The micro-level, moralistic cousin to famine
rationalization. It personalizes hunger, suggesting an individual's
starvation results from a lack of hustle, poor planning, or divine will, rather than from dispossession, engineered scarcity, or the
violence of markets. It turns a social condition into a personal failing.
Example: "They're hungry because they don't budget properly or value education." This
starvation rationalization ignores
the reality of food deserts, unlivable wages, and the time poverty of working three jobs. It rationalizes a society's failure to feed its people by blaming the empty stomachs themselves.