tv Documentary RT June 4, 2021 6:30pm-7:01pm EDT
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sitting down to dinner together today, millions of american family thought in circumstances beyond their control, their children will be compelled to live lives of poverty unless the cycle is broken. president johnson's war on poverty has. there's one goal to provide every one the chance to grow and make his own way. ah, i think everything in life that important really lives in the gray. there's no black and white gray. how do we make it more clear of what the problem is? there are so many different life experiences to poverty, and we don't have a real clear definition of it. federal government definition. they say, if you're a family or you need write about 24000 to take care of your family for a year. and does that mean that if you're making more you're not in read and that's not the case. i think the most difficult challenge with
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the way the way out of your current predicament in your property of course, people cannot contribute to the nation if they are never taught to read or write. if their bodies are stunted from hunger, if their sickness goes untended, if their life is spent and hopeless poverty, yes, drawing a welfare check. so we want to open the gate to opportunities. like we're also going to give all our people the help that they need to walk through those gates, all of our welfare get money and you get more if you have less income. so 30 income, you get the biggest benefit. and then as you earn money,
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lose part of the benefit. sometimes it's even one extra values, a whole benefit medicaid for health insurance, for people and people who are the same. that number seems low and should because it's based on 1960 the living in the sixty's economists came up with a formula for calculating. what does the family mean? and they said things like, well, we'll have a parent in the home, so we don't have to include childcare. people can walk to work. so we don't have to include transportation and employers will pay for health care. so we don't need to include that 3 major family expense, and they're not included in the 2007 tool. federal poverty guidelines, where you have more women in the workplace than ever in history. parents and divide their income into 5 equal parts and less for 120 percent. so this would be parents with income below roughly 25000 dollars year. and now we can watch their kids grow up and we measure their kids income. 303034 years age. are they doing better
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than kids on that bottom of in humble or 25000 and are twice as likely as we would expect based on chance to be in the bottom. it's very difficult to get out of the model. it's a fight every day to meet your needs and the needs of your family in some corner of our brothers and sisters in paris on a lonely i'm on a pub. in the midst of a vast ocean, material bearing more must be done to reduce poverty and dependency. and believe me, nothing is more important than welfare reform. i think poverty to a large extent is also a state of mind. poverty, a death sent out the poverty look pocket. it doesn't have a line because you can put some make up glow on anything. a
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bad terms of we struggled with poverty in a certain way. we tend to be most, most critical because we say, well, we didn't, i pulled myself up while i was dressed. i got it done. i struggled, i had to work 2 jobs. i did it. well. your situation is not the same as somebody else is because we're individual and our characteristics, our personality, our network of people, our demographics, the area that we lived in are different. so we can't take 2 people from different say, well, this person did it, he must be good and this person didn't do it. they trained the elephant elephant with a little rope. when they're young. when that elephant growth of the full moon elephant put the same little roll around that elephant elephant, i have been condition only go far as that rope will live in poverty were the same way. many cases the people actually had that little rope
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around there, man. and that rope will, would only let them go so far, you know, and that's the only dream so far when they were children, then when they grew up, i came down in the same little ro deal tied to them in, but only goes for that road in the 2 most important things where you're born and who you are born to. so this one guy, he said i'll do your study for you. and i grew up in poverty. and i said, thank you so much. i said, tell me, how did your family get by? he said, well, my father was a physician. he died when i was 12. i had to go live with grandparents. i worked in their store, i pulled myself up by my own bootstraps. i had the right mindset and i was determined and i became a doctor like my dad. and i'm listening to him through the eyes of somebody who's bought her 5 brother for the back window of the car. and i'm thinking you knew
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someone who owned a store and you were related to them. but if you look at it from his context, his experiences, who did the children a professional thing? typically it's going to be other children or professionals in what people do is we can paris off to the people around us and we can cut an umbrella and say poverty is just poverty and that's not true. that's not the case. it's so difficult to come up with a solution to help someone we don't understand the problem ourselves. how can we work together? how can we understand each other? and the answer is, we have to accurately understand poverty. what is poverty about i ah, so understanding the perspective of people who live in generational poverty or
