Then you are wrong. Poor people don't spend on education, they cannot afford to do so. They rely on the state to provide education, as is their right. Poor people do not spend on improving their quality of life, They spend on the essentials of living and, if they get a little extra money they either put it towardss paying the never-ending debt in which they find themselves, or buy themselves or, more probably, their children, a rare luxury.
One by one:
Point: Poor people don't spend on education.
Counterpoint: Every single immigrant family who scraped together and did night classes to put themselves and their kids through school.
Point: They rely on the state to provide education, as is their right.
Counterpoint: Education is, unfortunately, a commodity - one with varying values and costs. The right to access education is not the same as the right to a guaranteed education.
Point: Poor people do not spend on improving their quality of life
Counterpoint: Demonstrably false, starting with every Black Friday stampede. South Africa has millions of people that live in shanty towns with satellite dishes so they can watch sport while the roof leaks - actual phenomenon. Any money that can make life easier to bear, is spent to that effect wherever possible.
Point: They spend on the essentials of living
Counterpoint: Thereby improving quality of life
Point: put it towardss paying the never-ending debt in which they find themselves
Counterpoint: Incurred in the pursuit of improving quality of living. Homeless (the one cohort that's given up on quality of life), far as I know, don't incur lots of debt to pay for it.
Point: more probably, their children, a rare luxury.
Counterpoint: Thereby improving quality of life.
I trust that this meets with your standards for thoroughly addressing your posts, and not just cherry-picking out-of-context quotes.