Thank You, Melanie Griffin! | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Fred H Olson (fholson![]() |
|
Date: Mon, 25 Jan 2010 06:21:17 -0800 (PST) |
E L Cobb <elcobb54 [at] gmail.com> is the author of the message below. It was posted by Fred, the Cohousing-L list manager <fholson [at] cohousing.org> {html only post) -------------------- FORWARDED MESSAGE FOLLOWS -------------------- Melanie, I truly appreciate your response. To the one or two others that spoke out against the original post, thanks as well. I suppose I am more flabbergasted by the fact that so few active posters spoke up than by the fact someone made such an assertion to begin with. After all, it was here back in 2001 or 2002 that someone expressed an opinion against greater financial diversity in cohousing because "why should I use my hard-earned money to help subsidize anyone. This is America, where everyone has the equal opportunity to make as much money as I have, and if someone doesn't have as much money, it's because they're lazy." That time I was speechless, and I simply left the listserv. Some three or four years later, I returned to lurk, because I confess to being intrigued by the possibilities and potentials behind cohousing. One of the good things about the economic downturn is that it has forced people to consider smaller housing, as well as put low-cost housing on the table. Cohousers are going to end up needing to open the metaphorical gates to people of lower incomes if they are going to fill up all their units. This means confronting one's own elitism, prejudices, stereotypes; indeed, confronting the myths one still holds about the American dream, the land of equal (and endless) opportunity. Liza It's true that some people with mental illnesses don't do well at work and can't sustain a good credit rating; it's also true that some can. I understand that there are behaviors that preclude working well in community. Can we stick to describing those behaviors and not make assumptions about how much money you should or can have if you don't exhibit those behaviors or call people crazy????? The original point, that those who are poor do not have whatever it takes to survive in community, may have some statistical support, but certainly does not apply to any given individual and strikes me as elitist. Excusing it by saying poor people are crazier than rich people just makes it worse. Finally, i think the real issue is that people who are poor or even middle class can't afford to live in many communities, including many cohousing communities, and that's just a fact. It's not because they have character flaws or mental or physical disabilities. Melanie
-
Thank You, Melanie Griffin! Fred H Olson, January 25 2010
- Re: Thank You, Melanie Griffin! Diana E Carroll, January 25 2010
Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.