We’ve
all heard the age old phrase, “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day.
Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.” Perhaps the place where
this proverb fits most aptly is the fight on global poverty. Poverty is a very
real issue today: in the words of former Financial Coaching Fellow, Jerome
Thompson, “the fight on poverty is this generation’s civil rights movement.” There
are opposing theories on the best way to address the issue of poverty – give
the fish or the lesson? Or, does the issue go deeper? Should we be asking which
method is better, or should we be examining the way in which the methods are
administered?
Social change work is hard and frustrating and wonderful and terrible; it is also, at times, funny, quirky and just plain fascinating. With this blog we hope to capture all that goes into what we do at Capital Good Fund, and we invite you to join the conversation!
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Saturday, January 25, 2014
The Paradox of the Panhandler
The Parable of the Starfish
We’ve all heard the
parable of the starfish: a man comes across a young boy throwing starfish into
the ocean. The man, seeing this, tells
the boy that what he’s doing is a waste of time because, there being thousands
of starfish, his actions won’t make a difference. And then comes the boy’s famous
response. Picking up a starfish, he says,
“It makes a difference to this one!”
I got to thinking
about the starfish story as I was driving home from work today and passed a
homeless man panhandling on the side of the road. It’s a frigid day—windy and cold, with a
chance of rain and sleet in the afternoon.
In short, a day that must make the despair of homelessness even more
biting and sharp. Stopped at a red
light, I looked at the man, bundled up yet shivering, holding up his makeshift
sign, and wondered what I should do.
Give him a dollar? Ignore him? Work for systemic change that will end
homelessness?
Monday, January 6, 2014
The Mental Stress of Fewer Options
My Experience
The summer before college I found a job babysitting that would earn me enough to cover my first year books and possibly leave some left over for some fun college activities. The job was in Newport, about 45 minutes (on a good day) from my house. Rather than waste money on gas, I decided to take the bus every day. One summer morning, I went to my usual stop, walking just over a mile to get there. I saw the bus coming down the street and stepped forward with my change in-hand. I was standing in plain sight, right under the bus sign but that bus didn’t even slow down. I even saw a few people point at me as I waved my arms in an attempt to get the attention of the driver, but no luck.Saturday, January 4, 2014
A Frank Discussion About Money
Cut The Euphemisms
I feel that so much of our modern lives are shrouded in euphemisms that rarely do we say what we mean; instead we hide behind safer language, safer feelings. Beer and shampoo and a host of other consumer product commercials imply that use of the product will result in dates, in sex, in beauty, in success. To sell sugar water Coca Cola shows us polar bears enjoying the beverage: let's make something lacking any nutritional value seem cute and refreshing! Exxon doesn't rapaciously exploit natural resources: it "delivers value" to its stakeholders. The wealthy get preferential treatment (11% taxes on capital gains!) not because they have the clout to lobby for that treatment, but rather because they are job creators. Financial institutions behind the global recession are spared criminal suits, not because they have the power to intimidate the government and the legal team to fight it, but because they are too big too fail. Benefits and programs to support the poor and middle class--food stamps, unemployment insurance, job training, infrastructure improvements--are continually whittled down, not because they lack political power...No! It's because government is too big and they are too dependent on government largesse. And so on.
I feel that so much of our modern lives are shrouded in euphemisms that rarely do we say what we mean; instead we hide behind safer language, safer feelings. Beer and shampoo and a host of other consumer product commercials imply that use of the product will result in dates, in sex, in beauty, in success. To sell sugar water Coca Cola shows us polar bears enjoying the beverage: let's make something lacking any nutritional value seem cute and refreshing! Exxon doesn't rapaciously exploit natural resources: it "delivers value" to its stakeholders. The wealthy get preferential treatment (11% taxes on capital gains!) not because they have the clout to lobby for that treatment, but rather because they are job creators. Financial institutions behind the global recession are spared criminal suits, not because they have the power to intimidate the government and the legal team to fight it, but because they are too big too fail. Benefits and programs to support the poor and middle class--food stamps, unemployment insurance, job training, infrastructure improvements--are continually whittled down, not because they lack political power...No! It's because government is too big and they are too dependent on government largesse. And so on.
Saturday, December 14, 2013
You Gotta Plan...And You Gotta Believe
Martin Luther King didn't just have a dream, he had a plan: marches, sit-ins, legislative advocacy. But no amount of dreaming, and no amount of planning, could comfort him when the death threats rained upon him, when the Churches were bombed and the dogs set loose; no, in those all-too-frequent (if not constant) moments, he needed something else: belief. Belief that was not always justifiable; belief that strained the bounds of credulity; belief that he almost certainly struggled to believe himself. Yet that belief remained, and it resonated in the hearts and minds of the countless thousands that risked their lives for justice, and it resonated even in the hearts and minds of those who would prefer to look the other way--but couldn't, because the Civil Rights movement forced them to...forced them to believe that change was coming.
O, but it's so hard. During the darkest days of the Cuban Missile Crisis, or the Battle of Britain, or the Civil War, or the American Revolution, or the myriad other events that shaped history, how many times did the way forward seem impossible, unthinkable? How often were the best of plans laid to waste, the best thinkers proven wrong? And yet sometimes, in the midst of strife--moments when all the roads to Justice have been washed away by a torrent of hopelessness--a path is forged. It is a path that defies logic, that shouldn't work...and then somehow does.
Sunday, December 8, 2013
What Do Our Customers Need?
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Guest Blog Post: Mintaka Angell, Financial Coaching Fellow
While many
students can attest to emphasizing service work on their college applications,
it seems that this focus begins to slip soon after the "submit"
button is clicked. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics, for example, recently found that overall
levels of volunteerism were declining in America - with the lowest levels of service
prevalent among 20-24 year olds. With raising college tuition and
ever-increasing stress to conform to a specific set of criteria for the job
market, it's easy to understand why fewer college students are finding the time
to participate in social justice and change. However, there are several reasons
that service is invaluable, no matter a student's situation. Not
only is it a personally enriching experience that deepens communal connections,
fosters new friendships, and allows for each person to contribute towards
positive change in their community, is also opens a series of perspectives
vital for the next generation of leaders to understand. Here are five (5) reasons
that service and social justice work are an irreplaceable component of every
college student's education:
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