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phobosanomaly | 4 years ago
In your time in the US, did you get a chance to visit the Navajo reservation?
"Tribes without clean water demand an end to decades of US government neglect
US has broken promises as Indigenous Americans lack access to safe water, a crisis worsened by Covid-19"
"An estimated one in 10 Indigenous Americans lack access to safe tap water or basic sanitation..."
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/28/indigenous-a....
Please check out this photo-essay on the homeless in Los Angeles.
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-03-08/homeless...
What do these folks have that the poor in other countries don't? Food insecurity, outbreaks of disease, living in improvised structures, threat of violence, lack of access to health care are all present in the United States.
Did you get a chance to visit anywhere like the Imperial Valley?
"Two weeks ago, federal prosecutors filed a lawsuit intended to clean up or shut down Duroville, which they said was lacking in necessary permits but plentiful in horrid conditions: defective construction, faulty electrical wiring, unhealthful distribution of drinking water and a deeply flawed septic system. Those ponds of gray.
“The system itself leaks sewage under and around trailers and in common areas,” the government charged in court papers, leading to raw sewage being “tracked into trailers and elsewhere on the feet of residents and their pets.”
But everything about Duroville is hard, just as its name suggests.
It sits on the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indian Reservation, where Mr. Duro is a prominent member. Weary of the news media, he has hired a spokesman, Alan Singer, who stops short of equating Duroville with nirvana, but calls the tales of squalor overblown and racist.
Mr. Singer asks one question, though, that pricks like a cactus: If Duroville is shut down, where will these thousands live?
So far, no answer."
https://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/21/us/21land.html
The order of magnitude in numbers may differ, but there is plenty of grinding poverty in the United States.
The more you travel in the United States, the more you realize that it isn't the magical shining city on the hill people think it is.
refurb|4 years ago
Clearly not.
phobosanomaly|4 years ago
I mean, compare the US Gini coefficient with other developed countries.