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Losing Ground Consequentialism In Charles Essay

In fact, over two million more families lived below the poverty line at the time of Murray's research than they had a decade before he published -- and this estimate may have even been conservative (Murray 1994, pp. 133). Regardless of the intentions behind American social policy and the welfare reform JFK called for that Murray alludes to in the chapter's opening, it is obvious that all such policies are failing and evening worsening the situation. In Losing Ground: American Social Policy 1950-1980, Charles Murray argues quite compellingly from a consequentialist perspective that social policy in this country is in massive...

In the chapter dealing with the American family, as in much of the rest of his book, Murray basically implies if not outright states that racism and sexism have become institutionalized and monetized, and that this trend has been increasing in recent decades despite efforts to the contrary. He does not make any recommendations in this chapter for the proper reforms to make or future policy predictions, but it is clear that the consequences of continuing such policies would be ruinous.
References

Murray, C. (1994). Losing ground: American social policy 1950-1980. New York: Basic Books.

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Murray, C. (1994). Losing ground: American social policy 1950-1980. New York: Basic Books.
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