| Thursday, December 30, 2004 | PERMALINK: |
| Welfare - adding psychological damage to injury |
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reprinted from August 16, 2003
It also created a chasm between the nouveau middle class and the stranded inner-city poor. For those not part of the boom, it removed any hope of working their way up, and it divided our nation racially and psychologically. While the new middle class could envision nothing but future prosperity, the poor lost hope. The 50's were a time of "can do", of limitless growth... as long as you didn't look beneath the surface. Prior to WWII, Americans of all colors labored and lived together in cities. The effects of the privileged race to the suburbs effectively split black and white into cities vs. suburbs, and psychologically into "them" vs. "us". The inner-city black population was now an embarrassment, shameful by contrast. The new America responded. Unfortunately, it responded from its new divided, paternalistic viewpoint. Those who had would help those who had not. Naturally, they would do it through government. So, government welfare programs got a massive new dose of support. AFDC - Aid to Families with Dependent Children - was part of the original Social Security legislation of 1935. Here's a short summary of what happened:
AFDC was a major disaster. The "cure" was even worse than the "disease". In the AFDC program the requirements for eligibility essentially amount to:
Anyone satisfying these requirements was entitled to benefits. And the word entitlement means "right" -- benefits cannot be withdrawn simply because recipients refuse to modify their behavior. Direct Results?
People will do what you pay them to do, especially if they're desperate. It was exactly what should have been expected from AFDC. Naturally, these new families were virtually incapable of taking care of themselves. Young mothers, with little education, qualified for very few jobs, had the additional burden of children to care for, by themselves. Fathers of children born as tickets to cash in on welfare were absent from parenting... by FORCE, and that gradually transformed young men who would have ordinarily been responsible fathers into absent sperm donors. Soon, as seen from the distant suburbs, we had a black underclass that appeared to have no morals. Not only were they not working and on the dole, they were breeding fast, and men were abandoning their families. We had divided the nation with veteran's benefits, psychologically crushed the left-behinds with destructive welfare, and then insisted that they had a RIGHT to be "kept". Think about how similar that is to the treatment of slaves... except that the new slaves didn't have to work. |
| # -- Posted 12/30/04; 12:02:16 AM Edit |