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The Never Ending Cycle

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The Never Ending Cycle

Everyone has heard someone comment on poverty in the United States. Some people say, "the poor have only themselves to blame for their situation." Or, "why don't they get a job?" This is the problem with society today; the different levels of the class structure have grown so far apart from one another they cannot even relate to one another. People look down on the poor as unmotivated and lazy when, in fact, it is not their fault, but the fault of a society that does not value people of wage labor. In our society today poverty is a never-ending cycle that feeds off itself, making the rich richer and the poor poorer. There are three main factors that can be brought up when talking about the cycle of poverty; …show more content…

The problem with poverty is more deeply rooted than just the decision to attend school. Poverty also is a factor of something the poor have absolutely no control over, the redistribution or dispersion of money. This is the deciding factor in how the classes are formed. If the government does not redistribute the wealth evenly throughout the class system, gaps appear. This is exactly what is happening in today's society. Under the new policies of our president the richest one percent have taken a 25 percent income tax cut while the poorest 20 percent have taken a 1.2 percent tax cut (Bush Tax Cut Plan). It is said that the rich will spend their money on goods and services throughout the economy, essentially "trickling down" or giving the money to the poor through businesses, but it has not worked to date. From this theory we find that the cycle continues; the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. So where does all this tax money go; shouldn't it be given back to the poor? In the poor's eyes, yes it should, but in the rich people's eyes, no it shouldn't and so it does not. Sure, the government puts some taxes towards welfare, but, in fact, roughly 38 percent of the federal income goes right to the military cause (War Resisters League). Only about 30 percent of the federal income is spent on human resources such as welfare and medicare. The money that can

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