My Life as a Public Health Crisis

Submitted by Hardscrabble Farmer

She may write for Medium, but she looks like an extra large.

https://miro.medium.com/fit/c/256/256/1*1I1_7O5PPBtj0YZhKTtMuA.jpeg

Guest Post by Harmony Cox

As a fat woman working in food justice, I see firsthand how even those trying to help continue to spread dangerous stereotypes about obesity and poverty.

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We’re at a coffee shop in a “transitional” neighborhood. The shop is new, an ultra-modern storefront that brags about $7 pour-overs. I hate pour-over coffee because it takes forever and if I cared about nuanced flavor I wouldn’t start my day with the most bitter drink imaginable. I reflect on that, and on how much the neighborhood has changed since I grew up here, and how I used to see possums the size of poodles on the roof of this place back before the professional folks sitting around and sipping their lattes showed up.

My mind is whirling because if I let it dwell on the words coming out of this woman’s mouth I might punch her in the face. That wouldn’t do anybody any good.

Probably.

We were discussing the neighborhood, and how we could help people here get healthier food. Creating access to healthy food is my job, but it’s also my passion. It’s how I pay my bills and find an outlet for my frustration with a society that allows the poor to suffer. I was hoping to hear some optimism. Instead I got this:

“Nobody would eat it. Everyone around here is just so… fat.”

I felt the folds of my belly pushing against the table. I felt familiar shame burn the back of my throat, bitter as a $7 coffee.

She went on, “The kids always eat fast food. It’s like nobody loves them.”

I wondered how she could know what the kids around here always eat, and what that has to do with how loved they are.

Growing up here never made me question my family’s love, but it did make me aware of the tension between what we were “supposed” to eat and what was actually available to us. It wasn’t all junk, of course. We had a huge garden in our backyard. We grew so many tomatoes we would beg neighbors to take them off our hands, and I was probably the only eight-year-old hillbilly in Ohio who loved gazpacho. But you can only harvest a garden so many times a year, and you can’t grow milk and meat in the backyard. A food budget is more flexible than a set cost like rent, so it’s often the first place a family looks when trying to save money. Junk food is cheap, it doesn’t spoil quickly, and it’s easy to prepare. Combine pragmatism with a lack of time and money, and the high-calorie, low-nutrition diets of poor people make a lot more sense.

The first meal I ever learned to make wasn’t gazpacho, but “chicken parmesan” — spaghetti covered with a slice of American cheese and a processed hockey puck of chicken that could be heated up in the microwave. We loved that awful chicken, and it was $2 a box at the Save-a-Lot, so we ate it often.

I learned to make it when I was nine years old. One day our sitter left early, called in to cover a shift at her second job. I called Mom to let her know what had happened. Mom was working as a paid hourly intern, trying to meet a practicum requirement for her social worker’s license. She couldn’t afford to leave work, so my two sisters and I would need to feed ourselves. She reminded me to read the instructions on the boxes and said to call her if the smoke detector went off. I set about preparing the meal with grim determination, hoping not to let her down.

When Mom came home, dinner was done. She was pleased until she entered the kitchen. Not only had I made an incredible mess, but I had left the box of chicken pucks on the counter, where they’d melted into a brownish mush.

She dragged me by my wrist into the carnage I had wrought, my heels dragging on the linoleum. She pointed at the box.

“We do NOT waste food. You ruined a week of dinners. Be more careful next time.”

I nodded, trying not to cry. Wasted food was wasted money, and neither of those were things we could afford. Lesson learned.

There were resources to help us, like the government’s SNAP and WIC food-assistance programs that many still refer to as “food stamps.” Dad recently told me how much using WIC embarrassed him. He described taking us to the WIC office as babies, where we were weighed each month before he received our benefits.

“They wanted proof I was feeding you.” I flinched at the anger in his voice, even after all these years. “Nobody trusts poor people. They treat you like a criminal just for trying to feed your kids.”

If you get judged no matter what, eventually you stop listening to the judges. Poverty undeniably affected my childhood – everything we owned was second-hand, all my clothes were hand-me-downs from my cousins, and I once punched a boy in the face for a quarter – but my parents would never deprive us of any happiness they were able to provide. Our diet was a mix of whatever healthy stuff was available and the junk food we loved: the chicken pucks, the Bigfoot pizzas at birthday parties, the $10 meal deal at KFC. When we did well in school, Dad would spring for Old Country Buffet, and we’d eat our weight in ice cream and roast beef you had to soak in ketchup to chew.

In the reality of feeding a struggling family, the food pyramid is irrelevant. Keeping us fed was a source of pride, junk food was a source of joy, and so our diets endured.

