Please prove that Piven taught at Columbia and someone named Barry Sorento took her class or a class from Cloward.
So you admit by avoidance that Pivin never taught at Columbia and Obama never took a class from Cloward, so you just make shit up.
Proven! Ready to put your big boy pants on and admit you're a pathological liar and a desperate partisan hack, now? Maybe the problem is you don't know how to spell Frances Fox
Piven's name you ignorant tool!
Cloward and Piven were both professors at the Columbia University School of Social Work.
Cloward–Piven strategy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia




Wiki

Piven was Cloward's WIFE and taught at CUNY, not Columbia where her husband taught.
Dude....you didn't even know how to spell her name and you had no idea who she was. You're a moron. I just proved that she was a professor at Columbia you
desperate buffoon! So tell me - how does it feel to be my
personal ***** on USMB Eddy boy? By the way - since you can't figure out how to respond to a post without mucking up the editing and making it look like my post was your post - I've corrected that for you.
First proposed in 1966 and named after
Columbia University sociologists Richard Andrew Cloward and
Frances Fox Piven, the
Cloward-Piven Strategy seeks to hasten the fall of capitalism by overloading the government bureaucracy with a flood of impossible demands, thus pushing society into crisis and economic collapse.
http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/Articles/theclowardpivenstrategypoe.html
Hey Eddy boy...notice how it says Columbia University sociologists and names her. As in plural. As in both. Let me guess - every single site on the entire internet is not credible when it proves how stupid you are?




Discover the networks, Horowitz's discredited radical Right-wing site, you can't be serious!
Here is the real book, which was written in 1971, not 1966.
Regulating the Poor
Marshaling a vast array of research,
Frances Fox Piven and Richard A Cloward persuasively demonstrate how public relief has been used to avert civil chaos during economic downturns and to exert pressure on the work force during periods of stability. Their analysis ranges from the early history of poor relief through the inception of welfare during the Great Depression to its massive erosion during the Reagan and Bush years.
The authors provide a conceptual framework that sharply illuminates the problems current and future administrations will encounter as they attempt to rethink the welfare system. Admirably specific yet vast in its implications, Regulating the Poor is indispensable reading for anyone who cares about the American social contract.