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But Why Is Guatemala Hungry?

  
Via:  Vic Eldred  •  5 years ago  •  11 comments


But Why Is Guatemala Hungry?
What Guatemala needs is capitalism. But what capitalism needs are physical security, property rights, an independent judiciary, political stability, the rule of law, and a functioning civil society. Guatemala does not have these.

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We the People

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



I really, really don’t want to be on the “ Nicolas Kristof Wrote Something Dumb ” beat,   but, Jiminy Cricket !

Kristof has taken a trip to Guatemala, with a young woman from Arizona State University in tow. “My annual win-a-trip journey,” he writes. Reporting from Guatemala, he discovers that many Guatemalans do not eat very well, with sometimes horrifying consequences.

Kristof, who has been feeling a little literary of late, interposes snippets of high-end conspicuous consumption with his tale of Guatemalan woe. The headline reads: “The World’s Malnourished Kids Don’t Need a $295 Burger.”

Ah, but they do. That is   exactly  what they need.

Guatemala has many hungry children. “In another world,” Kristof writes, “on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, the restaurant  Serendipity 3 offers  a $295 hamburger. Alternatively, it sells a $214 grilled cheese sandwich and a $1,000 sundae.”


(I am not sure about the word “alternatively” in that sentence; I believe the word he is looking for is “also.” These are And People we’re talking about, not Or People.)


Kristof never gets around to saying what he believes to be the relationship between the $295 hamburger and the hungry kids in Guatemala. All he offers is: “Something’s wrong with this picture,” i.e., cheap moralizing. Guatemala’s hungry children deserve more than posturing.

The lesson we usually are meant to take from these juxtapositions is that the luxury of the rich causes the deprivation of the poor, that we should “live simply that others may simply live.” But that does not really stand up to five seconds’ critical thinking: Do you know what they do not have very much of in Guatemala? Restaurants selling $295 hamburgers. And do you know what they do not have very much of on the Upper East Side? Children stunted from starvation.


There is a lesson in there.



The economic arrangements that produce the $295 hamburger also produce the abundance that ensures practically no one in the United States is starving to death for purely economic reasons. Hunger, like genuine homelessness — sleeping-on-the-street homelessness, not living-in-cramped-quarters-with-people-I-would-rather-not-live-with “homelessness” — is in the United States a phenomenon that has little to do with economic exchange (much less insufficient production) but is instead mainly the product of addiction, mental illness, and — worse — the terrible condition of being a child dependent upon someone who is an addict, mentally ill, or indifferent.


The average occupancy of Los Angeles County homeless shelters is less than 80 percent. They are not forced to turn people away because they lack resources — instead, one in five beds go empty. Millions of Americans eligible for food assistance never apply for it. Many food banks are underutilized, not overstretched. The regulars sleeping on the streets in Manhattan or in the subway stations — and if you live or work there, you know who they are, because it is the same handful of people day after day — are not there because no material is available to them. They are there because their direst needs are not strictly speaking   material  in nature.

As Rich Lowry and others have argued in these pages, what really ails urban America is a massive failure of the mental-health system, not a lack of shelter beds, tuna sandwiches, or   truncheons .

What Guatemala needs is capitalism. But what capitalism needs are physical security, property rights, an independent judiciary, political stability, the rule of law, and a functioning civil society. Guatemala does not have these.

(And, since I can hear you without actually hearing you — you, over there, the hippie with the greying ponytail and the sandals and the smirk, before the words “United Fruit Company” ever even come out of your mouth: No, the United States is not without some culpability in this.)

It is easy to mock other’s luxuries and indulgences. (Don’t believe me? Visit the United Arab Emirates.) Perhaps Kristof, relaxing in an airport lounge somewhere, will meditate on that. But his dudgeon will not feed a single hungry child.

Monsanto does that.




KEVIN D. WILLIAMSON   is the roving correspondent for National Review.


Article is LOCKED by author/seeder
 

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Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Vic Eldred    5 years ago

And giving aid to the Guatemalan government hasn't helped either!

 
 
 
Don Overton
Sophomore Quiet
1.1  Don Overton  replied to  Vic Eldred @1    5 years ago

[Deleted]

 
 
 
Jasper2529
Professor Quiet
1.2  Jasper2529  replied to  Vic Eldred @1    5 years ago
And giving aid to the Guatemalan government hasn't helped either!

Several 2020 Democrat candidates and others are stupid enough to think that throwing even more money than what we already do into those corrupt Northern Triangle countries will decrease illegal immigration and somehow "cure" their poverty. 

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1.2.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  Jasper2529 @1.2    5 years ago

I don't know if they really believe it, but that's their solution to the crisis on the border

 
 
 
katrix
Sophomore Participates
2  katrix    5 years ago

I remember stories about parents telling their kids to finish their dinner because there were starving children in China.  Luckily my parents weren't that dumb!

 
 
 
Jasper2529
Professor Quiet
2.1  Jasper2529  replied to  katrix @2    5 years ago

Perhaps it wasn't so much that those parents were "dumb" but that they were teaching their children the lifelong lesson of being thankful for having food to eat.

 
 
 
katrix
Sophomore Participates
2.1.1  katrix  replied to  Jasper2529 @2.1    5 years ago

Even as a young child, I was able to understand that my finishing my dinner had nothing to do with whether or not a child in China went hungry.  If I finished my dinner, magically that child would be able to eat?  It just doesn't make any sense, just as someone ordering a $295 hamburger isn't depriving someone in Guatemala of food.  Now, should someone who can afford a $295 burger try to help others who aren't so fortunate, and are hungry, from a moral perspective?  Of course. 

There's nothing wrong with a parent telling their child they should realize that they are fortunate to have enough to eat, when so many people don't.  I would highly recommend that parents do things like that to instill compassion and charity in their kids.  But using an example which makes no sense - and which encourages kids to overeat - isn't the way to do that, IMO.

 
 
 
Jasper2529
Professor Quiet
2.1.2  Jasper2529  replied to  katrix @2.1.1    5 years ago

Not all parents think as our parents, you, and I. Also, many parents simply repeat what they were taught as children. That's all I meant.

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
3  seeder  Vic Eldred    5 years ago

How do you bring democracy and the free enterprise system to a country that dosen't even have the institutions to support either?

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
4  Sean Treacy    5 years ago

Very true..

It's the cure for poverty.

 
 
 
Sunshine
Professor Quiet
5  Sunshine    5 years ago

Well I can't read the original article from the NYT because I don't have an account and I don't want to create one.

Given that it is the NYT, I bet that some virtue signaling is going on from him.

USA is the most giving country on the planet because we do have $295.00 burgers.

 
 

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