“[I]n practice, the United States is alone among developed countries in insisting that while human rights are of fundamental importance, they do not include rights that guard against dying of hunger, dying from a lack of access to affordable healthcare, or growing up in a context of total deprivation … at the end of the day, particularly in a rich country like the USA, the persistence of extreme poverty is a political choice made by those in power. With political will, it could readily be eliminated.” — United Nations Special Rapporteur Dr. Philip Alston, on the subject of extreme poverty in America.
-
Recent Posts
- You can’t fix stupid; Good-bad news on the bayou
- If you can’t beat ’em, cheat ’em; Fun & games
- Pennsylvania soggy; Epic fail in North Carolina
- Sibella scandal spreads; Supremes forestall Seminoles
- Atlantic City rebounds; Sibella dumped; NFL suspicions
- MGM limping back; Atlantic City follies; Wall Street Jottings
- On and off the radio
- MGM crippled; Illinois & Indiana report; Bally’s shaky in Chi
- MGM paralyzed; DraftKings debacle; Mount Airy wins
- Bally’s opens, Chicago yawns; MGM, tree murderers
Categories
@Stiffs_Georges
Error: Sorry, that page does not exist-
Archives
Recent Comments
- Alice Eskandari on Durango Station, slightly downsized
- David McKee on You can’t fix stupid; Good-bad news on the bayou
- American Gaming Guru on You can’t fix stupid; Good-bad news on the bayou
- Ray Lebowski on Sibella scandal spreads; Supremes forestall Seminoles
- David McKee on Sibella scandal spreads; Supremes forestall Seminoles
- Ray Lebowski on Sibella scandal spreads; Supremes forestall Seminoles
- David McKee on MGM crippled; Illinois & Indiana report; Bally’s shaky in Chi
- Paul Shanahan on MGM crippled; Illinois & Indiana report; Bally’s shaky in Chi
- ACGambler on MGM limping back; Atlantic City follies; Wall Street Jottings
- Bob on Bally’s opens, Chicago yawns; MGM, tree murderers
Views
- Sibella scandal spreads; Supremes forestall Seminoles - 56,265 views
- You can’t fix stupid; Good-bad news on the bayou - 56,168 views
- If you can’t beat ’em, cheat ’em; Fun & games - 54,606 views
- Pennsylvania soggy; Epic fail in North Carolina - 55,542 views
- Atlantic City rebounds; Sibella dumped; NFL suspicions - 55,521 views
- Profit vs. investment on the Strip - 1,055,329 views
- Lame nag; Frissora overpaid? - 578,432 views
- The evils of bingo; Wynn’s Aqueduct exit - 90,455 views
- That casino smell - 63,582 views
- Bally’s opens, Chicago yawns; MGM, tree murderers - 58,053 views
- MGM crippled; Illinois & Indiana report; Bally’s shaky in Chi - 57,633 views
- MGM paralyzed; DraftKings debacle; Mount Airy wins - 57,060 views
- MGM limping back; Atlantic City follies; Wall Street Jottings - 56,684 views
Blogroll
Admin.

Your assumptions must be challenged. No one in need of medical care will be turned away from a US hospital because of poverty. No one who is starving will be turned away from the many homeless sanctuaries provided by many charitable organizations in the US. Extreme poverty in the US is more often a choice made by the individual who does not take advantage of work opportunities nor the many programs provided by the Government and by charitable organizations. This country is extremely charitable, but our Constitution does not require the Federal government to heal the sick, provide shelter for the homeless, nor feed the hungry, only to promote the general welfare. The general public and the charitable organizations can do a better job of that than the Federal government, anyway, with help from local and state governments as needed.