10 Things You Might Not Know About Poverty
By Paul Rosenberg
January 8, 2014
| Fifty years ago, Lyndon Johnson announced the war on poverty as the
central message of his first State of the Union, less than two months
after John F. Kennedy's assassination. Conservatives, following Ronald
Reagan's quip, like to joke that the War on Poverty is over and poverty
won. But as usual, the facts disagree.
We haven't vanquished poverty, it's true. But it's not Johnson's anti-poverty policies that have failed us. They've performed much better over the past 50 years than America's capitalist economy has, which has actually made poverty worseover that same period of time. If we want to make real, dramatic progress toward realizing the American Dream for all Americans, we need to arm ourselves with an accurate understanding of what the War on Poverty has actually achieved, as well as how it has fallen short, in order to make better policy for the future. What follows is a list of some of the most important facts to help guide our way.
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