« Great Moments In TiVo History | Main | Harold And Maude: No Good! » 20 Feb 2008 02:39 pm Food Was My Kryptonite[Jim Manzi] My reactions to Barbara Ehrenreich’s famous book Nickel and Dimed, in which she purposely lives on low-income jobs for a couple of years, weren’t very lofty. First, I’ve had some pretty unpleasant jobs in my life, so I felt simultaneously bad for people who had these jobs, and glad that I didn’t. Second, I was confident that in that situation, I would find a way to get out of it over time. It seemed clear to me that she was making stupid choices. Would you really live in hotels for a sustained period if you worked for minimum wage? Would you really “eat fast food, or the hot dogs and Styrofoam cups of soup that can be microwaved in a convenience store" as your primary diet? Would your reaction to the possibility of a telemarketing job really be that it “can be dismissed on grounds of personality”? (Really you, not some imaginary person that you think is “not prepared to make intelligent choices” or whatever) A 2006 college graduate, Adam Shepard, apparently had a similar reaction, and decided to put this to the test. He says that he showed up at a homeless shelter in Charleston, South Carolina with $25 plus the clothes he was wearing, and set himself the following goal: have a car, a furnished apartment and $2,500 in savings within one year without using either his credentials or connections. After 10 months he had the car, the apartment and $5,000, and ended the project to deal with an illness in his family. He has written a book about this experience, and described it in a recent Christian Science Monitor article, as well as a more detailed email interview. What was his “secret”?:
Interestingly, he didn’t see himself as unique:
Now, of course, Shepard was a young, white, healthy male with no dependents. He also had the accumulated social capital represented by his upbringing and education. But unless you think that his ability to get ahead was created primarily by the reactions of other people to him based on his immutable characteristics (which seems pretty implausible), then you have to ascribe it primarily to his behavior. Even if you don’t think that it is fair to demand that other people without his advantages behave this way, it does tell you some important things about contemporary poverty. Human agency matters. Many people have it within their control to improve their economic standing. Policies should recognize that much (not all) poverty in America is created by behavior rather than insurmountable circumstances, and should therefore focus on changing behavior rather than changing external circumstances. TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e5506faa998834 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Food Was My Kryptonite' |
