“A Personal Reflection on JFK’s Presidential Power to Purge Poverty: Commemorating the 35th President of the United States.” (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963) By Joe Colletti, PhD Society of Urban Monks November, 2013 John F. Kennedy’s (JFK) presidential power to purge poverty did not just include signing antipoverty legislation or creating anti-poverty programs as essential as they were. The influence of his presidential power also stemmed from his ability to help people focus on what they could accomplish, individually and collectively, in the years to come. He had an oratory skill that he used to encourage others to take time out in order to recognize the trends and needs of the decades to follow. He specifically urged others to reflect on the unsolved problems of pride, prejudice, and poverty among others, and how they could elucidate and eliminate these predicaments. JFK also had a penchant for quoting Christian scriptures during his speeches and to make other statements based upon such verses. These assertions supported the power of his presidency to purge social injustices such as poverty and his ability to inspire others to reflect on the future. Many of these quotes and statements can be found in the Religious Views of President John F. Kennedy: In His Own Words which was compiled by the Rev. Nicholas A. Schneider and published in 1965 a few years after JFK’s assassination. These avowals reveal a President who increasingly promoted the purging of poverty during the little more than one thousand (1,036) days of his presidency. These affirmations reveal a President who strove to bring the full power of the Presidency to purge poverty. JFK planned to use presidential power to purge poverty before he became President. During his acceptance speech as the party’s nominee at the 1960 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, he told the crowd that they were standing “on the edge of a New Frontier . . . of unknown opportunities and perils, the frontier of unfilled hopes and unfilled threats.” He also told them that “The New Frontier is here whether we seek it or not.” He immediately stated “Beyond that frontier are uncharted areas of science and space, unsolved problems of peace and war, unconquered problems of ignorance and prejudice, unanswered questions of poverty and surplus.” During this speech he also challenged everyone by saying “I'm asking each of you to be pioneers of this New Frontier.” He added “My call is to the young in heart, regardless of age -- to the stout in spirit, regardless of Party, to all who respond to the scriptural call: "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be [thou] dismayed." The first part of JFK’s quote is suggestive of two biblical verses—Acts 2.17 and Joel 2.28. Whereas JFK is calling “the young in heart regardless of age,” and “the stout in spirit” to be pioneers of the New Frontier, Acts chapter 2 describes how daring men and women of various ages became the pioneers of the Christian Church and understood their boldness as a fulfillment of a prophecy by the Prophet Joel, who declared that old men (and women) will dream dreams and young men (and women) will see visions. The second part of JFK’s quote—“Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be [thou] dismayed—“is from the Old Testament Book of Joshua chapter 1 verse 9b. JFK immediately followed this quote by stating that “For courage, not complacency, is our need today; leadership, not salesmanship. And the only valid test of leadership is the ability to lead, and lead vigorously.” Six months later, on January 20, 1961, JKF became the 35th President of the United States. In his inaugural address, he laid out his plan to use his presidential power to overcome “the common enemies of humanity” which were tyranny, war, disease, and poverty. He called upon the nations of the world to join the fight. He pledged that the United States would guarantee loyalty to old allies and faithful friends because “United, there is little we cannot do in a host of cooperative ventures;” promise new states “that one form of colonial control shall not have passed away merely to be replaced by a far more iron tyranny;” help “break the bonds of mass misery” for “those people in the huts and villages across the globe” by assuring “our best efforts to help them help themselves for whatever period is required;” “convert our good words into good deeds” by assisting “our sister republics south of our border” with “casting off the chains of poverty” in a “new alliance for progress;” support the efforts of the United Nations; and offer a quest for peace “to those nations who would make themselves our adversary.” Regarding poverty, JFK believed that humanity holds in its “mortal hands the power to abolish all forms of human poverty.” He also believed that “If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.” 2 He also quoted from the Christian scriptures in his inaugural address. He called upon “all corners of the earth” to heed “the command of Isaiah—to ‘undo the heavy burdens’…and to let the oppressed go free,” which can be found in chapter 58 verse 6. He also stated that fellow citizens should be “rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation” (which is from the Book of Romans 12.12) because of the opportunity to “assure a more fruitful life” for all humanity. Anti-poverty Programs One of JFK’s first presidential acts concerning poverty was to create the Peace Corps. He laid the groundwork on October 14, 1960 by first challenging students at the University of Michigan to give two years of their lives to helping people living in underdeveloped countries as “doctors, technicians, or engineers” and “to contribute part of your life to this country” in a similar manner. He established the program five months later by Executive Order and more than 200,000 volunteers have served through the Peace Corps to date. JFK also laid the groundwork for the Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) which became the domestic version of the Peace Corps. This anti-poverty program was created by Lyndon B. Johnson who became President just 2 hours and eight minutes after JFK’s assassination. Volunteers agreed to fight poverty in low-income communities primarily through educational and vocational training programs for one year of full-time service. Anti-poverty Legislation Other actions during JFK’s presidency resulted in a significant number of anti-poverty legislation bills passed by Congress and included the: Omnibus Housing Bill of 1961 which spurred the development of affordable housing for low and middle income households; Social Security Amendments of 1961, 1962, and 1963 which increased benefits and the provision of social services; School Lunch Act which provided free meals for poverty-stricken areas; Public Welfare Amendments of 1962 which increased