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Winter of discontent
Rick Williams
I don't wish to be overly dramatic, but I think the most visible
sign of the crisis will be families freezing and starving in the
dark in many parts of our region this winter. More working poor
people who, until now, have supported themselves with no income
at all, and with no alternative sources of support. For them, the
economic crisis will mean misery and stunted lives. It will, in
time, generate an intensifying social crisis, as whole communities
are plunged into a poverty culture that is very difficult to escape.
For every individual or family that emigrates -God only knows where-
to find a job, dozens more will be forced into appalling living
conditions and long-term economic marginality.
If a serious earthquake occurred in our region, people across Canada
would act immediately to comfort the victims and to help rebuild
communities and local economies. A crisis of economic decline, however,
evolves over a protracted period, and by the time the destruction
of people and com-munities becomes visible, outsiders see the situation
as normal and irreversible. What is worse, they tend to blame the
problem on the cultural characteristics of the victims - traits
that, for the most part, are themselves symptoms of economic and
social breakdown.
Rick Williams, in New Maritimes, September-October 1990. Subscriptions
are $15/year from New Maritimes, 6106 Lawrence Street, Halifax,
Nova Scotia B3L 1J6.
Published in the Connexions Digest #53, January 1991.
(CX4170)
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