I had not planned to read this book. I found the author’s essay on the history of American capitalism for the New York Times Magazine‘s 1619 Project badly wanting, so I passed over Poverty, By America, until one of my students (a sociology major) asked me about it because he was reading it for his Sociology of Poverty course. Matthew Desmond is a passionate writer, but verve and fervor are poor substitutes for sound arguments backed by carefully interpreted data. Desmond’s conviction and moral certitude are clear on every page—a reviewer for The New Yorker writes, “Its moral force is a gut punch”—but his argument is ultimately unconvincing.
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23 sats \ 1 reply \ @SimpleStacker 2 Sep
I know of Matthew Desmond because he runs Eviction Lab, and I was looking for data on evictions / homelessness.
It's unfortunate that a lot of very talented researchers have a hard time disentangling their moral convictions from what the evidence actually does or doesn't say.
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30 sats \ 0 replies \ @0xbitcoiner OP 2 Sep
small world.
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