"Money can't buy poverty"
About this Quote
A joke this short is basically a trapdoor: you step on what sounds like a familiar proverb and suddenly you’re falling. Feldman riffs on the well-worn consolation “money can’t buy happiness,” but swaps in “poverty” to expose how slippery these moral sayings are. The punch isn’t just the absurdity (who would want to purchase poverty?) but the way it re-aims our attention: poverty isn’t a lifestyle choice, a spiritual badge, or an aesthetic you can collect with enough cash. It’s a condition imposed by systems, luck, exploitation, and policy. You can’t stroll into it like a themed restaurant.
The subtext is also a jab at the wealthy flirtation with “authentic hardship.” Even in Feldman’s era - postwar Britain’s class rigidity, the fading but still potent memory of rationing, the rise of consumer culture - there was a growing market for respectability through deprivation: the rich trying on simplicity, romanticizing the “poor but honest” myth. Feldman’s line yanks that mask off. If money can buy almost anything, why not the one thing culture keeps treating as character-building? Because real poverty isn’t curated; it’s enforced.
There’s cynicism in the logic, but it’s humane cynicism: the joke doesn’t mock poor people, it mocks the comfort of people who get to treat hardship as a metaphor. Feldman compresses a political truth into a one-liner: deprivation isn’t an accessory, and pretending it is lets power off the hook.
The subtext is also a jab at the wealthy flirtation with “authentic hardship.” Even in Feldman’s era - postwar Britain’s class rigidity, the fading but still potent memory of rationing, the rise of consumer culture - there was a growing market for respectability through deprivation: the rich trying on simplicity, romanticizing the “poor but honest” myth. Feldman’s line yanks that mask off. If money can buy almost anything, why not the one thing culture keeps treating as character-building? Because real poverty isn’t curated; it’s enforced.
There’s cynicism in the logic, but it’s humane cynicism: the joke doesn’t mock poor people, it mocks the comfort of people who get to treat hardship as a metaphor. Feldman compresses a political truth into a one-liner: deprivation isn’t an accessory, and pretending it is lets power off the hook.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
|---|
More Quotes by Marty
Add to List









