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Saturday, March 15, 2014

As If Inner City Is The Country's Economic Problem





Paul Ryan to meet black U.S. lawmakers after 'offensive' remarks


Reuters

Rep. Paul Ryan attends Conservative Political Action Conference in suburban Washington DC
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U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) makes remarks to the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Oxon …
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Representative Paul Ryan on Friday agreed to meet with the Congressional Black Caucus after members of the group branded his remarks about inner-city poverty this week "highly offensive".
The controversy began on Wednesday after Ryan said on William Bennett's talk radio show, "Morning in America," that there was a "tailspin of culture, in our inner cities in particular, of men not working and just generations of men not even thinking about working or learning the value of work."
Representative Barbara Lee of California, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus, called Ryan's remarks a "thinly veiled racial attack."
"Let's be clear, when Mr. Ryan says 'inner city,' when he says, 'culture,' these are simply code words for what he really means: 'black'," Lee said in a statement.
Ryan, the 2012 Republican vice presidential candidate, is known for budgets with proposed deep cuts to programs that help the poor. The potential 2016 presidential contender has made a point of proposing Republican solutions to ease poverty that focus on the private sector.
The Wisconsin lawmaker, who chairs the House Budget Committee, said in a statement that he "was inarticulate" about the point he was trying to make.
"I was not implicating the culture of one community, but of society as a whole," Ryan said. "We have allowed our society to isolate or quarantine the poor rather than integrate people into our communities. The predictable result has been multi-generational poverty and little opportunity."
Last week Ryan released a report on the federal government's 50-year-old "War on Poverty" that concluded that many of the 92 federal programs aimed at assisting the poor were "haphazard" and contributed to a "poverty trap" that keeps people dependent on welfare benefits.
Representative Marcia Fudge, chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, and Representative Gwen Moore, also from Wisconsin, sent Ryan a letter in which they called his talk radio remarks "highly offensive" and invited him to a meeting of the caucus to discuss ways to eradicate poverty.
"A serious policy conversation on poverty should not begin with assumptions or stereotypes," they wrote.
Ryan spokesman William Allison said on Friday the House Budget Committee chairman "would welcome a productive conversation on how to better fight poverty, and he looks forward to meeting with the CBC in the near future."
Allison declined to comment on the timing for Ryan's 2015 budget plan.
House Speaker John Boehner has repeatedly said the House would pass a budget this year that would reach balance within 10 years. This would require deep cuts in federal benefit programs, especially if previously agreed discretionary spending levels for 2015 are maintained.
Republican lawmakers and aides said on Friday that party leaders were polling rank-and-file members to gauge support in the caucus for a budget that balances in 10 years, indicating some uncertainty over the path forward.
No Democrats are likely to vote for a Ryan budget, so to pass, it would need 218 votes out of the party's 233 House members.
A two-year budget deal negotiated by Ryan and Democratic Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray had to rely on Democrats for passage as 62 Republicans voted against it.
(Reporting By David Lawder)

9,705 CommentsMy Comments

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  • Rick 8 minutes ago
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    I live in a rural area, so I can't speak on inner city problems from experience. But out here, there is a culture of people working the system. They use pills, smoke weed and live of the the govt. Teat. It is getting worse with each generation and lack of good job opportunities make it worse because they aren't going anywhere. I can't imagine how bad it must be when you take this same dynamic and shove thousands of people in a small inner city area. Its bads enough out here where people are spread out.
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  • Josie 14 minutes ago
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    It's funny how they always say whites are racist Yet the organizations they belong to always have the word BLACK in them. Fools who keep buying into this are total ridiculous and childish, there is a BLACK MAN in the white house does that not tell you something! It's not the color of his skin it's the fact he worked hard to get there. Grow up already the black and white issue in the US is a ploy, DIVIDE and CONQUER. People who keep believing this BS will keep us all from moving forward the only ones who get rich are the BLACKS AND WHITES who feeds us this BULL. Wake up people it's time to think for yourself and not let them brain wash you any longer!
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  • Rick 12 minutes ago
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    Forget what Ryan said or not said, the Congressional Black Caucus have to look at the amount of millions of dollars that 'Tax Payers' monies have gone to 'We need better Education, Better (free) Homes, or to feed the poor' over year after year and nothing changes for the other 'Culture'?

