Remarks—Service of Compassion
Daniel F. Sullivan—September 14, 2005
We are here as a St. Lawrence community to express together, in solidarity,
our compassion for the victims of Hurricane Katrina. When such devastation
befalls brothers and sisters, we can do no other than share our deepest
sympathy, our complete support.
And truly heartening has been the outpouring of support
from all over the nation, but in no greater measure anywhere than
from this community. Groups and individuals all over the campus and
in our community have organized benefits to raise money, individuals
are donating to relief funds administered nationally—a larger
total of funds given than for any previous disaster—and the
University too has found ways to help, most notably by enrolling a
number of students who were attending or about to attend universities
in the affected area but who found that impossible all of the sudden,
in many cases after losing their belongings and records and having
to evacuate with great courage in the face of the storm’s destruction.
For all of this we must be very grateful. These are
expressions of the best Americans have to offer brothers and sisters
in need, examples of the kind of generosity of spirit of which we
can all be very proud.
At the same time this storm revealed in an almost unique
way a larger set of issues America has yet to confront successfully—issues
that are deeply rooted in the growing inequality of wealth and income
in this country, and issues having to do with the residual effects
of the racial divide that still haunts us as a nation. When I was
a student at St. Lawrence in the 1960’s, America ranked something
like 34th among industrial nations in the extent to which wealth and
income were distributed unequally—or, to say it the other way
around, in the extent that wealth and income were highly concentrated
at the top of the social class structure. Today I believe we rank
first—that is, no industrial country in the world has a more
unequal distribution of wealth and income than America. We have seen
enormous gains in the wealth and income of the top 5% of the distribution,
and no gains and even declines in wealth and income for those below
the middle. The rich have gotten richer and the poor poorer. To paraphrase
the Gospel According to St. Matthew: “To him that hath will
be given, and from him that hath not will be taken, even that which
he hath.” Those are expressions of what the economists call
the principle of cumulative advantage.
There are many reasons for this that I won’t
seek to disentangle for you in this setting. The relevance for the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina is that the invulnerability of those
with high wealth and income has grown, and the vulnerability of those
with the least wealth and income has grown. Someone said that the
wealth and income of the inhabitants of New Orleans are almost completely
correlated with how much above or below sea level their homes were.
The same is roughly true of the institutions of higher education in
the area in and around New Orleans: the larger the institution’s
endowment and the older it is, the higher the ground on which its
campus stood, and the less the damage from Hurricane Katrina.
We know too that race and social class are still highly
correlated in America. Almost anything that has a disproportionate
impact on low income people also has a disproportionate impact on
non-white Americans. The impact of Hurricane Katrina is a true national
disaster. Understanding its aftermath reveals the ongoing national
disaster of our increasingly stratified and rigid class structure—there
is less upward mobility in America today; new generations are increasingly
stuck in the social class positions of their parents—and it
reveals the continuing impact of a racial divide that should be embarrassing
to us all.
So as we lend our hands and our resources to mitigate
the disaster that has befallen our neighbors in Louisiana and Mississippi—and
this we must do with equal commitment to all affected by the storm,
my previous comments notwithstanding—we must at the same time
resolve to restore our commitment to creating an America where upward
mobility is the realistic hope for all, an America where the commitment
by those at the bottom of the class structure to the democratic institutions
that are our signature as a nation is not eroded beyond redemption
by cynicism bred in their understanding of how the principle of cumulative
advantage may relegate them and their children to the bottom of our
system forever.
Our compassion for the victims of Hurricane Katrina
must expand into an ongoing compassion for those negatively affected
by the dynamic of growing income and wealth inequality in America
as a whole. We can choose, through our political activism, to get
America to a better place on this, and we can choose, as a University,
to continue the fight for diversity to which we have long been committed.
My heart goes out to the victims of Hurricane Katrina; I am inspired
by your compassion and activism on their behalf!