The VSP Paul Ryan slaps a new brand on a stale old trope
by digby
So I guess nobody’s supposed to notice that the Very Serious Paul Ryan’s “new” plan is simply regurgitated stale right wing talking points going back 50 years?
Ryan appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press” to discuss his newly released poverty proposal, which involves consolidating 11 federal anti-poverty programs — including food stamps and housing vouchers — into one program coordinated on a state-by-state basis.
Host David Gregory asked the representative to speak to comments he made in January of 2013, in which Ryan said the country struggles with “more and more able-bodied people” becoming “dependent on the government.” Gregory said Ryan didn’t sound like he had much “sympathy” for impoverished Americans.
“We don’t want to have a poverty management system that simply perpetuates poverty,” Ryan said, pitching his poverty proposal that he says will allow for a customized approach to each individual’s needs.
“The federal government’s approach has ended up maintaining poverty, managing poverty, in many ways it has disincentivized people from going to work,” Ryan said. “Able-bodied people should go to work, and we should have a system that helps them do that so that they can realize their potential.”
Thanks Paul. That’s quite a unique observation. I wonder why nobody’s thought of it before now. (And kudos to David Gregory for calling him on this moldy old line of argument. Oh wait. He didn’t.)
Seriously, I cannot fathom why anyone would think this represents a break in hardcore wingnut thinking. It’s literally been their standard argument for decades ever since Daniel Patrick Moynihan wrote his famous report about African American culture:
In his report, officially titled “The Negro Family: The Case for National Action,” Moynihan claimed that African-American family values produced too many fatherless households and nurtured what he called a “tangle of pathology,” a self-perpetuating, self-defeating cultural flaw responsible for persistently high rates of poverty and violent crime. Conservative columnists and politicians seized on the report, promulgated by a liberal in Lyndon B. Johnson’s administration, as official evidence that African-American culture was dangerously pathological. Civil rights leaders saw it as an attempt to blame the black community for systemic problems of racial discrimination. A wide spectrum of academic researchers criticized the report, finding errors and mistaken statistical logic; it was a hasty analysis wrapped in provocative rhetoric. Over the next decade, more evidence was brought forth that challenged Moynihan’s data and assumptions (and Lewis’). By the late 1970s, the premise that poor people have a distinctive culture that causes them to fail seemed to have been rejected.
Reagan’s election in 1980, however, rehabilitated the culture of poverty concept by invoking images of welfare queens and the supposed dangers of a dependent underclass. In 1984, Charles Murray, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, wrote a popular book called “Losing Ground,” which claimed harmful social programs and bad behavior by the poor were the main causes of the growing poverty of the era. Liberal academics countered that unemployment in deindustrialized urban areas was the main cause of poverty, though some of their cohort also conceded Moynihan’s original premise, arguing that economic failure partly resulted from ineffective parenting within the underclass. Once again, cause and effect were up for grabs, and conservatives (then, as now) opted for the appealing explanation that poor people cause their own problems.
In his interview with Bennett, Ryan cited Murray approvingly, a reference that intensified the charges of racism levied against him. Murray is a co-author of “The Bell Curve,” published in 1994, which controversially posited a genetic link between race and IQ. His 2008 book, “Coming Apart,” argued that the white lower classes were largely abandoning marriage and family fidelity, that they too have been infected with the tangle of pathology.
Ryan wants to “help” the poor the same way conservative have always wanted to help them — by giving them the “tough love” of making their lives even worse than they already are. If they want “help” they can go to a church and pray to their God and maybe they’ll get a sandwich.
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