By 2g1c2 girls 1 cup

Around Osceola Untitled Document
Home Opinions
Opinions
Gun nuts’ fantasies vs real world tragedies PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Friday, 08 February 2013 13:18

Pitts_leonard_2011Leonard Pitts
Tribune Media

You remember that serious conversation we were going to have about guns? Here’s how serious it has turned out to be.

Recently, President Obama described himself in an interview with The New Republic as an avid skeet shooter. Conservatives scoffed at the claim, whereupon the White House promptly whipped out photographic proof.

 
Poverty is still America’s vicious cycle PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Wednesday, 06 February 2013 13:06

Robyn Blumner

Tribune Media

Why are some people stuck in poverty? Dr. Ruby Payne wants to let you in on the secret.

Payne is a poverty doc, or more aptly, a get-out-of-poverty doc. With a Ph.D. in educational leadership, she writes prescriptions for addressing the scourge of poverty wielded by public school systems, social service agencies and the corporate world. Her analysis is insightful, her advice practical, and it doesn’t hurt that she has a delightful manner, which helps her bulldoze through the sensitive subjects of poverty, race, gender and class without ruffling feathers.

Payne says that people are poor due to their own behaviors and lack of education -- a rationale that appeals to political conservatives. Also, she thinks that political and economic structures keep people in poverty, even if they are hard-working, and that poor people are easily exploited -- ideas to which liberals nod their heads. All of these factors conspire to strip people in generational poverty of the stabilizing personal, economic and cultural resources they need to make it into the middle class.

Makes sense to me. Now what?

Payne asks if you’ve ever driven by a beaten up trailer and seen a new satellite dish outside. Do you know kids who qualify for free or reduced lunch but manage to have a dollar or two a day to spend on ice cream?

She says that people who can’t understand these behaviors or are infuriated by them don’t understand the hidden rules of poverty. For someone in generational poverty, it makes perfect sense to spend whatever money one possesses on a satellite dish or delicious ice cream. “Poverty is very painful,” Payne says, “and money is used for entertainment to take away the pain.”

Unlike people in the middle class who are driven by “work, achievement and material security,” people in poverty are simply trying to get by day after day. The two chief drivers for the poor are entertainment and relationships, according to Payne. Entertainment is an escape from poverty’s relentless tyranny, and relationships are a substitute for money as a survival strategy. When a middle-class person’s car breaks down, they call AAA, Payne quips. When it happens to someone in poverty, they call Uncle Ray.

Only by understanding this mindset will teachers, social workers and employers succeed in connecting with people from generational poverty. As an example, Payne says that unless teachers are aware of how relationships have paramount value for an at-risk child, they won’t understand the need to create a trusting, mutually respectful connection with him or her. Otherwise, the child will refuse to learn from them.

Payne came to be an expert on poverty almost by accident. She was working for a public school district in Baytown, Texas, when discipline problems spiked in a school that went from 24 percent low-income to 60 percent in three years. Her analysis of what was going on and why became the focus of Payne’s seminal book, “A Framework for Understanding Poverty.”

Personally, I agree with much of her analysis, including her claim that simply having more money won’t change the culture of the poor -- lottery winners prove that. But I think Payne underplays the benefits of a living wage and how transformational that alone can be.

It’s exhausting to be poor. You may have to work more than one job, use spotty public transit and rely on undependable child care arrangements. Children of the poor are often thrust into the role of taking care of younger siblings or shouldering other adult duties. Had the United States not suffered such an erosion of wage levels for low-skill workers, where someone can work full time yet still be in poverty, I think there would be far less stress and social pathology.

Payne’s work is undeniably needed. Making every job in America a good job by raising the minimum wage to a living wage is needed more.

