America declared an ‘unconditional war on poverty’ 50 years ago, but you’d never know it [View all]
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/01/07/america-declared-an-unconditional-war-on-poverty-50-years-ago-but-youd-never-know-it/

America declared an unconditional war on poverty 50 years ago, but youd never know it
By Nicolaus Mills, The Guardian
Tuesday, January 7, 2014 5:54 EST
This 8 January marks the 50th anniversary of President Lyndon Johnsons declaration of unconditional war on poverty. The statement came in a state of the union address that, because of its often drab prose, has rarely drawn much praise. But a half century later, its time to re-examine the case Johnson made in 1964 for remedying poverty in America.
In an era such as our own, when despite a poverty rate the Census Bureau puts at 16% Congress is preparing to cut the food stamp program and has refused to extend unemployment insurance, Johnsons compassion stands out, along with his nuanced sense of who the poor are and what can be done to make their lives better.
Johnsons 1964 ideas on how to wage a war on poverty (today a family of four living on $23,492 a year and an individual living on $11,720 a year are classified as poor) not only conflict with the current thinking of those on the right who would reduce government aid to the needy. They also conflict with the current thinking of those on the left who would make the social safety net, rather than fundamental economic change, the answer to poverty.
Johnsons approach to poverty reflects the influence of John F Kennedy and the New Deal thinking of Franklin Roosevelt, but the passion behind Johnsons call for a war on poverty has its deepest historical parallel in a figure very unlike him the turn-of-the-century American pragmatist William James. James, in his 1906 essay, the Moral Equivalent of War, made the case for bringing the fervor we associate with war to improving civic life.