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Food Stamp Nation


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2010 Oct 10, 1:55am   34,579 views  178 comments

by RayAmerica   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

“The lessons of history … show conclusively that continued dependence upon relief induces a spiritual and moral disintegration fundamentally destructive to the national fiber. To dole out relief in this way is to administer a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit."

"These searing words about Depression-era welfare are from Franklin Roosevelt’s 1935 State of the Union Address. FDR feared this self-reliant people might come to depend permanently upon government for the necessities of their daily lives. Like narcotics, such a dependency would destroy the fiber and spirit of the nation..."

Read more .....

http://buchanan.org/blog/food-stamp-nation-4517

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1   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 3:05am  

Nomograph says

Unless you exist in the lowest socioeconomic levels, food stamps and welfare shouldn’t even be on your radar screen, much less a dominant force in your life.
If I were you, I would take all that time you spend thinking about food stamps and welfare and use it to think about personal career advancement, growing wealth, and business creation. You’ll never get anywhere obsessing over welfare, food stamps, and low-paying government jobs.

Pat Buchanan wrote the article. Are you suggesting that he too exists "in the lowest socioeconomc levels?"

2   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 3:15am  

"When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." Benjamin Franklin

3   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 3:27am  

Nomograph says

Why not spend your time thinking about how to succeed rather than obsessing about failure?

I have already succeeded in life, but thanks for your heartfelt concern. Ben Franklin also expressed concerns about protecting what the Founders created as illustrated by comments like this:
“When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.”

What liberals seemingly fail to understand is that America is a very special country (and concept). Those of us on the right are concerned about preserving what the Founders created. Liberals on the other hand are concerned about creating a socialist welfare state. Therein lies the divide.

4   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 3:46am  

Another interesting thought that conflicts with socialist/liberalism:

"Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves." William Pitt in the House of Commons November 18, 1783

5   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 3:51am  

"Every step we take towards making the State our Caretaker of our lives, by that much we move toward making the State our Master."

Dwight D. Eisenhower

6   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 3:57am  

What a revolutionary thought! In contrast, liberalism wants to increase government.

"It is the duty of the patriot to protect his country from its government."

Thomas Paine

7   elliemae   2010 Oct 10, 4:12am  

RayAmerica says

What liberals like fail to understand is that America is a very special country (and concept).

The American in which rayray lives allows people to starve, go without medical treatment, and encourages discrimination. It doesn't believe in helping people through college, providing day care and otherwise helping people to better themselves.

Rayray say that we he & his brethren are concerned about preserving what the Founders created... here's a line from the Declaration of Independence (regarding the King of England): "He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands."

Kinda sounds to me like they were advocating immigration there.

There's an interesting ending to the Declaration: "And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor."

I guess that they didn't mean conservatives as related to lives/fortunes/honor. They just forgot to put that part in. (?)

8   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 4:27am  

"The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."

Thomas Jefferson

9   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 4:29am  

"The principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, under the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale."

Thomas Jefferson

10   Â¥   2010 Oct 10, 5:22am  

Plus Patrick put this up today in the news sidebar:

http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/v1ch15s32.html?source=patrick.net

pretty cool to have my ideology be in total consonance with TJ on this.

Predates http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrarian_Justice too.

11   tatupu70   2010 Oct 10, 6:59am  

CBOEtrader says

Its a real shame that the average voter, as well as the average politician, is incapable of understanding even basic statistics, much less a regression analysis. Instead we get all these well intentioned leaders who have hearts bigger than than their brains, enacting legislation that makes them feel all warm and fuzzy. All the while the poorest amongst us, and particularly the black community, is suffering the untintended consequences

That's pretty funny. If your link was from an actual unbiased source, then perhaps it might be more persuasive. The Cato institute reporting on testimony from someone from... wait for it.. the Cato Institute. I'm shocked that he feels welfare should be ended. Shocked, I tell you. He spends a long time making the case that single parent families lead to higher crime rates, then another good deal saying that welfare increases single parent families. OK, I'll believe both of those. Then he makes a huge leap saying welfare is a main cause of juvenile crime. Sounds like you need to give him a lesson in statistics...

