Althusser
20th April 2012, 18:26
Hello, I'm sorry if this is in the wrong section, but I am doing a project for a social justice class. I'm going to write about poverty in America, and I've been searching for historical instances like the destruction of overproduced food during the dust bowl, etc. that can help me tie poverty to capitalism itself even further. I've already got the format in my head, but any help would really be appreciated. Thank you.
seventeethdecember2016
20th April 2012, 18:45
Here is just something on starvation during the Great Depression.
The researcher, Boris Borisov, in his article titled “The American Famine” estimated the victims of the financial crisis in the US at over seven million people. The researcher also directly compared the US events of 1932-1933 with Holodomor, or Famine, in the USSR during 1932-1933.
In the article, Borisov used the official data of the US Census Bureau. Having revised the number of the US population, birth and date rates, immigration and emigration, the researcher came to conclusion that the United States lost over seven million people during the famine of 1932-1933.
“According to the US statistics, the US lost not less than 8 million 553 thousand people from 1931 to 1940. Afterwards, population growth indices change twice instantly exactly between 1930-1931: the indices drop and stay on the same level for ten years. There can no explanation to this phenomenon found in the extensive text of the report by the US Department of Commerce “Statistical Abstract of the United States,” the author wrote.
The researcher points out the movement of population at this point: “A lot more people left the country than arrived during the 1930s – the difference is estimated at 93,309 people, whereas 2.960,782 people arrived in the country a decade earlier. Well, let’s correct the number of total demographic losses in the USA during the 1930s by 3,054 people
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