Look everybody - the Heritage Foundation does NOT "get a pass." The site that was being given a pass was Slate. I explained very clearly that the bias of Heritage is, in fact, relevant to the discussion. What it doesn't do is INVALIDATE it as a source. When Heritage cites numbers from the Census Bureau, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and such, those are hard numbers. The numbers are real whether cited by Heritage or Slate.L'Emmerdeur wrote:Given Forty Two's logic in dismissing Slate as a source, I have to wonder why the Heritage Foundation gets a pass, given their partnering with the Discovery Institute and hosting such anti-luminaries as Stephen Meyer (multiple times), John West and Jay Richards.
I did not rely solely on Heritage anyway. I cited the Economist, the OECD Better Life Index, Forbes, and Pew Research studies, too, and I provided links. But, for some obvious reason, some of you want to just harp on Heritage Foundation. That's why I cited multiple sources not just one.
I took issue with Slate, because (a) Slate is a clickbait source, and not a serious news/data outlet, and (b) Slate has a as much of a left wing bias as Heritage has a right wing bias, and (c) the article in Slate substantively addressed only ONE statistic, the LIS income study, and did NOT specifically address poverty. It equated income inequality with poverty which IS NOT ACCURATE and does not measure poverty levels.
The stats and sources I cited were varied, and across the board, and did address poverty per se, income, wealth and consumption - all of which are relevant factors.
I did not claim that there was no poverty whatsoever in the US, nor do the sources when you examine them. Of course there are people needing help and there is poverty. That's true in various Shangri-las like The Netherlands, where everything is run fairly and morally, and not like in the evil US - they have poverty and homelessness there too. Not huge, of course, because no western, first world, democracy has the poverty that exists in the second world and third world.
The reason the western first world countries have less poverty than "the rest of the world" is that they have capitalist economies (some with greater or lesser social welfare systems - but all with some form of social welfare). The countries that base their economies on socialism, communism or central planning fail, and fail miserably.
This whole line of discussion, of course, was generated by the article suggesting that the feisty Australian who goes around the world holding countries to account for poverty issues is now going to set his sights on the US, which - the article said - we know in advance is an "outlier" from "the rest of the world" when it comes to poverty. We suck, it said, compared to "the rest of the world." The reason I posted the numbers from the OECD better life index, the Pew Research center, yes, Heritage too, and also Forbes, and The Economist, is that the numbers show that the US is not "an outlier" from "the rest of the world" and that in reality the lives of "the poor" in the US compare very favorably to "the rest of the world" and there are very few other countries in which it's better to be "poor" than the US. That's not even arguable based on the numbers.
That does not, of course, mean that there are no problems in the US, or that the US is perfect, or that the US is superior. It isn't. All it means is that we are not some suck-ass "outlier" from "the rest of the world" which needs to catch up to how "the rest of the world" treats its poor. The reality is that the US is among countries like Canada, Oz, NZ, six or seven countries in western continental Europe and the UK in being the best in the world among the 192 countries when it comes to poverty. The "rest of the world" sucks ass to be poor in. You want to be poor in Russia instead? Romania? Turkey? Thailand? China? Indonesia? Colombia? Venezuela? Brazil? Mexico? Come the fuck on.