Since 1968, the number of Americans below the official poorness line has increased by 60 percent to 40.6 million. While poorness rates are highest among African Americans and Latinos, white people make up the largest number of the country's poor (17.3 million). The top 1 percent's share of national income has nearly doubled since 1968 while the official poorness rate for all US families has only slowly moved up and down. A key driver of this growing money-based divide is the steep drop in unionization, from 24.9 percent of workers in 1968 to 10.7 percent in 2016. Income concentration at the top has taken useful supplies from those at the bottom and partially lied about our (system or country where leaders are chosen by votes). After President Johnson's “War on Poorness,” the social safety net has taken a beating, with especially terrible and destructive effects on single mothers and children. In the richest country in the world, 30.6 million children 43 percent live at or below 200 percent of the poorness line, thought about the minimum for meeting basic family needs. Female-headed families are 5.4 times more likely to be living in poorness than families headed by married couples. More than 50 years after the Voting Rights Act, people of color still face a broad range of system discrimination such as, when leaders are chosen by votes, including racist …show more content…
The poorest 30 percent of US communities suffered 36 percent of the deaths in the Vietnam War and 38 percent in the Iraq War. And while the legal draft of the Vietnam time in history is no more, it has been replaced with a money-based draft. Pentagon data on US deaths from Iraq and Afghanistan show/tell about that 23 percent came from job-rare/not enough small towns and areas away from cities that represent only 17 percent of the US population. Since 1968, the health of surrounding conditions have become less but race and income unexpected differences continue to happen, access to clean air and water and exposure dangers/risks. According to the Centers for Disease Control, at least 4 million families with children are being exposed to high levels of lead from drinking water and other sources. The risks fall the heaviest on poor, African-American, and Latino children, in part because they're more likely to live in old and or getting older poorly maintained housing. Those who've added/gave the least to climate change are suffering the most from the related extreme weather effects. Low-income families and people of color tend to be more likely to have living conditions and jobs that increase the health risks of extreme heat. They also get hit the hardest by natural disasters because of (things that block or stop other things) to getting property insurance. The point here, as campaign co-chair