Socialist Progressives
Related: About this forumThe Building Blocks of Deprivation
Ruling elites in Baltimore and cities like it have pushed a development model that enriches the few and marginalizes the many.
by Daniel Pasciuti & Isaac Jilbert 5-11-15
he protests, anger, and violence that have fixed the eyes of the world on Baltimore over the past couple weeks are easily attributable to systemic inequality and poverty.
But concepts like inequality and poverty are rarely unpacked, and use of these broad terms often ignores, or glosses over, the mechanisms and processes that propagate inequality over time. No credit is done to the concerns and demands of Baltimoreans who struggle every day under systemic constraints if we fail to understand how the inequality they face is replicated.
To understand the building blocks of deprivation in Baltimore, it is necessary to examine both the historical legacy of city planning and the comeback of Americas old industrial centers.
The engineering projects of Robert Moses and others in mid-century cities created a legacy of physical and social divisions that continue to edit the lived landscape of Baltimore. Today, new economic and social development projects the Urban Renaissance are creating new divides in which there has been astounding success for some, built on the premise of excluding others, and creating new contradictions that are becoming impossible to ignore ...
Much more here: https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/05/baltmore-freddie-gray-protests-poverty-inequality/
daleanime
(17,796 posts)redruddyred
(1,615 posts)unis and hospitals pay better than retail, but that's still not enough left over at the end of the week.
it's the wages, stupid.
olddots
(10,237 posts)we were born to be a boom town on materialistic dreams that are turning sour from ignorant greed .