the Federal share in the cost of public assistance payments; and Equal Pay Act of 1963 which abolished wage disparity based on gender; JFK would have used more of his presidential power to purge poverty if not for his assassination. A month after JFK’s death, then Special Assistant to the President, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., published a eulogy in the Saturday Evening Post, December 14, 1963 JKF memorial issue. Reflecting upon his last talks with JFK, Schlesinger wrote that while JFK “was 3 musing about the legislative program for next January,” he said that 'The time has come to organize a national assault on the causes of poverty, a comprehensive program, across the board.' Even with his presidential power, JFK knew from the very beginning of his presidency that purging poverty would take time. After outlining his plan in his Inaugural Speech to overcome “the common enemies of humanity,” which included poverty, he stated that “All this will not be finished in the first 100 days. Nor will it be finished in the first 1,000 days, nor in the life of this Administration, nor even perhaps in our lifetime on this planet. But let us begin.” How foretelling were these words. He began to purge poverty during the first 100 days of his presidency. The job was not finished in the first 1,000 days or in the life of his administration, which was cut short to just over 1,000 days because of his assassination. In his eulogy, Schlesinger lamented the limited time of JFK’s administration by stating: “The bright promise of his administration, as of his life, was cut short in Dallas. When Abraham Lincoln died, when Franklin Roosevelt died, these were profound national tragedies; but death came for Lincoln and Roosevelt in the last act, at the end of their careers, when the victory for which they had fought so hard was at last within the nation’s grasp. John Kennedy’s death has greater pathos, because he had barely begun—because he had so much to do, so much to give to his family, his nation, his world. His was a life of incalculable and now of unfulfilled possibility. Still, if he had not done all that he would have hoped to do, finished all that he had so well begun, he had given the nation a new sense of itself—a new spirit, a new style, a new conception of its role and destiny.” Anti-poverty Speech JFK knew that others have also “given the nation a new sense of itself—a new spirit, a new style, a new conception of its role and destiny” and continuously encouraged others to do the same during the coming decades up until the hours before his death. On November 21, 1963, the evening before his assassination, he gave a speech in Houston during a dinner that was given in honor of Congress member Albert Thomas. During the speech, he focused on 27-year cycles. The first cycle was from 1936 to 1963 and the second was from 1963 to 1990. 4 The first cycle focused on Thomas. JFK stated that Thomas had “a vision of the modern-day Houston” when he was first elected 27 years earlier in 1936. There were “those who were opposed to progress and growth, who preferred to defy or ignore the forces of change.” However, Thomas and supporters prevailed as a force of change because of their “ability to recognize the trends and needs of the future beginning in 1936. As a result, the city experienced great achievements that brought social and financial prosperity. JFK then shifted to the next 27 years to come—the period between 1963 and 1990. He stated that if the country was to prosper, we must heed to the vision of “a new generation of Americans.” He encouraged others to do what Thomas did and create a vision for the next 27 years. Thus, he challenged the people living in 1963 to think about the social and economic needs of those who would be living in 1990 and beyond. Some of the words that he used to encourage the people that were listening to this speech came from the Old Testament. He declared ‘Your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions,’1 the bible tells us; and ‘where there is no vision, the people perish.’2 JFK also declared that Thomas, at age 65, was old enough to dream dreams and still young enough to see visions. After much reflection on JFK’s ability to encourage others to reflect on unsolved social problems such as poverty, including how to elucidate and eliminate such problems, I want to encourage adding two more 27-year cycles to JFK’s speech. The next cycle, which would be the third cycle, is from 1990 to 2017. The following cycle is from 2017 to 2044. Third Cycle: 1990 to 2017 By 1990, I was influenced by the writings of JFK and other world and national leaders that helped me dream dreams and see visions about the purging of poverty. Thus, I consider myself a product of JFK’s presidential power to purge poverty. I primarily have been involved with ending homelessness, an extreme form of poverty, during this third cycle of 27 years. During this period of time I have had the opportunity to work alongside national and local leaders that have resulted in unprecedented decreases in national 1 2 See Job 2.28 Proverbs 29.18 5 and local homelessness. These decreases are a result of the tireless labor of researching, promoting, and implementing evidence-based and best practices that were not prevalent prior to 1990 and not yet fully practiced today. As a result, I can envision how homelessness can be purged in the United States and will continue to help implement the evidence-based and best practices during the last few years of this 27-year cycle. I will encourage others to do the same. Fourth Cycle: 2017 - 2044 When the next cycle of 27 years begins in 2017, I will still be old enough to dream dreams and young enough to see visions. Like JFK, I believe that we hold in our “mortal hands the power to abolish all forms of human poverty” and if we “cannot help the many who are poor, (we) cannot save the few who are rich.” I can see how homelessness can end in the United States before this 27-year cycle ends in 2044. I can also see how purging this extreme form of poverty will not happen unless many of us, in the spirit of JFK, take the time to recognize the negative trends and needs that have been, and will be, created by extreme poverty. We often commemorate people and events in order to inspire the old and young among us to carry on the work of an individual like JFK and events inspired by an individual like JFK. Many of us have memorialized JFK by repeating one well-known quote out of his inaugural address which is “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” In answer to his own question, JFK would clearly urge us to purge poverty and to do so during the next 27 years. Some of us have already dreamed his dream and seen his vision. As a result, his presidential power to purge poverty continues to this very day. 6
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