    Why does the 'Congressional Black Caucus' feel they should be a 'special tag' when there are more other nationality tax payers paying for all these problems for their 'culture' and have to sit back to suffer themselves? Remember people it's all about the 'Tax Payers' monies that is the real reality here that is given away for the reason of 'Empathy',
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  • James 9 minutes ago
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    Hey, Barbara Lee, and Ms, Fudge, I detest Paul Ryan and his ideas as much as anyone, BUT he is absolutely correct in his assessment of the "inner city" inhabitants. Instead of standing up for these lazy, uneducated thug families, do something personally to have them pull themselves up and clean up all they destroy, like the neighborhood and society in general. Your idea of lifting them up was Section8, which has ruined more neighborhoods around the country than any other idea you people have ever had. These uneducated "inner city" individuals have completely ravaged the area where I live in northern Ohio. And you know that Ms. Fudge. A better life should not be a detriment to others.
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  • soul searcher 3 minutes ago
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    What better way to shift the focus away from the truth than to pull the race card! Barbara Boxer, who represents one of the most blighted, crime-ridden areas in California and who was once an associate of the Black Panther Party (according to her Wiki bio), one of the most racist organizations the US has ever had to deal with, can't or won't even admit that the major inner cities are rife with people just as Ryan described. All one has to do is look at Detroit! No, Barbara Boxer, Paul Ryan is not sending a racist message: But you are, because it's much easier to blame the white man than it is to admit the truth!!!!
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  • Claude 1 minute ago
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    Since when did this group of racists get to dictate what is and what is not a reference to Blacks. If the shoe fits wear it. Why aren't you working in the inner city trying to change the culture that is there regardless of skin color instead of enabling it with your welfare regulations and give aways that enslave these people to the Democrat party. It's funny that Ryan has to point out what's happening right under your noses. You guys must arrive at the Capitol with window shades drawn. Is it a coincidence that they are all Democrats?
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  • Vladimir 2 minutes ago
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    We have a lot of problems on this planet. I am hoping that more and more people will be working together on finding and implementing better and better solutions to these problems. I am also hoping that we will be finding better and better ways of electing governments. A government is a tool. If those we have do not work the way we want them too, it’s time to figure out how to create better ones. I think that it is possible to improve on everything that has ever been done by human beings so far. How governments are elected is no exception.
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  • Tim 28 minutes ago
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    Has it come this far backward that a person who talks about inner city blight, morals and ethics is deemed to be racist? How can you then talk about problems of the inner city? Inner-city might have a higher frequency of African-Americans who live there, but they are not the only ones. Its the inner city areas that are having a lot of problems with education, crime, etc. Is it thinly veiled or is it really thinly skinned? How can both parties reach across the aisle and work on problems if they think this way? We have virtually idealogues on both sides who have no interest in the other sides views and points. This is truly a divided country around many lines and if it keeps up we will be a one party dictatorship. It won't be Republican or Democrat dictatorship but one of elitist and power hungry mongers. I blame the media and education for failing all our kids and bringing us to this point. Its not just race, but is economics, education, different ethnic morals and standards among many other things. We no longer have AMERICANS, everyone has to be labeled by one side or the other.
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  • Cowboy 1 minute ago
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    Why the is there a Black Caucus anyway? Is there a White Caucus or is that racial? What is good for the goose is good for the gander. The Black Caucus needs to be shut down because all it does is racially divide people. Everyone should have to follow the same rules. All of the racial separatists media/papers/magazines need to be shut down. If there was a white anything that would be racial. But black, brown, red, yellow groups. That is ok......... Just not white because it is racial. Does anyone see what is happening here?
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  • Nate R 14 minutes ago
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    Hey I'm mixed race,and What the man said was the truth.Most men in black communities want to stand on the corner and sell drugs,or some easy way of making money.They were'nt brought up in homes where a father packed his lunch and went to work.The white man will not bring work to the black community,you have to commute.I road buses for 2 hours to find work,and moved closer to my job,when I could.
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