Only Nixon could go to China. And only when a Democrat is in the Oval Office can we admit that culture can be a cause of poverty :
For more than 40 years, social scientists investigating the causes of poverty have tended to treat cultural explanations like Lord Voldemort: That Which Must Not Be Named.The reticence was a legacy of the ugly battles that erupted after Daniel Patrick Moynihan, then an assistant labor secretary in the Johnson administration, introduced the idea of a culture of poverty to the public in a startling 1965 report. Although Moynihan didnt coin the phrase (that distinction belongs to the anthropologist Oscar Lewis), his description of the urban black family as caught in an inescapable tangle of pathology of unmarried mothers and welfare dependency was seen as attributing self-perpetuating moral deficiencies to black people, as if blaming them for their own misfortune.
Moynihans analysis never lost its appeal to conservative thinkers, whose arguments ultimately succeeded when President Bill Clinton signed a bill in 1996 ending welfare as we know it. But in the overwhelmingly liberal ranks of academic sociology and anthropology the word culture became a live grenade, and the idea that attitudes and behavior patterns kept people poor was shunned.
Now, after decades of silence, these scholars are speaking openly about you-know-what, conceding that culture and persistent poverty are enmeshed.
Weve finally reached the stage where people arent afraid of being politically incorrect, said Douglas S. Massey, a sociologist at Princeton who has argued that Moynihan was unfairly maligned.
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