Showing posts with label American Dream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Dream. Show all posts

March 28, 2015

Our Kids, Robert Putnam's Latest Tome, Book Review




Book Review
Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
by Robert Putnam
(Simon & Schuster, 400 pp., $28)



[From review]
Our Kids relies on both a series of contrasting interviews with affluent and lower income-children about their families, their schools, and their communities, and an impressive collection of charts giving numerical heft to the differences that emerge from their tales. Adding to the breadth of the book is its geographical range: from Orange County, California to Port Clinton, Ohio, the author’s hometown and from Atlanta, Georgia to Bend, Oregon,
[. . .]
Skeptics may be most convinced by Putnam’s graphs and figures. In example after example, Putnam shows the “scissoring” of class-based children’s experiences since 1970 as conditions improved for rich kids and declined for the poor and working class.
[. . .]
The quality of family life, schools, and communities are mutually reinforcing, leading to success for rich kids and struggle for the poor. The gap, Putnam concludes, is bad for kids, bad for the economy, and—especially given the lack of trust and civic engagement among low-income families—bad for democracy.
[. . .]
Had Putnam ended there, he would have had a powerful book. But in the final chapter—“What is to Be Done?”—the social scientist yields the floor to the missionary in two notable ways. First, quoting Proverbs, Isaiah, and Pope Francis, among others, he reminds us that unequal opportunity “violates our deepest religious and moral values” and rues that we are “ignoring the plight of poor kids.”
[. . .]
School spending at all levels has gone from 4 percent of GDP in 1984 to 6.1 percent in 2010. Robert Moffitt of Johns Hopkins University estimates the per-capita government spending on means-tested programs has increased by 74 percent between 1975 and 2007. The federal government spends over $800 billion on 92 such programs. Of course, that doesn’t include the billions doled out to nonprofit groups by grant officers at the country’s thousands of philanthropies. And, all along, inequality has risen.
It’s still possible that the money and effort are not sufficient to the scope of the problem. It’s also possible that while government efforts may have helped to keep people out of poverty, erasing the opportunity gap is beyond the reach of conventional public policy.

http://www.city-journal.org/2015/bc0327kh.html

KAY S. HYMOWITZ
Robert Putnam’s Mission
The Bowling Alone author’s prescriptions for closing the opportunity gap have been tried—and found wanting.
March 27, 2015

November 29, 2014

American Dream Is Just That, A Dream




[From article]
Gregory Clark is sharing his research as a hard truth with no hope—whether or not you can get ahead in America is as predictable as any formula.
In fact, he says, the formulas for social mobility in the United States show there’s nothing to dream about.
“America has no higher rate of social mobility than medieval England, Or pre-industrial Sweden,” he said. “That’s the most difficult part of talking about social mobility is because it is shattering people s dreams.”
[.  . .]
“My students always argue with me, but I think the thing they find very hard to accept, is the idea that much of their lives can be predicted from their lineage and their ancestry,” he said.
Stuck in a social status is no American Dream—Clark says it’s the American reality.
“The good news is that this is coming from an economist, because economists are used to being unpopular, and so we are the right people to bear this message that the world is a limiting place,” he said.
There’s one caveat to the study, and that is for any one of us, there is always an exception to the rule.
Clarks’ study was published by the Council on Foreign Relations.


http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2014/11/26/uc-davis-economics-professor-there-is-no-american-dream/

UC Davis Economics Professor: There Is No American Dream
November 26, 2014 11:44 PM
Steve Large
CBS News Sacramento CA

April 6, 2012

American Dream is Antidote to Lost Spirit

http://townhall.com/columnists/calthomas/2012/04/05/inspiration_plus_perspiration_equals_success

Inspiration Plus Perspiration Equals Success
Cal Thomas
Townhall.com
April 5, 2012

September 2, 2011

Long Term Motels Are Now Home

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/the-last-resort-more-and-more-americans-are-calling-longstay-motels-home-2346963.html

The last resort: More and more Americans are calling long-stay motels home
In recession-gripped America, society's most vulnerable find themselves living in long-stay motels, writes Guy Adams.
The Independent (UK)
Saturday, 3 September 2011

August 25, 2010

America The Transformed

[Use your computer view tools to enlarge]

https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=2f02d6bd11&view=att&th=12a44eed8102daec&attid=0.1&disp=inline&zw

May 9, 2007

More Jokes

More Jokes

Letter to editor,
The candidates for governor are comedians for more reasons than Paul McMorrow stated. ("Gov, candidate likened to dictator," Weekly Dig, 4.12.06 to 4.19.06, page 7) Deval Patrick opens his appearances by reminding his audience that he was born on the Southside of Chicago in a project. He does not explain why he is clear-cutting forest in western Mass for a second McMansion.
He is a curious left-wing candidate or the second coming of Che Guevara. It is unlikely either of them would be a member of the Harvard Corporation as Patrick is.
McMorrow misses another Boston Globe deception by omission. Deval Patrick is a leftist like Dick Cheney is a leftist. He seeks sympathy for his modest beginnings while acting like the fat cats that he says he opposes.
He says he wants to extend the American dream to others as he narrowly defines it. But who wants to live in a mansion and serve on the Harvard Corporation? Leftists have dreams like that?
--
Roy Bercaw, Editor ENOUGH ROOM