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The Business of Keeping People Poor

35m 45s6,285 単語889 segmentsEnglish

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0:00

(film reel spooling)

0:01

- There's people getting rich off this graph.

0:04

(soft music)

0:09

What we're looking at here is the number of Americans

0:11

that don't make enough money for basic survival.

0:15

So like a family of four, two parents, two kids,

0:17

living off of $31,000 a year or less.

0:21

That's considered poverty in the United States

0:23

and there's millions of people

0:25

who live with that kind of income.

0:27

The U.S. government spends about a trillion dollars

0:28

every year helping these people meet their basic needs.

0:32

In recent decades, a lot of that money

0:33

has been flowing through a middleman,

0:36

private corporations who are supposed to be more efficient

0:38

in administering this money.

0:40

- So welfare is big business.

0:42

And of course, that's the irony of this whole thing,

0:44

that there's so much money to be made from poverty.

0:53

(pensive music)

0:58

- Now this is not easy stuff to understand.

1:00

We're talking about government welfare programs

1:03

and bureaucracy.

1:04

Sometimes they're intentionally hard to understand

1:06

and these corporations don't really want

1:08

to be known by anyone.

1:10

But if you start to dig, which we've been doing,

1:13

and you look deep enough into this,

1:16

you start to see what all of this actually looks like,

1:19

who's actually getting rich,

1:20

what the incentives are within this system,

1:22

where the loopholes are,

1:23

and whether or not this is actually benefiting the people

1:26

that it's designed to benefit.

1:28

So in this video, I'm gonna show you

1:29

who gets rich off the poor.

1:31

And I'm just gonna do a few case studies

1:33

that demonstrate how this works.

1:35

I'll be making a list of examples here

1:36

going from what I see is the least egregious abuse

1:40

of this system to the most.

1:42

I am bracing myself to get sued or intimidated

1:46

by the companies that I'm calling out in this video

1:49

because that's how a lot of these powerful

1:51

shadowy companies work.

1:52

So as always, every assertion in this video

1:54

is rigorously fact-checked and in my sources.

1:57

Lawyers, go check that first

1:59

before you send me your cease and desist order.

2:01

Thank you.

2:02

And with that, let's look at who gets rich off the poor.

2:05

Let's go back to this graph one last time

2:07

and just zoom back to the 1950s

2:09

where you can see that the poverty rate

2:11

was double what it is today.

2:13

It's like 22%.

2:15

This was really bad.

2:16

And it led to the president at the time declaring war.

2:19

- And this administration today, here and now,

2:24

declares unconditional war on poverty in America.

2:29

We shall not rest until that war is won.

2:34

- So, "A War on Poverty" by Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964.

2:39

This is what that war looked like.

2:42

This big line.

2:44

This is social spending as a share of GDP.

2:46

You can see this is where he gives this speech,

2:48

right here, this flat line.

2:50

Social spending just skyrockets right after.

2:52

The government spends tons of money

2:54

for this war on poverty.

2:56

That money goes towards programs like Medicare

2:58

and Medicaid, food stamps, public education,

3:01

which is why you see this big dip.

3:03

22%, all the way down to 12, 13%.

3:07

And for a time, all this spending worked.

3:09

Poverty declined 30% in five years.

3:12

But eventually, progress slowed.

3:14

The government kept spending and people got tired of it.

3:17

The economy wasn't doing well

3:19

and people were tired of subsidizing

3:21

these welfare programs.

3:23

And that's where this guy comes in.

3:25

- My friends, some years ago,

3:27

the federal government declared war on poverty

3:30

and poverty won.

3:32

- This is where things start to get a little bit murky.

3:34

So we needed help.

3:36

We got it from Ann Kim, who is an expert,

3:39

who literally wrote the book on this history

3:41

and the modern day poverty economy

3:44

and sat down with us to talk through this history

3:47

and how it works today.

3:49

- Remember during the 1980s, we had this,

3:51

well, no, you don't remember the 1980s. (laughs)

3:55

Well, during the 1980s,

3:56

there was really this mythologization,

4:00

if that's a word, of the CEO.

4:02

At the same time, the government spending was ballooning.

4:05

Economic times were not that great.

4:08

So Americans were not feeling particularly generous

4:10

about funding social services programs.

4:13

And so the CEOs were really kind of held up on a pedestal

4:16

as the ones who are going to make government

4:18

just as efficient as they made their own companies.

4:21

- Poverty is a big business here in the United States

4:24

and the government is making decisions right now

4:26

that will affect millions of people.

4:29

And yet what I've been finding

4:30

is it's hard to keep up on all of this,

4:33

how this stuff is being reported

4:34

and what is trustworthy and factual.

4:36

Lately, Medicaid portals have been shutting down

4:39

in all 50 states,

4:40

thanks to a Trump administration funding freeze.

4:43

This could result in millions of Americans,

4:45

low-income Americans, going without care.

4:48

This is huge and it's not really being reported on.

4:51

And when there's no accountability,

4:52

bad policies can go unchecked.

4:54

I'm saying all of this

4:55

because it has to do with the sponsor of today's video

4:57

who is more important than ever, in my opinion.

5:00

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5:02

and for existing in this important time for journalism.

5:06

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5:08

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5:10

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5:13

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5:15

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5:22

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5:28

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5:30

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5:34

Ground News is gaining notoriety for their work.

5:36

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5:39

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5:41

Since we're talking about Medicare and welfare programs,

5:44

let me show you how this actually works with an example.

5:46

Like this Medicaid shutdown news.

5:48

You'll often see one-sided coverage,

5:50

like left-leaning outlets focus on Trump's direct role,

5:53

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5:54

Right-leaning outlets, they either downplay it

5:56

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5:59

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6:00

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6:03

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6:04

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6:07

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6:09

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6:12

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6:13

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6:15

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6:18

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6:19

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6:21

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6:31

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6:37

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6:40

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6:41

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6:43

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6:45

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6:47

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6:53

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7:00

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7:01

So sign up now, ground.news/johnnyharris.

7:04

Thanks, Ground News, for sponsoring today's video

7:05

and for existing.

7:06

Okay, back to our list of who gets rich off the poor.

7:08

So it's the 1980s,

7:10

Reagan wants to rein in all of this spending.

7:13

He's also afraid that Americans are becoming too reliant

7:16

on the welfare system.

7:17

So he kicks off a bunch of changes

7:18

that over time would lead to a fundamental shift

7:22

in delivering income support to low-income populations.

7:26

- They wanted to privatize Medicaid, Medicare,

7:29

prisons, air traffic control.

7:31

- This privatization of government spending

7:33

started under Reagan,

7:34

but it continued into the future administrations,

7:38

especially under Bill Clinton, who helped expand it.

7:40

And the fundamental shift looks like this.

7:43

We're gonna be using a graphic like this,

7:45

not only for right now,

7:47

but for the future cases of how this works today.

7:50

Taxpayers give money to the government.

7:51

The government used to give money

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