Thanks for the note on diction BC, poor English corrected.. I'm tempted to blame the spell check on my phone but in truth I often make this err with the same word, It is an old bad habit that I frequently stumble on and in doing so afford my erudite critics with a stick to beat me with. I am ...all too human.
By the by "high calorie fat and sugar is cheap" would be more correctly stated as "high calorie fat and sugar are cheap"
:)
Thanks for the reminder on what poverty and deprivation are, however having worked in Africa I am most familiar with the realities of real poverty, and am (ashamedly) intimately familiar with the meaning of 'depravity'.
In a remarkable essay called "The soul of man under socialism" Wilde makes the profound observation that we are far more inclined to have sympathy with suffering, than we are inclined to have sympathy with thought'
Unfortunately the thought in the OP is being missed and rather is being used as a platform to offer some moral guidance on the point of our collective obligation to feel sympathy for impoverished peoples.
Tim has generously and honestly pointed out that his own misunderstanding of the OP, and his sympathy for poverty, is being dispensed whilst he reclines in his arm chair and enjoys a folgers coffee.
(fair play to ya Tim)
There are two points of clarity that need to be made.
Firstly the OP is referring to the subjective experience of poverty in that this subjective experience (if it is outside of actual real privation, real hunger disease and squalor etc.,) is a poverty that is derived from self-appraisal: my view of my place in the world, and of what I should have, relative to what others appear (to me) to have.
If indeed I have enough to eat and I have the basic requirements to sustain myself in a reasonably healthy manner I cannot lay claim to the status of real poverty or real deprivation, hunger, squalor... etc. My poverty is of an entirely 'relative' nature.
When Thoreau moved to Walden pond, he did so with practically nothing, and yet he lived for some years, a life of great pleasure and great intellectual achievement. He did not consider himself poor, but quite the contrary.
When one examines the claims of 'the poor' in Western societies it is clear that for the most part the poverty described, is one of a relative nature. In general terms the 'poor' in western societies are not starving and totally deprived of access to emergency medical treatment, clean water, basic education etc. There are rare exceptions, but in general this is true, and the contrary would not be tolerated in a civilized society on any large or appreciable scale.
The poverty in Western society is predominantly of a 'relativistic' nature., and most 'poor' westerners if they are mentally stable and in reasonable physical health, are far wealthier than Thoreau was in his cabin. Now of course it is unfair to compare the mass of men to a man like Thoreau, however in practical terms the poor of Western societies are not really poor but rather they are relatively poor.
In the social and self assignation of relative poverty one's philosophy of life, one's world view, or ones view of ones place in society is crucial to the application. There are many relatively poor people who are much happier than wealthier people and, this is generally down to the fact that these 'happier' poor people do not in fact consider themselves to be poor, but rather consider themselves rich in other ways that are often entirely alien to their un-happy wealthy counterparts.
To the great loss of Western civilization, the thought of Thoreau is not universal, but is almost entirely alien and academic. Yet Thoreau's wisdom is both timeless, logical and philosophically sound. One does not need to purchase a cd of the latest music, if one can hear the inimitable song of the blackbird. The later being far more or at least equally precious and beautiful, yet it is a currency that has little value for the relative poor
and rich alike. This song of the blackbird or the beauty of nature, hold little social currency for the mass of men, because the mass of men do not know the relative value of the simple and generally free things in life.
British Philosopher Allain de Botton has a very interesting documentary called Status Anxiety, [
https://youtu.be/edX7hdpKdbQ ] which looks at American society through this same relativistic lens.
Status is an entirely relativistic notion and is the basis of much relative poverty.
The thrust of the OP is to point to the reality that Thoreau's notion of wealth and independence are the real and only viable antidote to relative poverty.
The usual soap-box and high moral ground stuff that is shouted out, when someone points to the distinction between real and relative poverty, produces nothing but puff and smoke and creates an opportunity for the ostensibly moral, to gather a herd about them, and begin the predictable mud sling. My point is not being made for the benefit of the tired and vulgar game of mud.
Now (the second point) why all the opprobrium at the recognition of relative poverty? Well the main contributor to the continued existence of 'relative poverty' (second to the lack of philosophy in the individual who considers himself to be a victim of relative poverty) are the apologists for Capitalism, people who believe that their own personal accumulation of wealth is their right and entitlement... because they have worked hard, earned it etc etc and so on.
I might for example choose to buy a new car as it is my right and I have earned it etc etc. However when I exercise my right... what am I effectively saying to my neighbor? I have inadvertently or covertly informed him that his car is 'old' relative to mine. I have in essence contributed to the 'relative' poverty of my society. I do this (impoverish my peers) each time I buy something new and discard something old. In western societies the primary reason things are discarded, is not because they no longer function, but rather and quite simply because they are 'old' or no longer fashionable etc., they are discarded primarily because of the notional construct of relative poverty.
As such relative poverty is not only a principal cause of environmental destruction, it is a cause of human unhappiness on a massive scale. A scale that enlarges via the collectivization of thought that is consequenced by media and the internet. Indeed the real deprivation that occurs in Sub-saharan Africa for example may be considered as a consequence of the wealth that is hedged and wasted in western societies in order to feed the voracious appetite of OUR 'relative poverty'.
The media, television and the internet have resulted in a contraction in thinking that is often referred to as 'globalization' We in the west can show our new cars our relative wealth to populations in relatively poorer countries, and thereby increase the relative poverty experienced by our neighbours further and further afield.
Oftentimes we do not like the notion of 'relative poverty' because if we are to accept it as real, we must then take ownership of its cause, not just conceptually vis 'the poor man who is not really poor but simply unenlightened,' but also WE the not so poor are a cause in that we feel it is our entitlement to become richer in a material sense.
We solve much more poverty in the world by simply taking what we need from it and nothing more. How to determine what one needs has been explained in much detail by Thoreau, however his point is absent from the dialogue on poverty. His point can no longer be heard above the usual and predictable hue and cry that is raised by the herd, as soon as one suggests that real poverty is actually caused by imagined poverty.
M