From Malcolm
Gladwell in The New Yorker, a disturbing analysis of Katrina's forcible relocation of many of the residents of the worst bomb-crater neighborhoods in New Orleans. The removal improved not only the lives of those who moved away but also the lives of those who stayed behind. I don't know of any way to look at these results than to conclude that there is a poor black culture that can be improved--and can be prevented from dragging down the cultures it touches--only if it remains a locally diluted minority. If you belonged to that culture, what could be a harder message to accept?
2 comments:
It's not too different from a version of internal exile that's critical to some prison sentencing/rehab for drug offenders: you can't go back to that environment; you have to live somewhere else as a condition of parole.
Works there, too, at least better than letting them go back into the environment that led to their addiction.
Eric Hines
Too many slaves creates a problem for the aristocrats. That's what. PP gets to farm them for profit and to reduce the numbers.
Post a Comment