If we stop viewing poverty as a moral failing and start seeing it as a resource deficit, the solution changes. It’s no longer about "fixing" people with workshops or lectures; it's about fixing the system with direct access to capital.
When you’re struggling to pay for the next meal, your brain undergoes a "bandwidth tax." It’s not that people in poverty aren't capable; it’s that the mental energy required to survive the day leaves no room for long-term planning. It’s like trying to run a high-definition program on a computer with no RAM. If we stop viewing poverty as a moral
Wealth isn't just about what you have; it’s about the mental freedom to think beyond tomorrow. It’s like trying to run a high-definition program
"Poverty is not a lack of character; it’s a lack of cash." For decades, the prevailing narrative has treated poverty
This simple observation by Rutger Bregman flips the script on how we view social inequality. For decades, the prevailing narrative has treated poverty as a personal failure—a "personality defect" rooted in poor choices or a lack of discipline.
But science and economics tell a different story: