I would disagree it has nothing to do with property when nearly half of funding is from property tax.
but in either case, I did forget to mention parents, which, in my opinion, are also impacted by the culture that values people by the money they make. More and more two parent families with both parents at 'jobs' upwards of 40 hours week each, leaves less and less time invested in children, and puts more and more of the power in the hands of technology, media, and schools to take over many of those areas that the old family structure would have had a parent at home able to devote themself to doing.
I explained why the value of the property has nothing to do with the amount of property taxes paid, only who pays them. I do realize in poor communities what you are up against is the capacity of the residents to pay higher taxes and their willingness.
I'm well aware of the issue of 2 working parents and trying to find time for the family. It is always a juggling act but the family and the children need to be priority. People also need to be realistic about the lifestyle they can afford. There is not a need for a large house or a new car or fancy clothes; it is strictly a want on the part of the people!
Please stop making excuses for the losers and failures in society. Until we acknowledge those failures we cannot find solutions to the problems.
To recognize real struggles and obstacles, especially those that can be addressed and improved, is not 'making excuses'. Calling people 'losers' for their difficulty with obstacles and struggles is not helpful either.
We can find solutions to social obstacles and struggles. We can work together to get things done instead of making it all one sided or putting it all on any one person or group of people.
People need to have a set of values and personal characteristics to have some level of success in life. When they fail to learn those personal traits, they have difficulty with obstacles and struggle with life. Those basic human traits should have been learned from their parents but when the parents do not possess those traits it is almost impossible for a child to learn them. Those include such things as being honest, having a good work ethic, personal responsibility, and a positive attitude. You are right that we need to find some solutions to the problems of society but blaming it on society and the social environment is not helpful or lead to any solutions.
if it doesnt start with society, then where does it start?
I have to disagree, again, that the keys to earning a living are about being honest and having a good work ethic, personal responsibility and positive attitude. Sure they help, but they are far less of a guarantee than region, mobility and financial status, which brings with it networks, references, people interested in providing opportunity. The country is full of honest hard working people struggling to feed their families. IT also has those with more money than they could ever need to eat, whose fortune comes from how DISHONEST and unethical they can be for the love of money.
You best be talking a lot more about region, mobility and financial status. Most of us start out our working careers with 0 financial status and some parts of the country have an overall lower wage, those places also have a lower cost of living.
I think what most think is 'zero' financial status is like how Trump thought a million dollars was a 'small' loan. when I say ZERO, I mean no references or network to lean on AT ALL. I mean family that are also struggling.
the network around a person from BIRTH plays a big part in the opportunities they will have presented to them, regardless of how honest or hard working there are. of course there are EXCEPTIONS to every rule, but they are called exceptions for a reason.
To suggest that a grown person has no references or network means they grew up alone on an island. We all have people we know and who know us. Our teachers, business people, religious people, neighbors, and others we come across in everyday life. Are you saying they don't know anyone or that those they do know have no credibility? As for the financial part, most of the kids I grew up with had to make their own spending money. My parents paid for my basic needs, if I wanted more, it was time to go to work. I think I started doing work for pay somewhere around 12. My children also had to work for the extra things they wanted. I recall my daughter wanting these fancy designer jeans that were over $50 25 years ago. I gave her the going price for a decent pair of jeans - $15. If she wanted the designer ones, that was her problem!
Not when I am speaking in terms of 'success' or jobs. Networking means quite alot. People in regions where there is concentrated poverty, often dont know people that can provide them knowledge or skills or 'merit' to present for potential opportunities. Whereas people a bit higher up that ladder may have parents in positions or status to introduce them and expose them to the 'right' type of people and places where the opportunity may be presented to them. They may have the resources to get that degree that is going to give them enough 'merit' with employers to step into that job with potential for 'success'. We all have people we know. We don't all have people in positions or with experience to be an asset to us in terms of skills or references.
From business insider:
The benefits and the overall impact of networking have received a lot of study in recent years. The results of these reports vary to some extent, but all agree that it's definitely a popular way to get a job. Some experts say that 70% of people ended up in their current position thanks to networking. Others say it's more like 80% or even 85%.
Even when figures are broken down into different categories of job seekers and people are asked how they landed their current job, networking tops every list. In one survey, conducted by LinkedIn and the Adler Group, "active candidates" were separated out from "tiptoers" and "passive candidates," those who looked for work in more casual ways.
Regardless of the individual attitudes and approaches job seekers brought to the table, networking was the most popular way to get a job. For "tiptoers" it won out 3 to 1, and for even more casual job seekers, dubbed "passive candidates," networking dominated other job-search methods on a scale of 7 to 1.
There are a lot of hidden jobs out there
One of the major reasons that networking is such an effective way to get a job is that there is something of a hidden job market out there. Some estimate that as much as 80% of new jobs are never listed but are instead filled internally or via networking.
In fact, getting a referral for a job opening from someone who's already working with the company could give you pretty impressive odds. Only 7% of job applicants get this kind of referral, yet referrals make us 40% of new hires. Clearly, networking isn't just one potential route to finding a new job — it's actually the most effective path.
"At least 70%, if not 80%, of jobs are not published, " Matt Youngquist, president of Career Horizons told NPR. "And yet most people - they are spending 70% or 80% of their time surfing the net versus getting out there, talking to employers, taking some chances [and] realizing that the vast majoring of hiring is friends and acquaintances hiring other trusted friends and acquaintances."
https://www.businessinsider.com/at-least-70-of-jobs-are-not-even-listed-heres-how-to-up-your-chances-of-getting-a-great-new-gig-2017-4
there are plenty who do not live in these types of 'networking' circles.