I don’t remember parents who didn’t love me. If anything, they loved me too much, and their love language came deep-fried. It may have hurt me in the long run, but that’s never been a sign that something wasn’t borne from love.

A public health expert would draw a line between my childhood and my current size. I am on the “morbid” side of obese, and have been for as long as I can remember. I’ve spent a long time learning to love my body in a world that isn’t kind to it. I can handle the stink eye at the gym, the whispers and giggles at restaurants, the catcalls from passing cars full of (always) young white men. I eat a healthy diet these days and I exercise regularly, but if science is to be believed, it’s unlikely that my body will ever be smaller than it is. And so what? My fat body is still a good body. It’s the body of someone who is loved and worthy of self-esteem, regardless of how much space it takes up.

* * *

Unfortunately, I can’t avoid how my size intersects with my chosen career. I work with some of the most compassionate and dedicated people in the world, but I still struggle with my body and how colleagues perceive it. Whatever else I achieve, I’m still a fat person who grew up in poverty. I’m a walking, talking example of a public health crisis, working to eradicate myself with government funding. It gets awkward.

In every meeting I go to, at every panel I sit on, eventually the conversation turns to obesity. People notice me, because they’re trained to see me as a problem. And so their eyes turn to me, and then I have to breathe through my feelings or I might beat someone to death with my iPad.

Not that I’d feel bad about it, depending on the person. Everybody’s got their limits.

Speaking of limits: One of mine is definitely saying that fat children are unloved. I look my coffee companion right in the eye.

“You’re being unfair. I’m fat, and I grew up here too.”

She tries to jump in, to explain herself. I speak over her.

“I’m not fat because nobody cared about me. People make the best choices they can with what they have. If we can’t give them better options, we can’t blame them for working with what they’ve got.”

We both sense an impasse. What’s professional for her is personal for me.

She shrugs. “I get it. I just feel like something needs to be done.”

And so we change the subject, relaxing as we talk about the thing that must be done. Throughout the rest of the conversation she can’t look me in the eye. And later, when I email a “thank you” for the meeting, I’m not surprised to receive no reply.

It’s frustrating, but these conversations happen far too often for me to ignore. I’ve seen too many well-meaning efforts to help people access healthy food couched in toxic narratives about what a disgusting burden fat people are on society. Conversations about food access are so often tinged with judgment about personal responsibility and time management, as if every poor fat person is spending their time napping and eating Twinkies when they could be preparing quinoa from scratch. And of course, there’s the endless dwelling on the societal expense of obesity. You would think that fat people were Fabergé eggs for how difficult and costly we are to insure.

The fact is that most low-income people don’t have a lot of control over their diets to begin with, and the resources available to them tend to offer little in the way of assistance with the barriers that stand between them and health. I got a first-hand look at this when I got my first job as a task rabbit at a food pantry. I naively imagined smiling faces, neat boxes of food, and good feelings all around. My illusions were shattered when I was asked to sift through boxes of moldy cake and cookies, castoffs from a local grocery chain. I asked where the produce was, and I was met with a sigh. This was what was donated, so this was what we could provide.

Once I finished that, I had to hand out the go-bags. Go-bags were shopping bags full of food for people living in “unstable circumstances” – i.e., homeless. They consisted of anything that could be eaten on the go. They usually had a piece of fruit, but they were also full of slimy restaurant leftovers and cast-off pastries from the donation boxes. Bad food that fills you up and makes you happy, and a healthy snack when available. My family’s food pyramid, packaged to go.

I handed the first go-bag to a man my own age, a guy in a ratty coat who wouldn’t look me in the eye. He may have been ashamed of his situation, but I was ashamed that I couldn’t give him something better than leftover pizza and a cookie I wouldn’t feed my dog.

What angered me then – and angers me still – is that we didn’t have anything to be ashamed of. We weren’t the ones who made fresh food a luxury and junk food an easily obtained comfort. We didn’t chase the grocery store out of his neighborhood, and we didn’t ask the grocery stores in the suburbs to fill the pantry with their uneaten pastries in lieu of real food. We weren’t responsible for the poverty that was eating the neighborhood like a cancer, leaving a generation of people exhausted and malnourished. We weren’t the ones who had broken the systems that punished us. All he’d done was fallen on hard times, and all I’d done was try to help him. Our shame wasn’t earned. It wasn’t fair.

That was when I decided to work my way up to a position where I could help people like him get something they would be proud to eat.

Food justice is complex work. We want to give people healthy food that is relevant to their tastes and needs, but we work in neighborhoods where it hasn’t been readily available in decades. What they want, what they need, and what they know how to prepare varies wildly. Programs based on stereotypes or one-size-fits-all approaches are doomed to fail.

