R
RCIAGraduate
Guest
There’s probably more to what she said (but I’m not going to look it up). That said, perhaps she has a very valid point; how can a society be just if it exhibits opulent wealth while its needy go without. For example, America as a country may have a lot of wealthy as well as a relatively large upper class (the rich and elite along with an upper middle class) but rhetorically, how can one argue it is just while the country has a poor social infrastructure, one example being underfunded or poorly functioning social and human services like our foster care/child and family services systems as well as others like struggling public schools, poor access to mental health and substance abuse treatment or a struggling if not fragile working class (living paycheck to paycheck, assailed by living costs and only one crisis away from financial/economic catastrophe)?