortunate is that, besides making one feel good, besides the fact that it is, as just one example, the "Christian thing to do", it also helps the society, too. Any person who is helped with some food, say, might well avoid going to a hospital later or, in another example, might not steal--and risk getting caught and arrested. They may not try to rob a store and should that happen, things get much worse for all involved right there.

Then there's helping a person with education. Or a job. Both certainly help the area, the town, the city, the region, the state, the nation. They help with the person's health, their expenses. Heck, they help the different government's tax coffers. The benefits here snowball upward, positively, as well.

So there's every reason in the world why the already wealthy should help the unfortunate, the poor, the sick. It's good for that person and their family, sure.  But it's also great for the society and those benefits come back to that wealthy person. The healthier, wealthier and stronger our societies are, the better it even is for the wealthy. Their own companies will likely do better. Their own city, county, state and nation will do better.  That, in fact, then is the "rising tides help all boats." Not tax cuts for the already-wealthy. That does nothing but make the rich, richer.

So, yeah, the rich owe the poor. Don't ever think they don't.  

They owe it to themselves to help.


Links:










Monday, December 14, 2015

On Ending Hunger. And Poverty


This will likely surprise you. I know it did me.



I saw a quote a couple weeks ago, haven't forgotten it and couldn't agree more.

"There's so much absurdity. Poverty is so absurd." - Frank McCourt, author.


Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Huge, Ugly, Breaking Missouri News


According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch:

Editorial: Missouri's hunger problem gets worse and worse


If you are poor, hungry live in Missouri, you don’t need a report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to tell you how bad things are. Those Missourians who are more fortunate need to know.
Every year, the USDA issues its “food security” report, which analyzes hunger problems across the country. In Missouri, the news is very, very bad.
In a state that is getting used to ranking poorly in things that count — like education funding, poverty and health-care outcomes — Missouri is No. 1 in a dubious category for the second year in a row.
Over the past decade, as a percentage of population, more Missourians have fallen into hunger, defined in the report as “very low food security,” than in any state in the nation.
All of Missouri’s rankings in the hunger report got worse in 2013 compared to 2012.
Nearly 17 percent of Missourians reported being food insecure, meaning at least once last year, in most cases several times, they skipped meals for lack of money. That’s the fifth-highest percentage in the nation, up two spots from 7th the year before.
Worse, more than 8 percent of Missourians reported more severe hunger, defined as “very low food security,” second only to Arkansas in terms of the dubious ranking.
Here’s where the numbers get really bad, and they don’t show up in the USDA report: Over the past year, as Missouri’s hunger problems got worse, fewer Missourians had access to food stamps to help feed their families.
_______________________________
Worst hunger in the nation. Two years running. Got worse last year.
Not Mississippi.  Missouri
Those are some sick, sick statistics, Missouri. We need to do things about this.
Come November 4, vote blue.
For starters.

Monday, May 7, 2012

On poverty in America

Great points get made here, surprisingly, with Stephen Colbert using sarcasm and glibness to make his points.

I say again, until campaign contributions are done away with, our government will be of, by and for the wealthy and corporations.

Until that day and time, nothing will change.

Sunday, December 12, 2010


From a distance the world looks blue and green,
and the snow-capped mountains white.
From a distance the ocean meets the stream,
and the eagle takes to flight.

From a distance, there is harmony,
and it echoes through the land.
It's the voice of hope, it's the voice of peace,
it's the voice of every man.

From a distance we all have enough,
and no one is in need.
And there are no guns, no bombs, and no disease,
no hungry mouths to feed.

From a distance we are instruments
marching in a common band.
Playing songs of hope, playing songs of peace.
They're the songs of every man.

God is watching us. God is watching us.
God is watching us from a distance.
From a distance you look like my friend,
even though we are at war.

From a distance I just cannot comprehend
what all this fighting is for.
From a distance there is harmony,
and it echoes through the land.