Just a week ago I was at a corner store that was trying to sell healthy food. We set up out front to demonstrate recipes and offer samples to anyone who was willing to stop by. We stood outside for hours, making tiny cups of vegetable stir-fry and offering them to passersby. Residents trickled over from the abandoned houses, the bus stop, anywhere that they could smell the food and get curious about where it came from.

A small boy wandered up. He eyed me suspiciously. He was right to do so. Free stuff in this neighborhood? Unlikely.

But I saw the way he bit his lip when he looked at the food. You can tell when a kid is hungry. I held a cup of stir-fry out to him, smiling encouragingly.

“What’s in it?” he asked in a whisper.

“It’s stir-fry. Like, Chinese food.” I chirped. “Rice and vegetables. It’s good!”

His face collapsed.

“Nah. I don’t fuck with vegetables.”

Fair enough. When I was his age, I didn’t fuck with vegetables either. Food justice is not about forcing people to eat food they don’t want. It’s about changing the world they live in so they can make choices about what they eat, and believing that those choices will lead them to a healthier and more enjoyable diet. It’s measuring success not in shrinking bodies, but in growing appetites for the food that keeps people happy and healthy. It’s trusting people to know what’s best for them and making sure they can access it. It’s the long game, not the quick fix.

I believe that this is the only way we are going to build communities where food isn’t a source of judgement or shame for low-income people, but a human right. So as part of this work I accept that awkward conversations about my past and my size will continue. There will always be another coffee, another would-be ally, another moment of discomfort that I have the option of ignoring or turning into a confrontation. I have climbed my fat ass up this mountain with my past on my back and the world I want to see just out of my reach. I’m not stopping now. I will do what I can to build communities where choice and dignity are a part of the food access picture, and take the chances I get to stand up for people who deserve better. Myself included.

Harmony Cox is a Midwestern essayist and storyteller. She has worked in the public sector for over a decade and is a proud advocate for food justice in the communities she serves. Her work has been featured in The Belladonnas, Story Club, and in the upcoming essay anthology BELT Columbus. You can read more of her work on Medium @harmonycox.

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83 Comments
22winmag - TBP's top-secret Yankee Mormon
22winmag - TBP's top-secret Yankee Mormon
March 4, 2020 8:36 pm

Besides insufferable, unreadable, Caitlin Johnstone, this is what Medium.com has to offer for “firearms experts” and hit piece “writers” of the weaker sex.

Now extrapolate.

View post on imgur.com

Men, don’t cut your dick off just yet. Women will come around in August 2020 for the 100th anniversary of the right to vote. Everyone will claim the moral high ground and there will be much murmuring. Of course, it’ll be 150 years since women voted in Utah territory.

View post on imgur.com

Aodh Macraynall
Aodh Macraynall
March 4, 2020 8:42 pm

Who bitch dis is?

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Aodh Macraynall
March 5, 2020 2:18 am

Why? Why publish this article full of self pity and blame casting? Fat is fat and the fork don’t lift itself…muh chicken nugget

bigfoot
bigfoot
  Mygirl...maybe
March 5, 2020 2:30 am

Or, we could ask, “Why so serious?”

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Aodh Macraynall
March 5, 2020 10:41 am

She ain’t got nobody and is why she is so angry. Always remember, ugly girls need love too and fat girls are grateful.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
March 4, 2020 8:45 pm

” Food justice is not about forcing people to eat food they don’t want. It’s about changing the world they live in so they can make choices about what they eat, and believing that those choices will lead them to a healthier and more enjoyable diet. ”

Ahhh, they can make choices about what they eat now. I don’t get it. They just choose to eat shit food. Not my problem.

“I believe that this is the only way we are going to build communities where food isn’t a source of judgement or shame for low-income people, but a human right.”

And there we have it. A human right. I can’t seem to find that in my travel Bill of Rights brochure. Maybe a page got ripped out.

The fat fuck should take responsibility for her obeseness and culinary choices before dictating food justice for others. Anytime I hear the words “xxxxxxx justice”, it’s time to run the other way, hide your wallet, and guard your ammo.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  ILuvCO2
March 4, 2020 11:04 pm

Just another incoherent fat, angry, whiner.

Montefrío
Montefrío
  ILuvCO2
March 5, 2020 10:06 am

Thanks, you took the words right out of my mouth, because like you, what I put in it is my responsibility, just as it is for an obese person. This woman would be best off putting a sock in her mouth and leaving it there until she sheds some blubber.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  ILuvCO2
March 5, 2020 10:44 am

Big Mike changed the foods offered in school cafeterias by diktat and the waste increased significantly. Kids will not eat foods they were never given as a little one and told to eat.

