I dont see rich at all. I see middle class income but with underclass education and values that would drive them to construct in an area surround by poor folks. They probably feel comfortable there and like being the man in the ghetto instead of improving their human condition by surrounding themselves with a better class of people.
Wow, seems a bit venomous.
I just walked to the gym and back. (closed, thank you).
The middle class neighborhoods were quiet, nicely kept. Occasionally, spiked with a casa that never got beyond the concrete block stage, but from what I can see, the people live clean and healthy lives. However, it's just sort of sterile. No life. Not even children.
I cross back in to the barrio and there is life. The colmado is rocking, food is cooking, children are playing, and vendors are peddling. There's plenty of examples of dilapidated housing, and I know people in that housing that are solid people that are struggling on meager earnings. When I get to my alley, I find the baby (I guess toddler, now) downstairs as made it out to the street. I pick her up and take her back to her mother. I'll need to look for a small fence for her. It's a community.
As for the poor folks, they need to step their game up. It is 2016, this is not acceptable. There is obviously an addiction, substandard work ethic or poor family planning
In my barrio, I know of one person that might fit into this category among the ~100 odd people i know, and she's making a huge effort to get her life back together.
Most the people fit into the underemployed category. They work. Some even work very hard, but there just isn't enough work that pays well enough to lift them out of poverty.
I know one guy that comes home from a construction job to push a wheel barrel around selling platanos. His take for 2 hours of extra work? 100 pesos.