I agree few people in the US live in the type of poverty that you might see from the depression era, or a poor area in a third world country, but some of these poor people "have" these things because they originally had jobs and acquired these items prior to becoming poor. Some don’t actually own items like washer or dryers and other appliances because they are included in their rent or in their government-funded housing. If they own them, do they operate properly if at all? How did they acquire these items? Were they given to them (from others, a non-profit, purchase them themselves?)? Stolen? Purchased second hand? Do they have money to pay the electric bill to run the appliances? They may have air conditioning, but can they afford to use it? In addition, TV’s are cheap these days, and cellphones are now cheaper than actual land line phones. You can get a basic cell phone for as low as $20.00 bucks and only pay as little as 19.00 a month for bare bottom basic coverage. You can buy a microwave for as little as 40.00 too. Computers come cheap now a days also. You can buy cheap refurbished computers for as little as 90.00 dollars.
But don’t let me and some of those facts get in the way with your obvious stereotyping and myth propoganda.
Originally Posted by Stan.Dupp
Stan.Dupp drank the Okool-aid...astroturfing will not distract us.
Astroturfing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the type of advocacy. For the artificial grass, see AstroTurf.
Astroturfing is the practice of masking the sponsors of a message (e.g. political, advertising, or public relations) to give the appearance of it coming from a disinterested, grassroots participant. Astroturfing is intended to give the statements the credibility of an independent entity by withholding information about the source's financial connection. The term astroturfing is a derivation of AstroTurf, a brand of synthetic carpeting designed to look like natural grass.
On the Internet, astroturfers use software to mask their identity. Sometimes one individual operates over many personas to give the impression of widespread support for their client's agenda.[1][2] Some studies suggest astroturfing can alter public viewpoints and create enough doubt to inhibit action.