These people have been raised on EBT cards where the parent can buy anything they want and it usually does not include fresh vegetables, because they require work to prepare them.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
March 4, 2020 9:02 pm

Farmer.
Surely you jest?

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
March 4, 2020 9:06 pm

Food justice is complex work.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 4, 2020 9:17 pm

Food justice is Muh Right, here’s my EBT card for the shit food I have selected. Not a vegetable in sight.
I just can wait until the EBT coffers run dry. Bring it on. Oh, and I will be ready in my church to help you if you so accept the Grace of God and Jesus Christ. Hep Yosef.

starfcker
starfcker
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 12:36 am

Dude. As seriously as you take food, and I say that admirably, reading something like this must be enough to give you a migraine.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  starfcker
March 5, 2020 5:11 am

I try to wade into the shallow end of the literary/lifestyle pool every once in a while to see what the mainstream is thinking.

It never fails to inspire me to swim back into the deep end.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 5:26 am

Oh, that was good. I’m writing it down.

starfcker
starfcker
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 10:08 am

One of my favorite exchanges of all time on TBP. Starfck, “Give those people nothing but bread with EBT.” Llpoh, “Give them nothing but flour.”

Pegasustra
Pegasustra
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 4:52 pm

Boy howdy, HF! How succinct of you! Never thought about it, but that is precisely what I have done for most of my life.

A young woman of 20, I had Dostoyevsky and Sarte on my personal bookshelf. (Not that I then had complete comprehensive understanding, mind you, but there it is.) On the street I saw people everywhere reading Valley of the Dolls. So many, in fact, that I HAD to find out what all the fuss was about, so I bought it.

As I recall, I found it to be insipid, which drove me back into the arms of the likes of Kafka and Camus.

Gupatii
Gupatii
March 4, 2020 10:15 pm

Who ever decided to put the words “Food” and “Justice” together should be drawn and quartered.

Pequiste
Pequiste
  Gupatii
March 4, 2020 10:51 pm

What are your thoughts on the descriptor “food desert”?

Sam Kinison had a unique and still salient perspective on the issue:

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Pequiste
March 5, 2020 12:45 am

Just don’t let the third-world filth come HERE.

Montefrío
Montefrío
  Anonymous
March 5, 2020 10:09 am

Many 3rd worlders have a far better diet than do many 1st worlders. Then again, many don’t.

card802
card802
  Pequiste
March 5, 2020 11:36 am

I lost my shit when I watched that for the first time, I still lose my shit watching it again.

My liberal millennial office manager just lost her shit watching that, but not in a funny way.
Ok, I admit, it was funny as heck!

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Gupatii
March 5, 2020 10:48 am

It comes from the “science” of sociology. They have to make up jobs for those who got their masters in this worthless curriculum.

swimologist
swimologist
March 4, 2020 10:42 pm

“It’s how I pay my bills and find an outlet for my frustration with a society that allows poor people to suffer.”
Firstly, you’re lucky to be compensated for such a useless vocation, and secondly, in this country, if there’s ANY reason that poor people suffer, it’s because of their OWN stupid choices. FACT

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  swimologist
March 5, 2020 10:49 am

My grandmother used to say “Poor people make poor choices.”

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 4, 2020 10:45 pm

She’s a very good writer that could easily convince her audience as well as herself.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Anonymous
March 4, 2020 11:37 pm

In this age of designer self pity diseases I’m sure she has but not because she’s a good writer.

Steve
Steve
March 5, 2020 12:05 am

Stop yur frickin whining, darling. Eat more rice. That shit is cheap and somehow 4 billion Asians manage to work like hell, live long lives and stay slim while doing it. And quit waiting for the elevator to take you down 1 floor ya lazy cow.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Steve
March 5, 2020 12:48 am

Did you know that Asians have such high metabolisms that if they don’t eat regularly they will get shaky and pass out? That’s why you rarely see obese Asians. And that’s probably ALSO why they’ll eat just about anything. They have to eat all the time and want ANYTHING to change up the diet.

Steve
Steve
  Anonymous
March 5, 2020 7:32 am

Got any info on that?
I worked and lived with Korean soldiers and a Korean gal for 1 year. I ate the same diet and nobody ever passed out?

Uncooked
Uncooked
March 5, 2020 12:18 am

How patently unfair that social services interfere with people’s right to broccoli. I realize now that my Mom was totally into Food Justice as well. And Food Enforcement too.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Uncooked
March 5, 2020 10:50 am

Probably more “food enforcement” than food justice, if she was like my mom.

