Night Strike wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:The government has no such incentive. Despots, monarchs, dictators, etc all have incentive to keep people heavily dependent so they won't complain about much of anything and will more fully serve the whims of the elite.
Democracies and Republics, however, provide social services because people don't happen to like seeing their neighbors starve. Traditionally, this included basic medical care because people, above all else, understood that if your neighbor cannot get to the doctor when sick, it is likely they will pass their diseases onto you. We have lost sight of some of that because we have so many vaccines and over the counter preparations to combat symptoms. (many people don't even get that treating symptoms is not the same as treating diseases or that antibiotics don't help colds).
I would contend we're closer to the despots, dictators, etc. than the democracies and republics on that scale. The political class has realized that they can use the powers of the national government to redistribute the wealth in order to buy votes from the poor. And then they can keep them poor and demanding more because of the constant stream of money that they do not have to work for.
The trouble is its Walmart, etc that are the big winners today, not average people. Wages keep getting lowered, so people have little choice BUT to go buy from box stores and Walmart.
Folks around here celebrate the Marcellus Gas industry, because it is providing jobs. And because it is providing jobs, no one but a few want to object too strongly or even look too seriously at teh dnagers having 3 big wells above our water system, along every water system in the area, is going to cause. THAT is what having power and concentration to the "job creators" does. It forces people to ignore danger so they can get a paycheck.
And, when the "alternative" is a welfare check... well, that is exactly where the powers that be want it. Neither those on welfare NOR those working will say much against the power brokers.
Night Strike wrote: ViperOverLord wrote:The problem I see is that a significant portion of the country wants and expects welfare. It would seem that government sponsored welfare is now part of our social fabric. How realistic is it to expect whole sale changes?
That's exactly what the progressives have been doing ever since Wilson was in office. They coerce you into voting for their unconstitutional schemes (like Social Security) in the name of being selfish and not helping out the less fortunate, and then once it has become ingrained into the system, they jack up the costs, payouts, and demonize anyone who wants to make one iota of reform to it. They even do it by constitutional means such as passing the income tax amendment on the premise that it will only be the very wealthy who will pay the tax and that even then it would never go above 1%. We all know how that one has turned out.
Nice twisting. Its not social security that kills people today, but it actually is true that things like food subsidies and the like are enabling big corporations like Walmart to pay only meager wages.
One problem is that we have too many of the same systems trying to do for people with varied needs. The idea of millions of disabled people really was not an issue when SS was invented. Frankly, most people who were really ill died. Many more were warehoused into things euphamistically called "institutions".
The Social Security system should be reserved for the retired. We need a different kind of system to deal with the disabled. We DO need bottom like "catches" because some people just plain are too disabled, too mentally ill, etc to truly work. We actually do an OK job in that regard in many locations, but the way its done is too expensive. AND, yes, in some cases we have to say something close to "no". There is little sense in hiring a $40,000 a year aid to assist one child constantly so they can lift a finger.. maybe, while forcing the rest of the elementary school to be crammed into classes of 30-40 kids. There is something between pushing those highly disabled onto a garbage dump and spending tens of thousandands to no real end except making people feel they have "done all the could" for the disabled. (I do have ideas on that, but this is not the place).
Others just hit a section of hard luck and offering them a bit of help. When I was laid off in Mississippi, it struck me as strange that I could get, for free an apartment. However, I could not get even a help paying the interest on my mortgage, nevermind that my entire monthly payment was far less than any rental in the area. I did not need the help, it turned out.. I got a job almost immediately and rented out my house, but I started thinking about the "in case". We see something similar today. Banks were happy to offer stupid loans to stupid people because they could make huge profits. BUT, now that some of those people, and not all of them even truly stupid, (many were tricked, some just plain lost jobs or got ill.. things no one can truly prevent) the banks are not obligated in any way to offer some of their prior earnings to help out those people. In fact, they have turned around and raised interest rates on almost every credit card holder, just because they could.
THOSE things are driving more and more people into default, into hardship who only just needed, in some cases, not even truly a gift of any kind.. just equity. Just a maintainance of supposedly "fixed" credit card rates or just a modification of a mortgage to current interest rates...
AND... why is it that its ONLY the homeowner's responsibility to pay for excesses when a home is "under water", worth less than is owed. Most people have little idea of real estate values beyond their appraisals. The BANKS are the ones who are supposed to know. Yet... now they are stepping back, laughing and asking everyone in the country to take on the burden their negligence created. They took the profits when times were good, now they ougth to have to take the penalty when times are bad. BUT... in a society so oriented toward the top, it is only those at the bottom who have to pay.
Night Strike wrote: The Bison King wrote:So if a natural disaster strikes it's the peoples problem?
Actually, yes. One of the most famous examples was from the 1800s when a severe famine struck Texas. The people affected by that went to the federal government asking for aid, and the government turned them down. When the surrounding people heard about this, they donated money and resources to the affected individuals. Their donations were triple the amount the people had asked for from the government. People will always help other people when there are dire circumstances. However, the current governmental structure allows people to just pass on the problems of others onto the government.
Some people will help
when they can, but such individual help is notoriously inefficient and spotty, going only to those "attractive" causes. The kids and puppies...