if maybe we are asking the wrong questions? I was reading the numbers that the government released on poverty and income and those covered by health insurance (article here) and it suddenly occured to me that I didn't care about the way the government presented the numbers.
I don't care how many blacks or whites or hispanics fall where on the poverty line. Maybe that is because I'm white, but I don't think so. It interests me more where the people like me are falling. I want to know about two parent households with three kids, I want to know about college educated people, I want to know how people who have "major" health care costs that fall outside insurance coverage are doing.
I want to know about the people who are doing everything "right." I want to know about those people who are tightening their belts and not spending money on stuff they don't need. I want to know about the people who bit the bullet and stayed in school or got training. I want these numbers to tell me the real story about who is making it and who is better off.
I want to know these things because the numbers as they are mean nothing to me. We are a middle-class family and we work hard and we do all the things we are supposed to do and we are barely making it. All it would take for us to not make it would be another terrorist attack where the economy goes kafluee for a while, or one more unexpected bill, or one more increase in our health insurance premiums that aren't covering what we need them to cover.
Those people who read here regularly know me--a little. They know that I am big into personal responsibility. They know that I am a big believer in working hard. They know that while the softer side of me feels for people that I don't put any stock in excuses like my mother never loved me or my ancestors were slaves or I don't know any better. It seems to me though, that you can do everything right and still have it not work out. That you can work hard, and tighten your belts, and plan for the future and not make any excuses and not ask for handouts and it still isn't enough...
Those are the people I want to know about, because like it or not, our government does do things to impact the economy and jobs and health insurance and prices and all of those things and it seems to me that we would know better how all of that is going if we measured all of these statistics in a different way. You want to keep numbers on race? Fine. I don't care, go ahead. That isn't what interests me. I want to know about the people like me.
Chris
Spell check is down, please forgive the errors...