...But there is one set of related policy ideas that would dramatically help the poor and should not be ideologically divisive. How about a renewed effort to help the poor by refusing to cheat them?
I am referring to a broad and growing collaboration between government and business to systematically defraud and exploit the poor through state lotteries, payday lending and payday gambling.
The lottery is a particularly awful example of political corruption. Here government is raising revenue by selling the Powerball dream of wealth without work. Studies in a number of states have shown that lottery ticket sales are concentrated in poor communities, that poor people spend a larger portion of their income on tickets and that the poor are more likely to view the lottery as an investment. “This could be your ticket out,” promised one typical billboard in a distressed Chicago neighborhood.
Think on this a moment. In a place where government has utterly failed
to provide adequate education and public services, government is using
advertising to exploit the desperation of poor people in order to raise
revenue that funds other people’s public services. This is often called a
“regressive” form of taxation. The word does not adequately capture the
cruelty and crookedness of selling a lie to vulnerable people in order
to bilk them. Offering the chance of one in a 100 million is the
equivalent of a lie. Lotteries depend on the deceptive encouragement of
mythical thinking and fantasies of escape.
Read the rest here.
HT: T-19
The Good Priest
50 minutes ago
1 comment:
Heck, when I lived in NYC I knew college-educated, middle class folks who considered playing the state lottery an investment.
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