Sorry, I don't mean to be mean or rude, but that is precisely why I started that thread in the Dirty Laundry forum, so we could, if we wanted to, talk about the politics of the situation.
No matter what it looks like *now*, plenty of people who could afford to have kids 10 years ago may have lost, one way or another, their spouses, jobs, homes etc. (Anyone can end up poor with no provocation -- John McAfee, the anti-virus programer who used to be a millionaire, for example, is now poor.) Which is not to say that we should just look at the kids and let them suffer.
Besides, it's way cheaper to educate kids than to have them drop out of school, which in this country basically implies a cycle where they can't find good jobs, may end up in jail etc and *then* we have to pay even more taxes to help and/or fix the situation -- better to attract as many as possible to school right now and see them graduate.
Either way, props to Whirlpool for doing something about it!