October 4, 2017 Page 11 Minority & Small Business Week Opinion articles do not necessarily represent the views of the Portland Observer. We welcome reader essays, photos and story ideas. Submit to news@portlandobserver.com. O PINION People Who Start Out Poor Often Stay Poor A rigged system takes its toll J ill r iCharDson We all want to live in a country where all it takes is hard work and some talent for anyone to succeed. We tell ourselves that we do. We even see examples of people who “came from nothing” and ended up rich and famous. And it’s true that it sometimes happens. Sometimes a child born into poverty grows up to become the president of the United States, a multi-billionaire, or an Olympic gold medalist. Most of the time, however, they don’t. And it’s not because they’re bad, lazy, stu- pid, or immoral. Often it’s because of our system itself. Take our school system for a start. By funding schools with property taxes, we guarantee that the children from the rich- est neighborhoods go to the wealthiest by schools. If we lived in neighborhoods that were economically mixed with families of all incomes, this wouldn’t be a big deal. But we don’t. Instead we have areas of very wealthy people whose children attend wonderful schools, and areas of concen- trated poverty where children attend fail- ing schools. And the kids in the good schools? Their parents can afford tutoring, extra- curricular activities, summer camp, and SAT prep classes. It’s the kids whose par- ents can’t provide those extra learning op- portunities who go to the worst schools. Meanwhile, careers are sorted into those that require a college degree and those that don’t. Once upon a time, one could support a family on the wage of a manufacturing job. But America lost those jobs, and replaced them with poorly paid service jobs that often have no ben- efits. For those without college degrees, get- ting ahead is difficult. But college is ex- pensive. Even without the tuition costs, one has to keep a roof over their head and eat while attending school. Community colleges and online programs add flexibil- ity for students who work full time while attending school, but it can still be diffi- cult. I don’t advocate a return to the days when men worked and women stayed home. But at least back then, families had an adult whose full time duties were to take care of the home and the children. When women went to work, the expec- tations of the workplace didn’t change. Men with stay-at-home wives never need- ed maternity leave or flex time or places to pump breastmilk or time off to pick up a sick kid from day care. But in families where both partners work, or in single parent families, how on earth are parents supposed to hold down a full time job and simultaneously be full- time homemakers? Sociologist Arlie Hochschild examined this in her classic book The Second Shift, finding that the housework often still falls disproportionately to working women, of- ten leaving them frazzled and exhausted. Sometimes the kids lose out, when neither parent has time to spend with them. Wealthier families now pay for the work that women used to do for free: childcare, laundry, cooking, cleaning, and so on. But whom do they pay? Less wealthy women, usually. And those women, after spending a day caring for someone else’s kids or doing someone else’s laundry, still have to figure out how to get their own housework done once they go home. The end result is that most people who start out poor stay poor. And those who start out rich usually stay rich. (Recent studies show that Canada now has three times better social mobility than the U.S., suggesting the American Dream moved north.) Ours is a great system, if you’re rich. But we’d be a better country if we didn’t rig the game against those whose only mistake was to be born to poor parents. OtherWords columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It. Distributed by Other- Words.org. A Low Bar for Corporations Rejecting Racism White supremacy can wear a business suit e Mily n orton Donald Trump’s fail- ure to condemn white su- premacists after the violent neo-Nazi rally in Charlot- tesville several weeks back had an unexpected casual- ty: the president’s business advisory councils. My partner works for a Fortune 500 company whose CEO sat on one those councils. Along with many other employ- ees, my partner had been pressuring the CEO through an internal petition for some time. Eventually, the dam broke: CEO after CEO decided they could no longer associ- ate themselves with the White House after the incident, forcing Trump to dissolve two high-level panels. I’m glad my partner’s efforts, along with bigger ones like a campaign to tar- get “Corporate Backers of Hate,” rattled these major corporations’ top decision makers. Corporate execs know that it’s bad for business to be affiliated with racists — and good for business to look like heroes. But while rejecting racism is good, it’s a low bar — especially when many still profit off it. For example, Jamie Dimon, CEO of by JP Morgan Chase, jumped into action after Charlottesville. He not only issued a statement, but also announced that JP Morgan Chase would donate $500,000 to the Southern Poverty Law Center, an or- ganization that’s fought racism since the 1970s. It was a smart business move. The last time JP Morgan was on the wrong side of racism, it cost them $55 mil- lion in settlements for charging black and brown people higher rates for their mortgages. Looking at that number, a $500,000 donation is a drop in the bucket. The company can’t take back the dis- crimination lawsuits or its part in the hous- ing crisis, which slashed black wealth in this country in half. That’s a huge percent- age. Black families had already been de- nied centuries of wealth accumulation due to slavery and racist policies like redlining, and this crisis was a double whammy. $500,000 also isn’t enough to make up for the bank’s financing of mass incarcer- ation. JP Morgan Chase lent hundreds of mil- lions of dollars to Geo Group and CoreCiv- ic, two major operators of private prisons and immigrant detention centers, despite investor concerns . All that dirty money makes Dimon’s comments in support of DACA after Trump’s decision to repeal it also ring a little hollow. DACA, or Deferred Action for Child- hood Arrivals, is a program created by the Obama administration that protects some young undocumented immigrants from deportation. It’s hard to believe that Dimon truly thinks that “when people come here to learn, work hard, and give back to their communities, we should allow them to stay in the United States” when his com- pany supports corporations that profit from warehousing immigrants in deten- tion. White supremacy doesn’t just look like KKK hoods and swastikas — it can also wear a business suit on Wall Street. Of the top five Wall Street firms, the highest lev- el decision makers are 86 percent white. That’s no coincidence. Corporations ha. But it’s got to be more than just words. JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs could publicly commit to pull contracts that contribute to mass incarceration. IBM could refuse contracts that contribute to violent immigration enforcement activi- ties. Wells Fargo could halt its financing of the Dakota Access Pipeline on Native lands. At a minimum, that’s what the Cor- porate Backers of Hate campaign recom- mends. And, by looking inward at their hir- ing policies, promotion policies, and pay scales, these businesses can begin building towards long term equality. Don’t get me wrong, it is a good thing that they denounced hatred. I just hope they’ll put their money with their mouth is. Emily Norton is the leadership devel- opment manager at the Institute for Policy Studies. Distributed by OtherWords.org. Providing Insurance and Financial Services Home Office, Bloomington, Illinois 61710 Ernest J. Hill, Jr. Agent 4946 N. Vancouver Avenue, Portland, OR 97217 503 286 1103 Fax 503 286 1146 ernie.hill.h5mb@statefarm.com 24 Hour Good Neighbor Service R State Farm R