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geefloyd46

(1,939 posts)
Wed May 9, 2012, 07:14 PM May 2012

Just a devastating critique from the Nation: The Other America, 2012: Confronting Poverty

Last edited Wed May 9, 2012, 07:46 PM - Edit history (1)

Clarksdale, Mississippi, might seem an unlikely starting point for a meditation on twenty-first-century American inequality. After all, the music the town’s fame rests on is born of the sorrow and racial exploitations of another century. Clarksdale proudly markets itself as the home of the blues: the world’s best blues musicians still come to jam in the little Delta town where W.C. Handy once lived, where Bessie Smith died and where Robert Johnson supposedly made his infamous pact with the devil at a crossroads on the edge of town.

But Clarksdale is also the site of a very different crossroads, one in many ways emblematic of what America is becoming: a place of stunning divides and dramatically disparate life expectations between rich and poor. The side streets of central Clarksdale are lined with tiny, dilapidated wooden homes. Most residents here make do without basic services and amenities, including anything beyond a bare-bones education, and many lack access to the broader cash economy. In contrast, the stately old townhouses in the historic district—places where several Mississippi governors grew up, where the young Tennessee Williams ran around while staying with his grandparents—look like the scenic backdrop to a romantic film set in the antebellum South. And the newer, more palatial mansions in the suburbs ringing the town could serve as staging grounds for a reality TV show on the nouveau riche.

...Unfortunately, Luckett is a rare exception in Mississippi politics. The state’s leadership is exemplified by ex-governor Haley Barbour and current governor Phil Bryant, who both won election by forging alliances between country club denizens and the culturally conservative white working class, which both preach the virtues of shrinking government, rolling back regulations and cutting social services. “When you get a white guy walking out of his rusty trailer into his pickup truck and he’s got a Vote Republican placard in his yard, then you’ve reached the height of stupidity,” (Democratic Nominee for Governor Bill) Luckett says.

Read more: http://laborspains.blogspot.com/2012/05/just-devastating-critique-from-nation.html

original piece here: http://www.thenation.com/article/167564/other-america-2012-confronting-poverty-epidemic
[link:http://www.thenation.com/print/article/167564/other-america-2012-confronting-poverty-epidemic|

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Just a devastating critique from the Nation: The Other America, 2012: Confronting Poverty (Original Post) geefloyd46 May 2012 OP
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