Gloriously Deplorable Paul
Gloriously Deplorable Paul
March 5, 2020 12:42 am

Friend of mine works with a group that collects food from local markets and hauls it to a local pantry. Every Sunday morning he and two or three other guys go to the local Trader Joe’s to pick up what the store can’t/won’t sell in the next couple of days.
The fresh food they collect hardly sounds like what this woman is describing.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 5, 2020 12:42 am

“It’s how I pay my bills and find an outlet for my frustration with a society that allows poor people to suffer.”
Firstly, you’re lucky to be compensated for such a useless vocation, and secondly, in this country, if there’s ANY reason that poor people suffer, it’s because of their OWN stupid choices. FACT

bigfoot
bigfoot
March 5, 2020 2:14 am

Life Is Not a Picnic by Harmony “Double Wide” Coxsure

Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing,
Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before;
But the silence was unbroken, and the stillness gave no token,
And the only words there spoken was the whispered words, “U R Too Fat”

This I whispered, and an echo murmured back the words, “Eat Less”—
Merely this and nothing more.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  bigfoot
March 5, 2020 10:52 am

I would offer to change the last line

Merely this and exercise more.

bigfoot
bigfoot
  TN Patriot
March 5, 2020 3:34 pm

Most excellent! You and Edgar both.

bigfoot
bigfoot
March 5, 2020 2:40 am

One big reason major grocery stores do not locate in poor neighborhoods has to do with shoplifting. Grocers operate on very narrow margins and rely on volume for profit. Lots of shoplifting will in no time make the store unprofitable simply because earning a couple of cents on a can of beans compared to losing thirty cents to theft on that single can removes all incentive to be a purveyor of goods.

Unreconstructed
Unreconstructed
  bigfoot
March 5, 2020 4:33 pm

In my town, the FSA is always complaining that stores (Walmart) won’t open in their neighborhoods (the dark side of town.) The bars on the windows of the existing stores should be a hint.

MTD
MTD
March 5, 2020 3:46 am

You’re telling me that the person in that picture is a woman? I’m gonna go out on a limb and say that she’s batting for the other team. I’m assuming she could fill up several more paragraphs about the dysfunctional abusive relationship she has with her lesbian partner and their house full of animals.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 4:14 am

Based on this article, people that are hungry are so spoiled they won’t even eat vegetables Junk food must be had. If you’re truly hungry, you will eat what you’re given.
I say give these people a box of food for the month, based on the number being fed, that they have to learn to cook and stop food stamps altogether. Beggars can’t be choosers. I find it hard to believe the majority on food stamps have limited time.

M G
M G
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 6:35 am

I offered a #10 can of the LDS beans to a beggar on a street corner and they turned it down. She said she wouldn’t know what to do with it.

So there is that. To be offered a big can of beans and not realize all you have to do is simmer them for a while and add seasoning suggests survival of the fittest being at work.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  M G
March 5, 2020 8:25 am

That’s a damn shame.

Unreconstructed
Unreconstructed
  M G
March 5, 2020 4:37 pm

I offered a local men’s shelter the excess produce from my garden. They turned it down. Wanted something in a can they only had to warm up. F__k em’

KaD
KaD
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 9:40 pm

Catherine Austin Fitts had the same idea, end welfare and give these people a food allowance instead. A per person monthly measure of rice and beans, oats, milk, raisins, bread, peanut butter and jelly, eggs, oranges and apples, some ground beef and chicken, veggies, canned, fresh or frozen.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  KaD
March 5, 2020 9:46 pm

I agree with that. That’s what I’m talking about.

Connovar
Connovar
March 5, 2020 4:50 am

Confusing a spoon with a ladle probably doesn’t help either. Get some exrecise

Warren Casleton
Warren Casleton
March 5, 2020 5:30 am

Wow, some pretty harsh comments. Leaving the authors personal appearance/lifestyle choices, ect… out of the discussion for a moment, the comments reflect a lot more about the posters than they may realize.
I think that someone who volunteers in a church food bank AND at the same time looks down judgmentally on those whom they are serving is wasting their time. Might as well go bowling and leave the charity to the charitable because you ain’t earning anything in Gods eyes except self satisfaction that you “do good stuff”.
I’m not fat, I’m not gay, I’m not poor, so this isnt a defensive rant. But you expect people who have been raised in a society that rewards their bad choices and has for generations to think like you do, they don’t and they won’t.
So either you help them out of love or you go about your business. Giving (in the Christian sense) doesn’t entitle the giver to make demands of the recipient.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  Warren Casleton
March 5, 2020 5:50 am

If someone writes about food and they happen to be obese, how is that not relevant to the discussion?

Yes, some of the comments were harsh, did you not read the original article? She got in her whacks upfront, apropos of nothing. People respond to it.

