Lies You Believe About Being Poor: Poor People Don’t Want to Work

Lucinda Gunnin
4 min readAug 16, 2022

The lie, which is becoming something of a mantra to business owners right now, is that “people don’t want to work.”

Republicans echo this statement over and over, using it as an excuse to oppose anything that helps the working poor.

Lie: “We can’t offer stimulus checks those people will just use it as an excuse not to work.”

I promise, when I was poor, getting money wasn’t an excuse to take time off. It usually meant I got to keep the lights on or having something other than ramen for dinner.

Lie: “We can’t pay off predatory student loans because people misused that money. They should have to work to pay it off.”

Most of the time, and anyone who has ever been behind on a loan with interest knows this, you can’t possible work enough hours to pay it off.

Lie: “Minimum wage jobs are for kids just trying to buy their first car or have pocket cash.”

If that were true, so many Americans teens wouldn’t sell their souls in student loans trying to break the cycle of poverty.

Most of the people I know who are or were poor work harder than anyone else I know. In fact, I can absolutely say that as my income level rose, the work I did became less and less difficult, demanding, lengthy, etc.

This problem reared it’s ugly head again recently with my freelance writer friends, so let’s look at my real life…

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Lucinda Gunnin

Lucinda Gunnin is a commercial property manager and author in the suburbs of Philadelphia. She’s a news junky, sushi addict, and geek extraordinaire.