DIvine Synchronicity

A very Important Speech on Poverty

Here is an interesting example of a thought-provoking test. 
 
What is the real cause of poverty?  What are the solutions on a personal scale, national scale, international scale?
When one realizes the truth behind diseases such as poverty, one realizes the cure for poverty lies outside “the system”.  The current economic system actually depends on poverty and debt.  If debt was binary without the relative, movable levels, the system would lose its dynamism and collapse.
 
Nobel laureate, Professor Muhommad Yunus has put forth the only workable plan which actually cures poverty.  Though extremely controversial and seldom newsworthy relative to mainstream media, when implemented, Yunus-inspired business programs have the ability to actually cure poverty.
 
The points Mr. Sanders makes are certainly a step in the right direction as they are all trigger points for social unrest and imbalance, not just in McDowell County WV, one of the most impoverished cities in the US, but worldwide.
 
The aforementioned test (and challenge) is to look at things from a higher perspective, outside and above the political rhetoric and think holistically and in terms of sustainability.  The problems caused by poverty are universal.  Will any of the proposed ideas of any politician, republican, democrat, socialist or independent actually work to solve problems of a complex, international socioeconomic system?  The “test” can be difficult to take or even pass because it requires one to question the foundation of the very philosophy upon which the system is built.
 
A hint:  The same problems have been with us (in America) since General Washington was in office and worsened as the value of money became controlled by external forces.
 
The true solution to poverty and its inherent problems lies outside the current socioeconomic/philosophical box.  The title of Mr. Sanders message in the email below is, “A very important speech on poverty“.  The speech is rousing and noble; he means well.  The discussion about the level of high stress an impoverished person must live under is very true.  The phyological and psychological impact of poverty-caused stress is shocking.  Those who are wealthy do not experience this kind of detrimental stress and generally have no understanding of it.  For practical solutions to the scourge of poverty, one should research the works of professor Yunis and others who have workable solutions in place.
-Ram
 
Note:  This is presented for informational and educational purposes only.  The founders of Divine Synchronicity.org are global and do not support any political party.

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Bernie Sanders <info@berniesanders.com>

Subject: A very important speech on poverty

In the United States today, the wealthiest country in the history of the world, 47 million Americans are living in poverty.

Almost 22 percent of American children are poor and we have the highest child poverty rate of almost any major country on earth.

Let’s be clear. Living in poverty doesn’t just mean you don’t have enough money to buy a big screen TV, a fancy laptop, or the latest iPhone. It goes much deeper than that.

Living in poverty means you are less likely to have a good grocery store in your community selling healthy food. Far too often it means you don’t know where your next meal is going to come from. Living in poverty means you are less likely to have access to a doctor, dentist or mental health care provider. It means you have less access to public transportation, which makes it harder to find a job. It means you are less likely to have access to child care.

In the United States of America, poverty is often a death sentence.

Yesterday, I spoke about poverty in McDowell County, West Virginia — one of the poorest counties in one of the poorest states in America. In 2014, over 35 percent of the residents in McDowell lived in poverty, including nearly half of the children. The roads are crumbling and only 6 percent of adults have a college education. Less than two-thirds have graduated high school. It has the lowest life expectancy for men in the entire nation. I hope you’ll watch part of my speech on poverty and share it with friends and family on social media.

Bernie Sanders Speaks on Poverty in McDowell County, West Virginia

Poverty is an issue we must address. In 2011, the American Journal of Public Health found that 130,000 people died in just one year alone as a result of poverty.

This is not an issue we can just sweep under the rug and hope it will go away. Because it won’t.

And when I talk about it being too late for establishment politics and economics, this is what I mean. When I talk about thinking big and outside the box, about rejecting incremental change, I am talking about the millions of Americans who live in poverty who have been tossed out, left behind, and abandoned by the rich and powerful. We need to create an economy that works for all of us, not just the 1 percent.

Here’s what we need to do:

  1. Rebuild our country’s crumbling infrastructure. A $1 trillion investment in our infrastructure will create at least 13 million jobs all over America – jobs that cannot be outsourced.
  2. We must rewrite our disastrous trade policies that enable corporate America to shut down plans in places like West Virginia and move them to Mexico, China, and other low-wage countries.
  3. We can create 1 million jobs for disadvantaged youths through legislation I introduced with Rep. John Conyers of Michigan.
  4. We need to increase the wages of at least 53 million American workers by raising the minimum wage from a starvation wage of $7.25 an hour to $15 an hour.
  5. At a time when women workers earn 79 cents for every dollar a man earns, we need to sign the Paycheck Fairness Act into law. Equal pay for equal work.
  6. We need to make health care a right for every man, woman, and child through a Medicare for All single-payer system.
  7. We need to treat drug addiction like a mental health issue, not a criminal issue.
  8. We need to ensure every worker in this country has at least 12 weeks of paid family and medical leave, two weeks of paid vacation, and one week of paid sick days.
  9. We need to impose a tax on Wall Street to make public colleges and universities tuition free while substantially reducing student debt.
  10. At a time when half of older workers have no retirement savings, we’re not going to cut Social Security, we’re going to expand it so people can retire with dignity and respect.

No president can do all of these things alone. We need millions of Americans to begin to stand up and fight back and demand a government that represents all of us. That is the political revolution.

In solidarity,

Bernie Sanders

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