The issue is not just her looks or just her poor writing, it’s that she is paid to write poorly about a topic she doesn’t appear to understand. It’s ironic.

dors Venabili
dors Venabili
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 6:05 am

HS quote

…it’s that she is paid to write poorly about a topic she doesn’t appear to understand.

That’s the point! She isn’t able to solve the cognitive dissonance she lives in. She wants to feel good in her morbese fat body and wants to be recognized as a good councelor ref “eat healthy”. Nope, doesn’t work! What to do,hmm? think harder or cry about the injustice, your choice.

M G
M G
  dors Venabili
March 5, 2020 6:41 am

I do agree there is some empathy for people who have been raised wrong, but after one becomes an “adult” one should be able to change one’s culture unless one is a pig who likes living in squalor. Some do, don’t they?

http://what-when-how.com/social-sciences/culture-of-poverty-social-science/

The idea that a culture of poverty is a rut is one of the popular themes which came from the early sixties…

The theory of a “culture of poverty” was created by the anthropologist Oscar Lewis in his 1959 book, Five Families: Mexican Case Studies in the Culture of Poverty. The culture of poverty theory states that living in conditions of pervasive poverty will lead to the development of a culture or subculture adapted to those conditions. This culture is characterized by pervasive feelings of helplessness, dependency, marginality, and powerlessness. Furthermore, Lewis described individuals living within a culture of poverty as having little or no sense of history and therefore lacking the knowledge to alleviate their own conditions through collective action, instead focusing solely on their own troubles. Thus, for Lewis, the imposition of poverty on a population was the structural cause of the development of a culture of poverty, which then becomes autonomous, as behaviors and attitudes developed within a culture of poverty get passed down to subsequent generations through socialization processes.

Critics of the culture of poverty theory have pointed out several flaws within both the theory itself and the ways in which it has been interpreted and applied to society. The culture of poverty assumes that culture itself is relatively fixed and unchanging—that once a population exists within the culture of poverty, no amount of intervention in terms of the alleviation of poverty will change the cultural attitudes and behaviors held by members of that population. Thus public assistance to the poor, in the form of welfare or other direct assistance, cannot eliminate poverty, since poverty is inherent in the culture of the poor. Following this reasoning, the culture of poverty theory shifts the blame for poverty from social and economic conditions to the poor themselves. The theory acknowledges past factors that led to the initial condition of poverty, such as substandard housing and education, lack of sufficient social services, lack of job opportunities, and persistent racial segregation and discrimination, but focuses on the cause of present poverty as the behaviors and attitudes of the poor.

RiNS
RiNS
  M G
March 5, 2020 9:26 am
Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Warren Casleton
March 5, 2020 8:42 am

According to the Bible, demands are made on the recipient of charity, such as gleaning. You work for what you get.
The whole problem with the poor in America is Uncle Sugar has taken over charity. In the past, mothers taught their daughter how to grow, preserve and cook food. With government’s food stamps, they buy what is the cheapest in the store which is junk food, no cooking required. That’s the problem. Private charity in the past did a better job, and parents in the past living in poverty, before government intervention, did a better job. You reap what you subsidize. You want to convince people to eat properly and cook healthy meals, how about bringing back Home Ec in the schools. How about teaching people how to grow a home garden. How about not subsidizing bad behavior and teach people?

Montefrío
Montefrío
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 10:32 am

I’m old enough to remember when poor folks were given “commodity foods” from the gov food surplus stores, said food subsidized by the taxpayer. It seemed a reasonable plan to me, but one had to prepare the food, as was to be expected by one and all. And you’re 100& right about Home Ec. I knew things were headed downhill when Cornell changed the name of the College of Home Economics to “Human Ecology”: “Hume Ec”. Sigh. That was about 50 years ago now.

KaD
KaD
  Montefrío
March 5, 2020 9:43 pm

Remember government cheese?

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 11:02 am

We used to have commodities for the poor and would give their family the basic nutrition for survival. The idea was to not “make them comfortable in their poverty. (Ben Franklin)” We now subsidize poverty and get lots of it.

KaD
KaD
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 9:42 pm

A pack of seeds is dirt cheap. Why aren’t the ghetto people putting gardens? Even in an apartment I had large pots with veggies.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Warren Casleton
March 5, 2020 8:45 am

Warren
“So this isn’t a defensive rant but” Believe everything after the BUT and nothing before it. Did someone here say they volunteer at a food bank? Someone posting a picture of a food item makes this a food bank? You reek of more self righteous self pity than the author.
She suffers from a rich country disease. Being obese but not rich. Real life would be much harsher than we are. I know a guy in Saigon who lives on a skateboard 24/7 who would never waste his time on self pity because it’s too expensive.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Fleabaggs
March 5, 2020 9:28 am

I couldn’t have said that better.

