Want to lower the poverty level in America?
It boils down to being raised within a solid family environment. Where, parents parent. Where they bear their responsibility of raising their children. For example, 72% of black children are born to unwed mothers. The overall birth rate outside of marriage has gone from 8% percent in the mid-60s to 41% today. And if you only consider babies born to women under the age of 30, an astounding 53% come into the world without a dad in the house. Single mother homes, of course, are the major driver of poverty in America.
Children raised in fatherless homes are far more likely to grow up poor and to eventually engage in criminal behavior, than their peers who are raised in two-parent homes. In 2010, blacks (approximately 13% of the U.S. population) accounted for 48.7% of all arrests for homicide, 31.8% of arrests for forcible rape, 33.5% of arrests for aggravated assault, and 55% of arrests for robbery. Also as of 2010, the black poverty rate was 27.4% (about 3 times higher than the white rate), meaning that 11.5 million blacks in the U.S. were living in poverty.
Do you believe providing more welfare to more people resolves the problem?
What would common sense and logic dictate? Hmmm.
It boils down to being raised within a solid family environment. Where, parents parent. Where they bear their responsibility of raising their children. For example, 72% of black children are born to unwed mothers. The overall birth rate outside of marriage has gone from 8% percent in the mid-60s to 41% today. And if you only consider babies born to women under the age of 30, an astounding 53% come into the world without a dad in the house. Single mother homes, of course, are the major driver of poverty in America.
Children raised in fatherless homes are far more likely to grow up poor and to eventually engage in criminal behavior, than their peers who are raised in two-parent homes. In 2010, blacks (approximately 13% of the U.S. population) accounted for 48.7% of all arrests for homicide, 31.8% of arrests for forcible rape, 33.5% of arrests for aggravated assault, and 55% of arrests for robbery. Also as of 2010, the black poverty rate was 27.4% (about 3 times higher than the white rate), meaning that 11.5 million blacks in the U.S. were living in poverty.
Do you believe providing more welfare to more people resolves the problem?
What would common sense and logic dictate? Hmmm.
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