Mia Birdsong: The story we tell about poverty isn't true
Mia Birdsong advocates for strong communities and the self-determination of everyday people. Full bio
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some of you, no doubt --
how to reduce poverty
millions of dollars
people who are poor.
job creation and asset-building,
our most marginalized communities.
and given passionate speeches,
that is leaving more and more people
of the income scale.
that much in the last 50 years,
the most powerful and practical resource.
is Jobana, Sintia and Bertha.
at a family resource center
as parents and friends,
financially, too.
to their families and friends,
the office or house
and who'd watch the kids.
the little ones all day.
for their families.
when a husband's work hours were cut.
as they were growing.
is Theresa and her daughter, Brianna.
outgoing personality.
moved in next door,
and found a translation app
with helping Rosie to learn English.
and kind of withdrawn
over what was happening.
to have to repeat second grade
and overwhelmed and alone
was not getting the support she needed,
with a group of friends,
one of her friends said,
with my son about a year ago."
that so much of her struggle
to talk with about it.
for parents like her.
and two other people.
20 people, 30 people
monthly meetings that she put together.
of supporting her daughter,
who were going through the same struggle.
she's doing great academically
BlackStar Books and Caffe,
with a "Welcome black home."
some Algiers jerk chicken,
with a buttermilk drop,
he won't tell you about it.
to get help with homework.
in the neighborhood
musicians and artists.
for an upcoming community event.
from people just like them
against the prison system,
and Latino folks,
who manifest hope and promise,
discipline practices in their schools,
their ingenuity and tenacity
their own solutions.
housing, health, community --
to realize their good ideas,
a better life for themselves,
and Baakir are the rule,
single mother in Rochester, New York.
in the suburbs, from a neighborhood
and their parents considered dangerous.
and do homework and chores,
as my afternoon snack.
I'd buy a Hostess Fruit Pie.
in a quickly gentrifying neighborhood
to turn on the stove
the same kind of self-reliance
like spinach and ricotta,
than Jobana, Sintia or Bertha,
of smart, talented people,
and most rewarded CEOs.
tapping into their resilience
get the kids off to school
that are putting them in debt.
their savvy intelligence
to make ends meet.
doing for themselves and for others,
for an elderly neighbor,
to pay the phone bill,
for the neighborhood kids
because of luck and privilege,
or self-deprecating --
denominator in this equation,
who make it to believe we deserve it,
in the back of our minds,
with those poor people."
that poor folks are lazy freeloaders
to get out of an honest day's work.
that poor people are helpless
that didn't read to them enough,
low-income single mothers
might think of my parents,
about the same people,
of the negative stories aren't true,
to not really see who people really are,
plot lines have us convinced
that needs fixing.
that what's working is the people
we are looking for,
that they have?
of what this could look like:
has grown up around the belief
and the desire to manifest them,
and lots and lots of money.
for Theresa and Baakir?
really all that different
to rethink a flawed strategy.
and families and communities are.
to speak to my people.
with blood, sweat and dreams;
because of our backbreaking work.
to jog your memory,
"Parable of the Sower."
"Letter from Birmingham Jail."
"First Writing Since,"
perform "Black Gold."
of Kehinde Wiley
a lot of wealth and power,
from systems that were not made for us.
the fabric of existing ways,
substantial collective power
about the concept of ubuntu,
Truth and Reconciliation process
is inextricably bound up, in yours;
the voices of the unheard.
promise of liberty and justice for all,
the voices of our unheard,
Sintia and Bertha,
and their ideas.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Mia Birdsong - Family activistMia Birdsong advocates for strong communities and the self-determination of everyday people.
Why you should listen
Mia Birdsong has spent more than 20 years fighting for the self-determination and pointing out the brilliant adaptations of everyday people. In her current role as co-director of Family Story, she is updating this nation's outdated picture of the family in America (hint: rarely 2.5 kids and two heterosexual parents living behind a white picket fence). Prior to launching Family Story, Birdsong was the vice president of the Family Independence Initiative, an organization that leverages the power of data and stories to illuminate and accelerate the initiative low-income families take to improve their lives.
Birdsong, whose 2015 TED talk "The story we tell about poverty isn't true" has been viewed more than 1.5 million times, has been published in the Stanford Social Innovation Review, Slate, Salon and On Being. She speaks on economic inequality, race, gender and building community at universities and conferences across the country. She co-founded Canerow, a resource for people dedicated to raising children of color in a world that reflects the spectrum of who they are.
Birdsong is also modern Renaissance woman. She has spent time organizing to abolish prisons, teaching teenagers about sex and drugs, interviewing literary luminaries like Edwidge Danticat, David Foster Wallace and John Irving, and attending births as a midwifery apprentice. She is a graduate of Oberlin College, an inaugural Ascend Fellow of The Aspen Institute and a New America California Fellow. She sits on the Board of Directors of Forward Together.
Mia Birdsong | Speaker | TED.com