In my view, the post below is totally wrong - nothing but a sob story. In the US, no one willing to work needs to starve. At least not when I left, three years ago.
I speak from experience. For years I was an interpreter/translator for an organization that provided free legal assistance to people below the poverty level in the DC area.
Many of our clients were illegal aliens who did not even speak English, but still managed to find and hold jobs. Initially they were preyed upon by their employers, but after a couple of years they found their footing, brought their families over, moved out of crumbling rental apartments (NOT SUBSIDIZED), bought modest homes and sent their children to school and to community colleges. Often, two or three families pooled their resources to buy a home, then gradually moved out as they got better paying jobs.
During my years as an interpreter I saw young Mexican guys arrive empty handed, start by raking leaves and shoveling out driveways, and in ten years end up with eight crews doing yard maintenance for three hundred homes.
I saw a Salvadorean man who had been sent to work in the fields at age six to support his widowed mother and two younger siblings. He didn't get a chance to attend school, so he never learned to read or write. He started working as a day laborer and ended up with a small linen supply company, serving local motels and employing a dozen people.
Sometimes I interpreted at inner-city schools' PTA meetings. Hispanic parents never missed a meeting and insisted on knowing exactly how their children were doing. US-born parent's often did not show up, despite repeated calls.
The US offers many opportunities for those who choose to go out and seek them out, instead of sitting down to feel sorry for themselves. There may be areas with fewer opportunities, but enterprising people go where the jobs are - they don't stay home waiting for employers to go knocking on the door, or for the government to support them.
I guess the main thing is that immigrants MAKE their own opportunities, while many Americans born in poverty (or in subsidized projects, sob, sob....!) feel ENTITLED to have opportunities, and expect the government to provide them.
Frankly, some don't realize how easy they have it, compared to the rest of the world. They sound like spoiled children: "GIMME... GIMME... GIMME....!"
LAtoBA said:
This right here is everything that is wrong with a certain "mind think" in America. You've obviously never lived or seen the school curriculum in Bankhead, GA, certain parts of Watts and Compton, CA, and NE and SW quandrants in DC, or places in rural Louisiana. These are places that I have either been to and spent time in, and in some areas have family living there now.
Your last sentence is the most idiotic statement of your whole post and I'm sorry does nothing but grate me. There are very, very, very few opportunities in these areas and any opportunities that may exist certainly aren't abundant enough to lift a whole community out of poverty. Do you know how hard it is to break out of poverty--wait because you did it then everyone else should be able to right? Doesn't work like that. Have you ever volunteered, worked, or lived in a neighborhood where the kids try to go to school and "learn" with lice, various skin diseases such as boils, are malnourished, and then go home to a drunk/crack using mother, father's in prison, grandfather rapes his granddaughter, parents don't care if their child learns etc etc.....that was in the west side of Atlanta.
Yes poverty in the US is different and not as severe from the poverty in places such as the DR (also volunteered here) and Brazil but to sit here and minimize it and actually sit here and say that they "are given the opportunity to make something of themselves" is complete garbage!
My father is from the Morningside projects in South LA. By the grace of god he made it out because he was given one of the very few opportunities that were available to people like him in the late 60's. Most of his buddies were shipped off to Vietnam. Go to the Morningside projects sometime....day and night, and then try and tell me there are "ample" opportunities available. Simply insane.
Did you know that in LA county, the county requires the legal guardian or parent to reimburse the state for any time their juvenile child does in juvenile hall?! They have to pay room and board. Did you also know that any wage increase people that are living in projects get, at least in LA county, must report it --then their rent is adjusted "up" accordingly. Aren't these just novel ways to get people out of poverty?! Lets see impose debt on families for their child's mistakes and increase their rent so they're unable to save and leave the projects. Way to go LA! I don't doubt its much different across the country. Don't get me started on DC or Atlanta.
I commend you for making it today as an "orphan"....but not everyone can do that, especially in these times.