by elocs » Wed 09 Aug 2006, 13:04:20
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'L')oki,
Probably the only thing I'm sure about in life is of my own ignorance. But, that's why I ask a lot of questions. So, I ask again, if the photo essay is not representative of how the average American lived during the depression, please point me to the sources. I will say that, as a history major and having had grandparents who were migrant workers that moved from Oklahoma to California during the depression, I can say that the photo essay is representative of the way many Americans lived during that time, and it was very difficult.
Now, it was said that 4 million migrant workers was "statistically insignificant" based on the US population of 120 million people at the time. Assuming those numbers are correct, I think it is a dangerous point of view to justify poverty or pain based on whether that poverty is "statistically significant." In fact, that is the very notion which Charles Dickens confronted in his book "A Christmas Carol." If we measure the value of action or inaction, or the level of our concern, by the "statistical significance" of the number of people affected, then I would argue the HIV problem in Africa is "statistically insignificant" to the world's population and therefore we shouldn't care; the number of casualties in Iraq, on all sides, is statistically insignificant to the world's population; the number of casualties in the current Lebanese conflict is statistically insignificant to the world's population, and therefore, not important. Its a dangerous philosophical road to take, to view suffering as "statistically insignificant."
All I can say that if I am poor, then poverty is statistically significant to me. If I am HIV positive, then it is statistically significant to me.
If I am a casualty of war, it has huge statistical significance to me.
But I hope I never view human suffering as statistically significant because then I will have lost a hope that is personally important to me and I will have lost an element that I value as a human being.
I will have become less than an animal because an animal is powerless to make even a portion of their world a better place, to display empathy and altruism. I know there are those who consider this to be laughable and a joke, but it is important to me.