by seahorse3 » Thu 22 Dec 2011, 08:45:53
Obi, I agree the problems are very complex. One of our founding fathers, Thomas Pain, wrote little known essay about how he noticed that "poverty" was a product of civilization. He noted that in the Native American tribes, the poverty and disparity we see in "civilization" didn't exists, and reading further on that, I have learned that Indian tribes status was determined by who could give the most away. But at any rate, Pain wrote that since man is born displaced from the land, meaning not enough land to provide for himself to live anymore like a free man, then civilization had a duty to him.
What I think Paine noticed and what we see today are problems of "technology", frankly, we can do more with less. Technology displaces workers who are no longer even "capital" as referred to by Marx. What are people to do? I wish I could find the link, but just this year there was a great article saying the fundamental problems facing economic growth, the development of a "service economy" etc were products of an increasing more complex society built on technology which frankly didn't need people to do much but buy, but if we literally don't need workers, how to support them? How do they earn money etc? Very fundamental and tough questions. I don't have the answers but to say the problems are more than the problems of anyone individual, thus I cannot lay all blame on the individual though I never remove that from the equation either. In our discussion, I took simply the bigger view of the problem, but do recognize the need for personal responsibility but as you say, how to instill it, how to teach it, and certainly someone has to intervene in the cycle of poverty and do something.
I wrote and posted an essay just today on "the business of mankind" which relates to this issue of poverty. If PO is real, if expensive oil is here today, it means some level of demand destruction which can be fatal to our "service economy" which is consumer driven. This means more recession, more economic pain, more poor. So, we have to address the fundamental problems of poverty or we will all reap the repercussions of an untreated illness that eventually, like in many third world countries, leads to entrenched crime and corruption.