Monday, March 16, 2020
Poverty and Welfare essays
Poverty and Welfare essays    Poverty has plagued mankind throughout history, yielding various     justifications for its existence along the way.  One of these arguments is     that poverty is simply a structural flaw created by the market system of     capitalism.  As a response to poverty in the capitalist society, welfare     programs were created and executed for the  first time.  And though many of     these programs exhibit disappointing outcomes and have proven to be     susceptible to abuse, welfare programs as a whole have helped to improve     the individual liberties of lower class individuals.  Indeed, it is the     duty of a democratic government to create equality of opportunity for its     citizens, and to avoid the equality of outcome so feared by conservatives     and critics of liberal welfare reforms.           Since racial discrimination has in the past played a large role in     perpetuating poverty, government involvement is necessary to put racial     minorities in the same socioeconomic level as the majority.  In America,     African Americans had been fiercely segregated and enslaved for hundreds of     years, robbing them of property and even liberty enjoyed by Caucasian     Americans.  As a result of this discrimination, African Americans emerged     poorer than the average white citizens, even after the Civil Rights     Movement Legislation of 1950s.   In response, various social institutions     and public assistance bureaus were created to reduce the difference in     economic status (Pivan and Cloward, p128).            Sadly, because of individual and structural discrimination that     remained in American society, most blacks, who moved to areas like as     Chicago, New York, Los Angles, Baltimore, Newark, and Philadelphia during     the Great Migration never found new employment (Pivan and Cloward, p 128).     Moreover, African Americans who had jobs during the recession of the 1960s           There is a lack of sympathy among conservatives. Murray notes,     "Because it was eas...     
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