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working poverty or immigrant poverty or situation poverty, there's so many different life experiences of poverty. and we use one word to describe them. so many years ago, they have no idea if you're born into a poor family. you're born into a minority family. if you're born into a family that only has a single parent that really constrains your lives, chances people die on average. 15 years younger who born into generational poverty only 72 percent of the people burning the generational poverty move out. so you move a lot and you just get through the day and life becomes about getting through the day. generational poverty, poverty or michael out of and people in generational poverty are worked at $1.00 jobs every month have to decide between pain or find need ah, the kind of poverty i come from. where most of my family members can't read and write. there's high mobility or constantly evicted,
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you're going hungry threshold to do that. really, really sick, you know, emergency room and hope they give you sample by the prescript home working class. poverty is a little different. you're living paycheck payback don't have a lot leftover, but know that check's coming to you feel like you have a little more control over your life. but they're very hard on my end of the idea that if they work hard to make the labor without an engine for skill or your whole life in and then the immigrant poverty where you have people who are struggling, housing, childcare in christian medical care, basic human needs and in addition to that, they have the language barrier, cultural barrier, prejudice, the racism to really dig off to address, to really develop to there. and then you have a question of poverty. you grew up in the middle class in my own that you here, middle password. since you were in the womb,
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know middle structure. you're not saying you maybe have a divorce and you fall into poverty, or maybe you get downsize in your job and you fall into time. those are the ones that sometimes don't find their way into our numbers that didn't fill out the papers for the free and reduced lunch. so in america, we like to think that everybody who works hard, it has a certain amount of talent, can make it and can join the middle class. that's the american dream and past generations. the american dream seem to be working pretty well. it's not working as well. now, we always think that in america, the home of the free, the land of the brave, equal opportunity. and it's just simply not your why don't you
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go just get through education, you can also better yourselves and other ways. you learn how to learn, how to think critically and find solutions to unexpected challenges. education also teaches you the value of discipline. but the greatest rewards come not from instant gratification, but from sustained effort and from hard work. and finally, with the right education, both at home and at school, you can learn how to be a better human being. the so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy plantation
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let it be an arms race is on often very dramatic development. only personally, i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very political time. time to sit down and talk to join me every thursday on the alex simon show and i'll be speaking to guess in the world, the politics sport, business and show business. i'll see you then me ah oh, as
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a korea professional sport is much tougher on some than others year old myer by everybody. so why would somebody believe me, i was just a little girl. the price paid to, to, to achieve really was, was to read in the paper this morning, usa swimming coach, arrested, allegedly had sex with a 12 year old girl. this happens almost every week. we get calls at the office. i get informed about one of my greatest fears is someone's going to start linking all this together. there's going to be a 60 minute documentary about youth coaches in sports like gymnastics swimming. is that documentary? see it on our t ah, the
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ah, i when you look at the landscape of our community, one of the things that keeps me up at night is our education attainment rate, 70 percent of our citizens. our neighbors, they live with us, have no post secondary credential. today's economy is very demanding skills and skills means education. getting a job these days with just a high school education is a lot harder than it used to be. the chances are that you're going to be in poverty
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or close to poverty and be especially if you're trying to support me. so i did 20 different focus groups. i did surveys, i did interviews expecting to find that students were afraid of math, which they are, that students need more tutoring, which they do. but those weren't the barriers that students identified that we're keeping on from being successful in the classroom. what students told me, overwhelming is the biggest barriers to their success in the classroom. had nothing to do with the classroom. transportation, child care, health care, housing, food utility payments, statistics show that college is a very successful way to go. and it's still the best decision for students, for anyone who wants to get out of poverty or level up and what they want to do. however, i also think that the worst thing to do is go to college and drop out years ago. the goal is to graduate,
