«Hurricane Katrina also underscores a much larger problem: the growing number of Americans trapped in a never-ending cyclone of poverty. (...)Na verdade, uma vergonha mais própria de países do 3º mundo...
The U.S. Census Bureau reported a few days ago that the poverty rate rose again last year, with 1.1 million more Americans living in poverty in 2004 than a year earlier. After declining sharply under Bill Clinton, the number of poor people has now risen 17 percent under Mr. Bush.
If it's shameful that we have bloated corpses on New Orleans streets, it's even more disgraceful that the infant mortality rate in America's capital is twice as high as in China's capital. That's right - the number of babies who died before their first birthdays amounted to 11.5 per thousand live births in 2002 in Washington, compared with 4.6 in Beijing.
Indeed, according to the United Nations Development Program, an African-American baby in Washington has less chance of surviving its first year than a baby born in urban parts of the state of Kerala in India.
Under Mr. Bush, the national infant mortality rate has risen for the first time since 1958. The U.S. ranks 43rd in the world in infant mortality, according to the C.I.A.'s World Factbook; if we could reach the level of Singapore, ranked No. 1, we would save 18,900 children's lives each year.
Nationally, 29 percent of children had no health insurance at some point in the last 12 months, and many get neither checkups nor vaccinations. On immunizations, the U.S. ranks 84th for measles and 89th for polio.
(...) That's the larger hurricane of poverty that shames our land.»
Blogue fundado em 22 de Novembro de 2003 por Ana Gomes, Jorge Wemans, Luís Filipe Borges, Luís Nazaré, Luís Osório, Maria Manuel Leitão Marques, Vicente Jorge Silva e Vital Moreira
quarta-feira, 7 de setembro de 2005
"O furacão da pobreza"
Publicado por
Vital Moreira
Impressionantes os dados fornecidos, a propósito da tragédia de Nova Orleães, neste artigo de Nicholas D. Kristof no New York Times, sobre a pobreza e as carências sanitárias nos Estados Unidos.