And it's the hope of hopes, it's the love of loves,
it's the heart of every man.
It's the hope of hopes, it's the love of loves.
This is the song of every man.

And God is watching us, God is watching us,
God is watching us from a distance.
Oh, God is watching us, God is watching.
God is watching us from a distance

Enjoy your Sunday, y'all.  Keep warm.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Quik Trip (QT) and their ugly, unnecessary, irresponsible waste

I was going home late last evening and stopped by a Quik Trip (QT) up North, on 169 Highway in Smithville.  There was a rather large guy there, with these big, black storage tubs (20" deep maybe by 3' long?) and he was throwing all the fruit--which wasn't spoiled, by the way, by any means--and baked goods (doughnuts, muffins, etc.) into the tubs.

Naturally, my first reaction was--and I asked him--"You're giving that to Harvesters, right?"

His answer was quick and negative.

It was all going to be thrown away.

The apples looked "new" as though they were still at a grocery store on the shelves.  Same with the bananas.  As for the baked goods, well, those things always look okay unless they're REALLY old--a week or more?--so you can't tell freshness until you bite into them.

If I had gotten there at 8:30, I could have bought and eaten it.  By 9 o'clock, however, it was to be trash.

I was disgusted by the waste so I repeated my question and incredulousness to the young lady at the checkout counter:  Was it really going to be thrown away?

She answered that she thought QT had announced a recent program to start giving it all to Harvesters for their volunteers.  She understood Harvesters couldn't give it away to the poor or homeless, she said, for fear of making someone sick--and I totally get that, the liability issue--but that it hadn't started yet.

So here's the deal.  I hope someone, anyone, at Quik Trip sees this posting today and can get back to me to say that the food is, very soon, no longer going to be wasted and thrown away.

Somebody, please tell me this is going to change.

That is an incredibly large amount of food, thrown away every Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings, I was told, and repeated at all their stores, throughout the area and chain.

Having just gone to their corporate website, they show a long list of organizations they work with and supposedly benefit--I don't doubt it--but Harvesters is not on the list and there is no recent announcement shown on the site, either, saying that they've started this new program.

Here's hoping.

This has got to change.  That food could help a LOT of people, one way or another, and still not hurt their sales in any way.

Friday, July 2, 2010

New report on "Child Food Insecurity": Missouri in top, worst 5

From the internet just now: Child Food Insecurity in the United States: 2006-2008 was funded by the ConAgra Foods Foundation, Feeding America’s exclusive Leadership Partner in the Fight to End Child Hunger. The study includes a comprehensive list of state rankings that also names Missouri, Mississippi, Georgia, Maine, South Carolina, Florida and Oregon, as well as the District of Columbia, at the top of the list. Like we give a damn. Link to original post: http://feedingamerica.org/our-network/the-studies/child-food-insecurity.aspx Link to complete study: http://feedingamerica.org/our-network/the-studies/~/media/Files/research/state-child-hunger-2010.ashx?.pdf

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Can we stop kidding ourselves?

I pose a question for you today:

If you're "middle class" in America, but you live better than 90% of the people on the planet, is the term "middle class" accurate?

To wit, say you're living in a $200,000.00 house out in a former corn field with a bunch of other suburbanites, you travel the 1/2 hour in to your job in the city each day with all the other travelers, your house is what? 3,000 square feet, it has a lawn sprinkler system, it's either brand new or looks it, the household income is, again, what? $125,000.00 to $150,000.00 per year (I'm trying to shoot low here and stay well under that magic $200,000.00/year range), you go on regular, dependable vacations, you have a late-model automobile, etc., etc.

You get the picture, I think.

This, in America, is considered solidly "middle class". There are lots of people for whom this is an accurate description of their social and financial status.

And, again, it's WAY over 80% of America's population, in terms of wealth and status and, I believe, much more than 90% of the world's population's status and financial situation.

So could we stop kidding ourselves, just to feel good?

It's decidedly NOT "middle class."