Temporary review:
So far I’m convicted in spirit and so moved by the book, 5/5 stars.
Over recent decades, poverty policy has shifted from providing meaningful support to enforcing behavioral control, transforming aid into a tool for regulating marginalized communities rather than addressing the root causes of inequity. From its origins, this approach has been shaped by racial biases that normalize whiteness and systematically exclude Black and immigrant populations.
The pathologization of Blackness has long served as America’s alibi, equating Black identity with poverty and dysfunction while using elitism to reframe systemic inequities and racialized exclusion as matters of personal responsibility. In this logic, welfare reform, work requirements, and surveillance are cast not as mechanisms of control but as moral correctives for alleged cultural deficiencies. Such narratives render poverty a pathology rather than the outcome of redlining, labor exploitation, or disinvestment, allowing elites to mask political culpability beneath the rhetoric of fairness. This is the essence of neoliberal paternalism: withdrawing structural support while forcing individuals to prove their deservingness, and turning humanity into a conditional privilege that shifts the weight of inequity onto the individual and grants recognition only when Black survival is subjected to scrutiny, policing, and surveillance. Black success, meanwhile, is tolerated solely when it props up the legitimacy of the very system that diminishes it.