Warren Casleton
Warren Casleton
  Fleabaggs
March 5, 2020 9:25 pm

Yeah, actually one of the posters did say they volunteered at a food bank. I’m not defending the author, that’s why I addressed the topic while explicitly leaving that beanhead out of it.
My posts “reeks” of nothing but my own experiences on both sides of the divide. I’m not defending our current vote buying system of welfare, I’m simply stating that its had the effect these bread and circus programs have had since Roman times. And that effect was/is known and that was/is the whole point of programs like these, to dumb down and enslave the great unwashed.
Ever notice that in Orwells 1984 that there is no revolt, no uprising except for the protagonist and his love interest? Once your teatherd to the trough breaking free is very hard.

As a Christian one is called to love all equally including our enemies. So if we are called to love our enemies how can we be less charitable to those who are not (neccesarily) enemies.
In the biblical worldview we all have a common enemy who afflicts some with addiction, some with sloth, some with pride, anger, you get the picture. We are held to account for our choices, but that’s not your or my job, it is for God alone, He doesn’t need our help with judging.

Americans love to take the “he who will not work will not eat” passage and use it to justify why they wont help this or that group. It way out of context if we read it that way but that’s something people have to research for themselves, don’t take my word for it (I’m sure you wouldn’t anyway).
Sorry to ramble, I’ll disappear again for another few years, every time I post it depresses me.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Warren Casleton
March 5, 2020 8:55 am

That bad behavior has been incentivized by the federal government’s welfare programs. People were better off, poverty-wise and food-wise, before the government intervened. Read history! Don’t blame the people for the government’s erroneous programs.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 9:37 am

Vixen.
Those “People” voted for FDR’s free –it that got this ball rolling. I know because my parents were grown ups who voted for him. Mom born in 1911, dad in 03. Their parents voted for Wilson and the income tax to soak the rich and pay for wars. Maybe you are the one who should read history.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Fleabaggs
March 5, 2020 10:14 am

In my opinion, the majority of those people didn’t know exactly what they were voting for. Do you endorse everything Trump or Obama have done? It you voted for them, apparently so.
It’s the same with every president. And every congress. The majority of people opposed the 2008 financial crisis bailouts but they went through anyway. In 100 years, will reporters say the people who voted approved of it because they voted for the people in Congress who did?
On this issue, I suggest you read Thomas Sowell’s and Tom Woods’ articles. They explain it better than I can.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Vixen Vic
March 5, 2020 1:27 pm

Vixen.
I didn’t vote for either of them and I knew plenty of what they were about. FDR promised free stuff and won 4 terms on free stuff because the voters wanted free stuff without regards for the penalty their kids would pay. I have spent the last 50 years exposing government lies. The last 40 exposing the self pity industrial complex.
YOU CAN’T RAPE THE WILLING.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Fleabaggs
March 5, 2020 6:00 pm

That’s true, too.

Baba Looey
Baba Looey
  Warren Casleton
March 5, 2020 11:27 am

Do not discount the value of shaming. It’s very effective.

Apple
Apple
March 5, 2020 5:57 am

Food justice?

Another personal issue you want to make my problem?
Heres a suggestion: eat less.
You can achieve a healthy weight with shitty food if you arent a sow.

RiNS
RiNS
March 5, 2020 6:07 am

The author is working hard to be a genetic dead end.

Hitchhikers Guide to Universe personified.

Zulu Foxtrot Golf
Zulu Foxtrot Golf
March 5, 2020 7:13 am

That fucking ogre needs to drink some concrete and harden the fuck up. Put the fork down and go walk 6 miles a day. Metabolism is a mother fucker when you aren’t exercising in any way.

Ginger
Ginger
March 5, 2020 7:36 am

This person most likely recieved a government grant to sit around and write this. Thanks to TBP now maybe twenty-five people have read it.
At least learned what a pour-over is and how much they cost.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Ginger
March 5, 2020 9:15 am

Pour-over coffee is cheap! I live on it. I started doing this because i would burn up a coffee maker within three months. I bought a ceramic coffee filter holder. I put in the coffee filter, place the holder on my coffee cup, put a scoop of coffee in the filter. Pour boiling water over the coffee until my cup is full and I’m done. Though I add honey. Easy peasy, cheaper, and tastes just as good as other coffee. You can also buy permanent filters that can be rinsed rather than paper filters for reduced costs. Nothing expensive about it.

Desertrat
Desertrat
March 5, 2020 8:49 am

From what I’ve seen in cafes and restaurants, it’s not WHAT fat people eat as it is HOW MUCH they eat. A trick: Grab the table with both hands–and push.

