Category Archives: Poverty

Dancing at the Revolution

If you’re going to do something radical, wear Brooks Brothers. You won’t just stop traffic, you’ll confound the status quo. Occupy Portland and the hundreds of other variations on New York’s Occupy Wall Street protest, need more ordinary middle-class employees. Many of them wear suits and are just as worried about America’s future. The men […]

More Kids Left Behind

There are two ways to shrink the achievement gap between black and white students: Increase the intelligence level of black students, or lower white students’ performance. The latter approach seems to be the direction we’re heading, especially in Oregon. It’s not surprising the state will likely apply for one of President Obama’s waivers to No […]

Does Old Age Have a Future?

If youth is wasted on the young, then old age is wasted on the elderly. Nobody wants to get old, except maybe someone young or middle-aged who has a life-threatening illness. Then getting old looks like a luxury. Having good health and money in old age removes some of the dread but invites criticism: “Oh, […]

Visiting a Bad Neighborhood

Wealth doesn’t always trickle down, but poverty can metastasize in all directions. People know that. It makes them fearful, which is why so many Americans on this Labor Day are careful to say, “I’m just thankful I have a job.” Never mind if the job serves a useful purpose, or if it pays less than […]

No Revolt on this Poverty Tour

Cornel West and Tavis Smiley ended their national poverty tour in August without a stop in Portland or Oregon. Too bad. Apparently they haven’t heard that Oregon is becoming the Mississippi of the West. And Portland — where better to see how the Democratic Party has failed the poor. They could have seen why there […]

America’s House of Pain

Given the events of the past several days (with a lead-up from the last several years), it’s time to retire that empty phrase, “The American Dream.” It only encourages people to get their hopes up for something that is not going to happen. And when they realize it isn’t going to happen, they turn to […]

Unmuzzling the Slave Trade

News flash: Henry Louis Gates, Jr. has discovered that white Americans are not the only ones who owned black slaves. So has NPR’s Terry Gross. “There is so much in your book that I did not know,” the host of “Fresh Air” told Gates. “I did not know I was so uninformed about slavery south […]

Staying Alive in Portland

When I was a police reporter in San Bernardino, Calif., and homicides were becoming a weekly occurrence, I told a colleague, “One of the leading causes of death in this town is turning your life around.” Every time I wrote a story about a homicide victim, invariably one of his loved ones would say, “He […]

A Discriminating Landlord

Suppose black rapper Tyler, the Creator went apartment hunting in Portland, Ore., and encountered a landlord who detected thug tendencies in Tyler’s attitude. Suppose the landlord didn’t want to rent to him. Should that be a crime? But what if Tyler, the Creator rejected the landlord as too uptight and the neighborhood as too quiet […]