You can respond to Robyn’s column at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 
S-U-P-E-R-B-O-W-L PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Friday, 01 February 2013 10:51

Stay safe this weekend while enjoying the Super Bowl between the Ravens and the 49ers.  For the first time in the history of this game, the coaches in this matchup are brothers.  Jim Harbaugh and John Harbaugh will go head to head for the NFL’s biggest prize, the Lombardi Trophy.

 
Have you ever been sick but had no place to go for a remedy? PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Friday, 01 February 2013 10:49

Sines_DonnaDonna Sines
Community Vision

Those of us employed, with an insurance card in our wallet, can pick up the phone and make an appointment with our doctor.

 
The goal is to improve service PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Friday, 01 February 2013 10:42

Ramirez_Armando_2013Armando Ramirez
Clerk of Court

As the clerk of the circuit court for Osceola County, I want to take this opportunity to let my constituents know what we are doing to improve service at the courthouse.

 
Obama’s inaugural address not progressive enough PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Wednesday, 30 January 2013 12:20

Robyn Blumner
Tribune Media

It was a liberal speech by a liberal president. That sums up the commentariat’s assessment of President Barack Obama’s second inaugural address. He focused his remarks on the best of what America has accomplished together, a collective vision of the past and future.

 
Osceola students in excellent hands PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Friday, 25 January 2013 12:20

The vision that Osceola County’s schools will outperform all other districts in the state is becoming tangible. This idea comes from Superintendent Melba Luciano.  Through her 26 years of experience, she is leading the Osceola County School District with positive energy and clear direction.

 
Campaign finance should be local and transparent PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Friday, 25 January 2013 12:19

Paula Dockery
Florida Voices

Florida’s legislature has started its committee meetings in advance of the 2013 legislative session.  The big news out of Tallahassee so far has been the Senate’s desire for ethics reform.

 
Letters to the Editor for January 26, 2013 PDF Print E-mail
Opinions
Friday, 25 January 2013 12:18

For what it’s worth

To the Editor,

Washington is a group of men and women who are caught up in a collective dysfunctional quandary.

Washington is made up of a collective group of dysfunctional human beings who have no more control of their actions than a 3-year-old in a temper tantrum. They act and react with the brains if a delusional teenager. It’s not that most of them standing alone would not prove out to be decent “love their country” citizens, but combined with hundreds of personalities seeking self-gratification, made up of greed and plain egotism, they have lost their ability to govern a country honestly and intelligently. Mr. Obama seems to be trying to run our country as if all he has to worry about is his family, “I have to keep up with the Joneses,” “I want a new car every year,” “I deserve a lovely million dollar home,” even though I can’t even meet my basic needs, I still deserve “the good life,” And if it means stepping on some less fortunate person, so be it. So we spend our lives loosing our dignity, our love of holding our heads up proudly, and being a people who live their lives doing what we were created to do: loving, giving, serving God, and making our country a place of peace where our children are safe where teenagers seek honorable things in learning the rewards from growing up to be proud young American citizens.

Our dysfunction is actually intensifying and accelerating because our security has broken the rule of constraint in all it’s actions. The people of these actions are choking us to the point where we are unable to stop and go back to common sanity in our daily actions. Our leaders seek to cover our fears with more threats to other nations. More bombs, guns, and acts of human torture is created in an attempt to protect us. We are caught up in a madness that leads to total destruction.

There was a Man who came to this earth from God who simply said “You shall love the Lord your God,” and “second, love your neighbor as yourself, and I will bring you peace.” We have chosen to ignore this message, the path has been paved in the opposite direction.

Only a few will survive. Will you?

Patsy Myers

Kissimmee

 
«StartPrev1234567NextEnd»

Page 6 of 7

 

 

Question of the Week

What grade would you currently give the Obama Administration?
 

Calendar of Events

<<  May 2013  >>
 Su  Mo  Tu  We  Th  Fr  Sa 
   
 



 

 

Osceola News-Gazette
108 Church Street, Kissimmee, Florida 34741
407-846-7600
© 2013 aroundosceola.com
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU General Public License.