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Mass

(27,315 posts)
Tue Dec 3, 2013, 10:08 AM Dec 2013

Hey, Media: White People Are Poor, Too

As the article notes, a disproportionate quantity of minorities are poor and this is a problem, but it is still a minority of poor people and representing poor people as overwhelmingly minorities just gets into the stereotypes.

http://www.theroot.com/articles/culture/2013/12/most_poor_people_in_america_are_white.html

According to Census figures in 2013, 18.9 million whites are poor. That’s 8 million more poor white people than poor black people, and more than 5 million more than those who identify as Latino. A majority of those benefiting from programs like food stamps and Medicaid are white, too.

But somehow our picture of poverty is different, and the media tends to tell us a different story. A recent New York Times story, “Cut in Food Stamps Forces Hard Choices on Poor,” included only pictures of African Americans and Latinos from the Bronx, N.Y., and a number of Southern states. In October, the Times published another story about the impact of states’ rejection of the Medicaid expansion that’s part of the Affordable Care Act.

The images accompanying that story were also all of black or Latino families. Was that because only blacks and Latinos receive Medicaid? No.
...
This stereotype, like most stereotypes, harms black people in myriad ways, especially because the political right has linked poverty with moral failure as a trope to undermine public support for government programs—remember Ronald Reagan’s welfare queen? These tactics didn’t end in the 1980s. Last week, for example, Fox News’ Brad Blakeman said the government was "like a drug dealer" peddling "dependency" to food-stamp recipients.

Social scientists and others have long made the observation that the media over-emphasizes people of color in coverage of poverty and government benefits. But if the message hasn’t yet reached even the New York Times, it clearly needs to be said again.

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Hey, Media: White People Are Poor, Too (Original Post) Mass Dec 2013 OP
I think this is on purpose and not an oversight gollygee Dec 2013 #1
Yep. Basic social science data since da 60s. MSM knows it, too. Eleanors38 Dec 2013 #2

gollygee

(22,336 posts)
1. I think this is on purpose and not an oversight
Tue Dec 3, 2013, 10:13 AM
Dec 2013

People were fine with big government and social programs until people of color had more access to the services white people had mainly used until then. That is when social services started being talked about in a negative way, and the only reason they did - white people didn't mind social services when they benefited pretty much entirely white people, but they did when everyone could use them. And I think people in the media get that on some level. News is entertainment, and they are trying to entice their viewers to read the story and choose them as a news source, so they show the images that reinforce a lot of people's views.

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