BB
BB
March 5, 2020 10:08 am

Hey fat fuck
It’s not a lifestyle it’s a fashion statement ?

Ricky Retardo
Ricky Retardo
March 5, 2020 10:34 am

This cunt is so ugly her dildo went limp.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
March 5, 2020 10:39 am

“We didn’t chase the grocery store out of his neighborhood,” Actually, it is usually the theft that drives grocery stores and other retailers out of the hood. That is when the small convenience stores move in with their high prices and mostly processed foods.

James
James
March 5, 2020 10:49 am

What is sad is folks try in areas of open space in poorer communities to start community gardens ect.,help folks have a shot at some food they grew on their own and first the folks trying to do this have to fight city hall ect. as govt. hates competition and then locals to a large part do not take advantage of the opportunity.There is one guy I believe in Michigan who makes a very good living(and provides a lot of jobs) growing on abandoned lots ect. and selling the food at very reasonable prices to locals,so,since he is making monies and not from govt. handouts folks in some places will take advantage of decent local food.

Local leaders should get rid of barriers to endeavors like this as everyone wins,just get rid of the barriers,not support with taxpayer dollars.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  James
March 5, 2020 10:56 am

I think you mean this guy, Will Allen, from Milwaukee.

Great guy with a fantastic approach to an almost impossible situation.

M G
M G
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 11:09 am

There are some resourceful people who grasp the concept of paradigm shift.

Welcome

I met some of these folks in Oklahoma.

It is what real community organizing is… hard work and a lot less bloviating.

comment image

RiNS
RiNS
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 1:07 pm

this fellow is doing amazing things as well…. in Jordan

James
James
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 1:34 pm

Hard,those folks have really got it going.The dude I am thinking of was I believe outskirts of Detroit,he had abandoned lots tested for oils/chemicals ect and good ones were put to use,some greenhouse but a lot of basically large open gardens.H e worked a deal with city would clean up junk off of tested lots and pay the city a small property tax a year,lots cleaned up,few bucks for city and food for the locals.He did from article I read basically same deal just a lot of muscle power for most of the labor.He also had a deal were locals could labor a few hours and get food but got tied up in court due to lack of taxes ect.,once again,govt. creating a problem.

On a side note,that is either a very old video or a great price for local honey.

card802
card802
March 5, 2020 11:17 am

“The fact is that most low-income people don’t have a lot of control over their diets to begin with, and the resources available to them tend to offer little in the way of assistance with the barriers that stand between them and health.”

Bullfuckingshit. This is the main problem with liberals and millennials.

We don’t have any control (We can’t think for ourselves), we don’t have enough resources available (More Free Shit), little in the way of assistance with barriers, (We need more government drones telling us how and what to eat) I’m fat and a product of less government assistance, but I’m loved.

I grew up in an era of very little in the way of government assistance, not that dad would have taken any anyway.
My family of five brothers and sisters were no doubt considered poor but so were a lot of family’s growing up in the 60’s.
Dad was a Korean vet and just starting in real estate after years working construction and mom was an RN working second shift. My entire life growing up I never had a bedroom, my brother and I slept in either an attic or basement while my three sisters and parents got bedrooms on the main floor. Easier to hide Playboys!

Mom was a great cook, dad was a great deal finder. He would find the food deals, mom would cook inexpensive nutritional meals for the entire week. A simple pot roast would feed us for three days with three different recipes. All dad had to do was warm up the meals while mom worked nights.
And guess what? We all grew up with the same ethics of taking care of ourselves, not the constant look towards government to care for us. News Flash, the government doesn’t care about your eating habits or your waistline or if you’re loved.

They just want dumbed down useful idiots, meet Harmony Cox.

Bullfuckinggoddamnbullshit

nkit
nkit
March 5, 2020 2:00 pm

“Nah. I don’t fuck with vegetables.”

I can not begin to imagine saying that to my mother or father as a young child. Certainly, I would have been in for a beating of Biblical proportions. Wasting food was an unforgivable sin in our house. We were not dirt poor, nor could we imagine being wealthy. Food did not go to waste. Rarely were there leftovers for the following day. Sometimes we might have left over grits. My mother would put them in a tall drinking glass and put them in the fridge to congeal so she could pop them out, slice ’em up and fry them for breakfast.

ALL vegetables were eaten, no exceptions. You could sit there at the table until bedtime. If they still were not eaten, that was breakfast. Get caught feeding them to the dogs? Say hello to Mr. Belt.

gilberts
gilberts
March 6, 2020 12:23 am

Amazing what some people can get paid to do.
Food Justice?
I hope she gets the Red Flu and dies a nasty hacking O2-deprived fevered death.