id you know that we could raise
millions of people above the poverty line every year just by
changing the meaning of a single word?
Now
there’s nothing funny about being poor. What is funny,
however, is the way the folks at the Census Bureau decide who is
poor and who isn’t.
It all began in
1980, when employees of that agency arbitrarily (and I want
to emphasize the word "arbitrarily") selected a dollar amount of
income for that year, which they then termed the "poverty line."
Implied was the notion that everyone with income for that year below
the line was poor while those with income above it were
not.
Since
then, the line has been upgraded every year to reflect
inflation.
However,
and this is a big however, the poverty line includes only cash
income; it completely ignores income in other forms, such as medical
benefits, subsidized housing, and food stamps.
Now how can we
raise millions of people above the poverty line every year
merely by changing the meaning of a single word? Very
simple.
All we have to do
is agree that the word "income" means all kinds of income,
not just cash.
To give you an
idea of how potent this change of language would be, had
the folks at the Census Bureau done this in 1993, the last year for
which such figures were available at the time of this writing, some
8 million people would no longer have been poor.
Imagine!
Not a single additional crumb of food would have been put on any
one’s table, not a single additional stitch of clothing would have
been put on any one’s back, not a single additional cubic foot of
shelter would have been made available to anyone. Yet all these 8
million souls would have been raised from poverty.
You know,
I’ve always thought that words were powerful. But I never thought
that they were that powerful!
Think about
it. 