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you got to graduate like you just can't drop out because unlike anything else, you still got to pay the bill. me the now what higher ed would do is they would look at those success rates and they would go, oh, our students aren't as well prepared. they're not smart. they don't know how to study. they're not dedicated. and i think what we've learned at emerald colleges, those aren't true at all. our students are smart, duran, vicious, they're capable, they want for themselves, their burden not just provided future for themselves, but to save their families. but they have real barriers that they bring with them. if we're going to fulfill our mission and higher education, we've got to understand those barriers and address them. if we want our students to
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be successful and classroom, i teach people that if you don't get educated, you don't get skills are going to be for your whole life or so will your children is an absolute exception of a person living. you know, some of the, well my uncle makes a 100000 and he's not educated, but i'm quoting labor statistic fences. that's an exception. i didn't know what i wanted to be. and so after i graduated from college, i think that that somewhat normal. but i went ahead and i went to college and i picked the major and i was glad that i had people in my life, encouraged me just to go ahead and go. and a lot of people because they've learned they've, they've been sent messages, but they're not smart enough. they're not good enough. they don't try to get your high school diploma and get your college degree. and then he pursuing what it is that you have a skill set, boring. you're passionate about. one of the hardest,
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most heartbreaking thing about not having your g d or your husband diploma is sometimes you hit a, a ceiling at work or you miss an opportunity. we don't want you to miss we want people to have those opportunities. the best student, you know, i'm not, i'm not a lot of walking around, but a graduate of math education. you need to plan. 0, one of the group really not going to high school students about is this subject that i like to call that success. we teach english, we teach math, but we don't teach exam, which regardless how smart you are in any of those other categories. if you understand the subject of success, when you lose a basic fundamentals of understanding, you know how to network, how to communicate with people, but also how to be strategic. realizing what's important in college is not about how smart you are. it's about how hard you're willing to work in every exposed that shows the average income of people who drop
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out of high school and people who graduate from high school. but don't go further. and kids who get a 2 year degree, it gives you better for you when they get to be adults with different levels of education explode over the last 3 or 4 days. and if we could show the kids and they could understand, you know, i'm, i get more education, i'm going to make more money. and that'll have an impact on every other part of my life. the most important thing is not to freedom to buy things, to freedom, the dream and chase. what you really want to do, the more money you can make and now and not spend it. it allows you to dream at a place and give you the oxygen in durance, where you're not thinking short term. i think that i think it's so important to understand is how poverty feels your hope
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and your confidence. i was talking to, to the students at my place and i loaded one of my car, brought him over here, walk them through the process, got him signed up, we got them enrolled, and then that student told me, after we got him, his schedule, when it came time to go to class for the 1st day instead in his current parking line for 3 hours, they couldn't get out of car that's. that's 9 because he was smart capable, or he didn't want to do it because he was a brave. and that's real, but it can't be an excuse everybody in their life. everyone has to be you. i just challenge you to work through your peer and, and don't let fear, keep you from being your best. so don't give up by yourself when you are educated and when you know the things that you know and you know how far you'll work,
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you need to create the story for yourself. you need to surround yourself with other people who are going to be a possibility and do not allow negative people or negativity to talk you out of your grade. i, what are you passionate about? what do you have skill set for? and in the meantime, pursuing your education, you have to understand you have so much purpose between 14 and 24, that the decisions you may not only gonna pack herself, they're going to pack your kid in your grandkids. you don't even know is going to benefit from the little decisions you make today. you may not be it, but your grandkids will definitely be the mm.
