Poverty is for the poor
March 2, 2010 |17:32 | News By : Team X
Can I see African National Congress (ANC) Youth League president Julius Malema’s greedy accumulation of wealth purely as a corruption of the human heart, without worrying whether that corruption speaks to my own fate?
Is it possible that the only thing absolute about each of us is our desire to escape — to escape the grinding realities of our birth, to escape the working class, yes, to escape the middle class, to finally align our reality with the world of our dreams, living life unbound by the shackles of limitations?
I can no more chastise Malema for his inconsistencies criticising Naledi Pandor for her polished accent, criticising the wine-sipping, steak-munching black men who seem to have forgotten their ANC roots, heaping scorn on the youth development officers for locating themselves in suburbia than see his behaviour as a reflection of my own dilemmas, even when he lives in suburbia, drives million-rand cars, wears a R25000 watch (gift or not) while the poor could add years to their lives on that kind of money.

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Living in poverty can shape the neurobiology of a developing child "in powerful ways", affecting children's behavior, health and how well they do later in life, a study presented here Sunday shows.
Seventeen million Asians have fallen into extreme poverty due to the global financial crisis, the Asian Development Bank and the United Nations said on Wednesday.













