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Poverty, by America 
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320page/132*203*19/231g
  • ISBN
9780593239933/0593239938
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  • ¡°A searing, essential book . . .[that] solidifies Desmond¡¯s status as a remarkable chronicler of our times.¡±¡ªVulture ¡°The passion, eloquence, and lively storytelling that made Evicted a Pulitzer Prize£¿winning bestseller are back in force as Desmond continues to speak on behalf of America¡¯s most hard-pressed. Desmond is our national conscience.¡±¡ªOprah Daily ¡°Desmond¡¯s new book is short, smart, and thrilling. The thrill comes from the sheer boldness of Desmond¡¯s argument and his carefully modulated but very real tone of outrage that underlies his words.¡±¡ªRolling Stone ¡°[Desmond¡¯s] arguments have the potential to push debate about wealth in America to a new level. . . . The brilliance of Poverty, By America . . . is provided by effective storytelling, which illustrates that poverty has become a way of life.¡±¡ªThe Guardian ¡°Poverty, by America is a searing moral indictment of how and why the United States tolerates such high levels of poverty and of inequality . . . [and] a hands-on call to action.¡±¡ªThe Nation ¡°A fierce polemic on an enduring problem . . . [Desmond] writes movingly about the psychological scars of poverty . . . and his prose can be crisp, elegant, and elegiac.¡±¡ªThe Economist ¡°Provocative and compelling . . . [Desmond] packs in a sweeping array of examples and numbers to support his thesis and . . . the accumulation has the effect of shifting one¡¯s brain ever so slightly to change the entire frame of reference.¡±¡ªNPR ¡°A data-driven manifesto that turns a critical eye on those who inflict and perpetuate unlivable conditions on others.¡±¡ªThe Boston Globe ¡°Urgent and accessible . . . It¡¯s refreshing to read a work of social criticism that eschews the easy and often smug allure of abstraction, in favor of plainspoken practicality. Its moral force is a gut punch.¡±¡ªThe New Yorker ¡°A compact jeremiad on the persistence of extreme want in a nation of extraordinary wealth . . . [Desmond¡¯s] purpose here is to draw attention to what¡¯s plain in front of us¡ªdamn the etiquette, and damn the grand abstractions.¡±¡ªThe New York Times Book Review ¡°[T]hrough in-depth research and original reporting, the acclaimed sociologist offers solutions that would help spread America¡¯s wealth and make everyone more prosperous.¡±¡ªTime ¡°Desmond¡¯s book makes an urgent and unignorable appeal to our national conscience, one that has been quietly eroded over decades of increasing personal consumption and untiring corporate greed.¡±¡ªClaire Messud, Harper¡¯s Magazine ¡°[Poverty, by America is] a book that could alter the way you see the world. . . . It reads almost like a passionate speech, urging us to dig deeper, to forget what we think we know as we try to understand the inequities upon which America was built. . . . A surprisingly hopeful work.¡±¡ªMinneapolis Star Tribune ¡°Desmond¡¯s electrifying pen cuts through the usual evasions and exposes the ¡®selfish,¡¯ ¡®dishonest¡¯ and ¡®sinful¡¯ pretence that poverty is a problem that America cannot afford to fix, rather than one...
  • Chapter 1 The Kind of Problem Poverty Is I recently spent a day on the tenth floor of Newark¡¯s courthouse, the floor where the state decides child welfare cases. There I met a fifty-five-year-old father who had stayed up all night working at his warehouse job by the port. He told me his body felt heavy. Sometimes when pulling a double shift, he would snort a speedball¡ªcocaine mixed with benzodiazepine and morphine, sometimes heroin¡ªto stay awake or dull his pain. Its ugly recipe was laid bare in the authorities¡¯ toxicology reports, making him look like a career junkie and not what he was: an exhausted member of America¡¯s working poor. The authorities didn¡¯t think the father could care for his three children alone, and their mother, who had a serious mental illness and was using PCP, wasn¡¯t an option either. So the father gambled, surrendering his two older children to his stepmother and hoping the authorities would allow him to raise the youngest. They did. Outside the courtroom, he hugged his public defender, who considered what had happened a real victory. This is what winning looks like on the tenth floor of Newark¡¯s courthouse: giving up two of your children so you have a chance to raise the third alone and in poverty. Technically, a person is considered ¡°poor¡± when they can¡¯t afford life¡¯s necessities, like food and housing. The architect of the Official Poverty Measure¡ªthe poverty line¡ªwas a bureaucrat working at the Social Security Administration named Mollie Orshansky. Orshansky figured that if poverty was fundamentally about a lack of income that could cover the basics, and if nothing was more basic than food, then you could calculate poverty with two pieces of information: the cost of food in a given year and the share of a family¡¯s budget dedicated to it. Orshansky determined that bare-bones food expenditures accounted for roughly a third of an American family¡¯s budget. If a family of four needed, say, $1,000 a year in 1965 to feed themselves, then any family making less than $3,000 a year (or around $27,000 at the beginning of 2022) would be considered poor because they would be devoting more than a third of their income to food, forgoing other necessities. Orshansky published her findings in January of that year, writing, ¡°There is thus a total of 50 million persons¡ªof whom 22 million are young children¡ªwho live within the bleak circle of poverty or at least hover around its edge.¡± It was a number that shocked affluent Americans. Today¡¯s Official Poverty Measure is still based on Orshansky¡¯s calculation, annually updated for inflation. In 2022, the poverty line was drawn at $13,590 a year for a single person and $27,750 a year for a family of four. As I¡¯ve said, we can¡¯t hope to understand why there is so much poverty in America solely by considering the lives of the poor. But we need to start there, to better understand the kind of problem poverty is¡ªand grasp the stakes¡ªbecause poverty is not simply a matter of small incomes. ...
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