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what about a young woman? i watched her this that, that she was going to be a thing. and, and i'm telling you, but the moment she decided she was going to be a thing or really a little girl at that point. every time i saw her doing what thing. okay. you know, this work ethic that she had was this weekend. amazing. i mean, you know, as a kid, i sort of thing and all the time. and then when we, we started this church in downtown used in our family join brought the kids genesis and she joined our choir. and every now and then she'd get a solo. and she would put more into that solo than the whole choir would into the
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whole well. and now the in, on the largest platform in the world. her name is b. r. o, because of a work ethic, young woman who made a decision as to what she was going to do and be in life and allowed no one to get away. will everyone be a no. that's why you got to have a plan, a plan b and a plan. we have hard workers in this community, whether they're students in general, a college or employees in the community. we have a really hard work ethic. the issue is they're under employed, so they're working really hard and making a living wage doing already is i am working according as this is 1.7 jobs and still i can't put food and pay rent. i have to make a choice. so when we say you just got to work harder in order to, to make it,
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that's not true, not when you're experiencing poverty. because people in poverty are working. i, i started looking at who's the number one teacher of poverty in the united states of america. and my answer that i found was the media. so what's the average person going to know about poverty and the people who live in it? it's probably going to be things like whether getting rich off. well, if a kid in high school is thinking it's not a big deal, as long as i have kids, i'll be fine. i'll be getting well for i'll be getting a cash offer will be covered by medicaid. i can get housing and so it doesn't happen that way. in 1986, my welfare check, the $408.00 for me. jennifer was 6. daniel was to my 15 year old homeless because it was living with me, and they said, we won't help her because she's not. yours will give you $408.00. my rent in a neighborhood called melanie. in portland, oregon was 395. to think
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a man welfare check today for a family history. national average 47898670 the average rent, according to had for my department 750. the average disability is $76.00. it's almost impossible to get out of poverty based on public in our labor statistics said you take a minimum wage job and you were 10 years and you don't have education beyond high school. you don't have a skill like electrician or plumber. the average increase after working hard for 10 years in a person's income. $2.00 an hour, and matter how hard you are. think about it, who worked harder, the person cleaning, the hotel room, or the person in their office. you don't move without a skill or an education. so if you want to buy your mom house, make sure your kids don't go hungry, can give skill guy get education. now if you want to say start out at $30000.00
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a year and they have the possibility of going all the way up to 60 or 70000 year, you have to have skills. you have to be talented. you have to know how to do. you need what we call soft skills and hard skills. part skills are just, you know, being technically trained to do something. take computer literacy. anybody goes through school these days and isn't computer literate is going to be in trouble. and i think our school should be doing a lot more if they're not already to teach people programming and coding skills and the whole set of things. you can't get a decent job anymore if you don't have those skills. and that is the soft skills. and if you talk to employers, employers will tell you that they are really missing this off skills as much as the hard skills. so soft skills are things like getting to work on time, dressing appropriately, knowing how to interact with other people, knowing how to be polite with the client or a customer knowing how to problem solve, knowing what to do when something doesn't go quite right, you know, being
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a bit creative, i think that helped me my personal life was to see other people, maybe of my same skin color or, or necessity and, and see them succeed. so it becomes obtainable. you don't know what you don't know . and i think a lot of times is that's what i think holding people back in poverty, they don't know it's bigger than their town and they don't know what they could do bigger than what they see on tv. and there are people, if he at school and the people that their parents are i used to work in elementary school and he asked the kids what they want to be in life. and they want to be doctors and, and in a lawyer. but if your home life doesn't support the ability of those things, it's a nice dream, but it's not a reality. answering groupings, neighborhood don't have that exposure. so it's important that our schools, our community kinda lend itself and expose, especially the youngest kids to that me.
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the me, the news this is your media a reflection of reality. in a world transformed what will make you feel safer. type relation, community you going the right way? where are you being somewhere? direct? what is truth? what is faith? in the world corrupted, you need to descend the so join us in the depths
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will remain in the shallows ah, in close work. so well, people don't like to use the word inconsistent. they like to say, oh it's, it's amazing in comprehensible mysterious i say it can't be quite right. and this is what direct says. this is what i just was reading. i met ashton on my local bank and honestly wanted johnny dudley. me up not because i'm not going to the the or up in the
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rush has high level economic borman st. petersburg hits the top gear with president putin announcing the countries pushing ahead with infrastructure for a vaccine tourism industry. when you we are just covering our own needs. we can also provide foreign citizens with the child to come to russia and get effects. and i would like to of the government to analyze all aspects of the issue by the end of the month. there is a consensus at the event that widespread vaccination is the only way to get the world economy back on a teeth with all 3 of the chancellor showing his support for splitting v as part of the global rollout. it doesn't matter where back same comes from, from russia, from the u. s. from china. every bit of success in the fight against corona. barbara is a shed success.
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