Why the Poor Stay Poor in America - A Holiday & Weekend Reading List...
Welcome to The Poverty Trap: Why the Poor Stay Poor in America. I’m thrilled that you signed up to read my newsletter, and I hope that you will enjoy participating in our community. Everyone deserves the opportunity to thrive in our country, and we can work together to make that happen. Please share this newsletter with your friends and family when you have a spare minute. Thanks! If you have the means, do upgrade your subscription to Paid—your financial support of my writing will help me to continue and expand the newsletter!
This post goes out to both free and paid subscribers, but if you are not already a paid subscriber and value this effort and our growing community, please consider upgrading to a paid membership. Thanks in advance for your financial support of my work —it’s what allows me to keep researching and writing! And a HUGE THANK-YOU to the flurry of new paid subscribers I’ve had recently! Your financial support lifts me up and keeps me writing!”Glen Helen is the legacy of [Antioch College] alumnus Hugh Taylor Birch, who, in 1929, donated the wooded glen to Antioch College in memory of his daughter, Helen. With this gift, a foundation was laid to establish the Glen Helen Nature Preserve. Additional gifts have expanded the preserve, which now encompasses 1,125 acres, all accessible from a 15-mile network of footpaths. Antioch College completed a conservation easement in 2015 through the Tecumseh Land Trust to ensure it would be preserved in perpetuity against development.” I put together a few articles for your reading and learning pleasure this holiday weekend, and shockingly, they are all uplifting. Government, nonprofits and ordinary people coming together to help their neighbors, larger communities, fellow creatures and their habitats. What could be a better way to celebrate our nation’s independence than to show we care about our greater good? — First up is a June article from Business Insider that touts some good news out of Denver, Colorado: The city, together with The Colorado Trust and an anonymous foundation has provided $9.5 million since the fall of 2022 directly to homeless people with resounding success:
According to the founder and executive director of the Denver Basic Income Project, Mark Donovan, "What is fundamentally different about our approach is the way that we start from a place of trust.” And according to what I have personally experienced and read, trusting a recipient with cash is the opposite of government programs like food and health care assistance, which have onerous and unrealistic requirements to obtain and do not provide cash, but instead are pre-loaded cards with restrictions on what you can buy. One unfortunate example I’ve mentioned before is that the SNAP Benefit Program (food stamps) allows you to buy all the soda, chips and candy you’d like, but not a hot rotisserie chicken. These benefits are lifesavers for recipients, but should not come with ridiculous restrictions. — In other positive news from out west, courtesy of the Los Angeles Times, California has recently authorized the return of land to the Shasta Indian Nation, after it was taken by eminent domain over 100 years ago to build dams. As part of ongoing projects to remove unnecessary dams in the U.S., which I wrote about late last year, the Klamath Dam was removed, and the land it flooded, a total of about 2800 acres, will be returned to its rightful inhabitants.
To be filed under the Don’t Hold Your Breath Department, the article ends by saying : “It’s unclear when the ancestral lands will be officially returned to the Shasta Indian Nation.” — We’re out west again, this time featuring an Oregon “horse detective” in an article published today in the Washington Post. I’m amazed at the dedication of people like Clare Staples, who buys wild horses and donkeys rounded up by the Bureau of Land Management, and works to unite horses separated from their herd mates, so they can run free on her 9,000 acre Bend, Oregon ranch. Most of these magnificent animals are saved from confined, cruel conditions and eventual slaughter.
Staples works with professional photographers like Scott Wilson, of Photoadvocacy.org, to reunite horse families based on photographic evidence of wild herds. — I’ll end with a fun story from the midwest, published in the Washington Post yesterday. Have you taken a “cat tour” of your neighborhood, or any neighborhood? John Edwards from Minneapolis just hosted his 7th annual cat tour in late June. What started as a joke has turned into something quite popular—this year, about 500 people turned out to view the felines residing in the Lowry Hill East neighborhood of Minneapolis. You’ll need to register in advance if you want your cat to be admired, usually through windows from the safety of your home, although some residents bring out their cats in strollers for their “meet and greet” with the crowd.
________________________________________ Let me know what you think of these stories in the Comment Section below. As always, You’re on the free list for The Poverty Trap: Why the Poor Stay Poor In America. All posts are free for now, but if you’d like to join the crowd, please support my work by becoming a paid subscriber. |
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Friday, June 28, 2024
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