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Not Helping those in Poverty in Barbara Ehrenreich’s Nickel and Dimed

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Why is it that whenever humanitarian aid is the topic of discussion amongst members of the American middle class, the peoples deemed most deserving of the United States’ efforts never reside within our borders? The United States Census Bureau reports that, in 2012, the official poverty rate was 15.0 percent. There were 46.5 million people in poverty. The only feasible path to accepting this staggering statistic as the reality of such a proud nation is by first acknowledging the accuracy of Barbara Ehrenreich’s (2001) premise as it is asserted in the final chapter of Nickel and Dimed: “Some odd optical property of our highly polarized and unequal society makes the poor almost invisible to their economic superiors” (p. 216). After we accept this as a truth, we must then move to analyze the methods by which this system is perpetuated. The exploitation and injustice against the American working class is seen starkly in the treatment of waitresses and practice of systematically forcing the poor to congregate in substandard living conditions. Those that are fortunate enough to have generated enough surplus income from their budget (provided they are poor enough to have a need to construct such) to dine at restaurants regularly have been pampered into forgetting that every step of their meal, from the first ingredient that touches the pot to its cheerful delivery to his/her table, is carried out by a living, breathing, human being. Many do not even bother to remember Sarah’s name

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