@Sooner In 1960 CBS did a documentary on poverty in Appalachia. In 1968 they did a documentary on Hunger in America that spotlighted various places in our country (including Native People's reservations) where hunger, poverty and lack of education were the norm.
There was also a heartbreaking special on Christmastime in the poorest areas of (I believe) West Virginia.
The people in these regions were not the lazy or entitled
types that are willing to get a subsistance check from the government and never break a sweat. These folks all worked very hard to scrape by, and receive very little respect or compensation for their hard labor. They are proud people and rightly so.
I imagine there are still areas of America where people still live like this, unfortunate, unheralded, uneducated, unknown and unaided. All while we send billions around the globe to help elevate the living conditions in other countries.
I think it is noble to aid other countries, but to recognize that we have people here in our own land that have fallen through the cracks and we have been unable to insure their education, their health, and ability to provide for themselves and their families with good jobs and just compensation is a blot on the American soul.