12   CBOEtrader   2010 Oct 10, 7:27am  

tatupu70 says

That’s pretty funny. If your link was from an actual unbiased source, then perhaps it might be more persuasive. The Cato institute reporting on testimony from someone from… wait for it.. the Cato Institute. I’m shocked that he feels welfare should be ended. Shocked, I tell you. He spends a long time making the case that single parent families lead to higher crime rates, then another good deal saying that welfare increases single parent families. OK, I’ll believe both of those. Then he makes a huge leap saying welfare is a main cause of juvenile crime. Sounds like you need to give him a lesson in statistics…

Would you rather I post direct links to the governments statistics that support the thesis? I assumed noone would want to read that. I went through all of them, but I'm a data junkie.

Here's a tip: any organizations that puts in the resources to do a study on public policy, or social programs will be biased in some way. If you want to do your own research into some of these topics, you are forced to read biased articles and biased studies.

I had many of the same thoughts as you when I found that article. So, I checked every link, and every stat that he quoted in his testimony. I then went and found stats from other sources and came to the same conclusion myself.

Like I said, it is a starting point. Focus on the message, rather than the messenger. If you disagree perhaps post some evidence, some study, some justification for welfare--as we practice it in the US now. You may even used a biased source, if you like.

13   elliemae   2010 Oct 10, 7:35am  

CBOEtrader says

Ahhh…the classic bleading heart justification for social programs. Unfortunately, the mountains of clear empirical evidence does not agree with your ideology.

CBOE:
My heart is bleeding (not bleading, nor bleating) due to - drum roll, please - my being a social worker. Food stamps do actually help people eat. The amount of $ allowed under food stamps isn't huge; in fact, it's a tiny amount of many other people's budgets. These programs are helping people not to starve - and in this economy that's something. Unemployment benefits render many people ineligible for food stamps, but after they run out at least it's something.

No, the system isn't perfect. But less people starve because of social programs and food banks. FYI, I can sleep (indoors, all snug) at night.

14   tatupu70   2010 Oct 10, 7:40am  

CBOEtrader says

Like I said, it is a starting point. Focus on the message, rather than the messenger. If you disagree perhaps post some evidence, some study, some justification for welfare–as we practice it in the US now. You may even used a biased source, if you like.

Fair enough. I just find his conclusion utterly unsupported by his evidence. I agree that we should look at welfare reform, but ending it entirely seems like a case of the solution being worse than the problem.

15   CBOEtrader   2010 Oct 10, 7:51am  

tatupu70 says

I just find his conclusion utterly unsupported by his evidence. I agree that we should look at welfare reform, but ending it entirely seems like a case of the solution being worse than the problem.

I agree with you.

16   marcus   2010 Oct 10, 7:55am  

CBOEtrader says

Welfare results in a cycle of poverty, broken families, and crime. It has decimated the inner-city black communities–and hurt society overall with increased crime, wealth disparity, and wasted human capital. Over multiple generations, welfare has the exact opposite effect than intended.

Not a very timely point. Most agree which is why Welfare has been decreasing for 35 years. Your link was from before "welfare reform" in 1996 (under Clinton).

General inferences about whether welfare was detrimental as structured 40 years ago, are not really relevant to the level and type of welfare going on today, which I believe is mostly food stamps.

18   marcus   2010 Oct 10, 7:59am  

Yes that was based on a quick search, and Wikipedia

Maybe you are time traveling back to the mid 90s and arguing that we should support the "Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act ?"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_Responsibility_and_Work_Opportunity_Act

19   marcus   2010 Oct 10, 8:04am  

Analyzing recent increases in welfare during our great recession is difficult. Do we even know what the true unemployment rate is ? Isn't it upwards of 20% if you include long term unemployed and extremely underemployed ?

20   CBOEtrader   2010 Oct 10, 8:10am  

elliemae says

CBOE:
My heart is bleeding (not bleading, nor bleating)

True, also, I highly doubt that Ray lives inside an American.

elliemae says

The American in which rayray lives...

Seriously, typos happen. As proud as you are of the spellchecker in your computer, get over it. It makes you appear petty.

elliemae says

due to - drum roll, please - my being a social worker.

I hope this isn't your topic-expert-trump-card. I had dinner with my girlfriend's coworkers a few days ago. It was a racially diverse group of psychotherapists and social workers. The stories they tell me about the ravages of welfare's unitended consequences on Chicago's African American communities are shocking.

It is common for their impoverished mostly black clients to 1)strategize to have an out-of-wedlock baby (or a second baby) to get welfare--the men these underage women choose to have babies with are often 10 or 15 years older than they are 2)choose not to get a job out of fear of losing benefits, 3)choose not to marry or allow an adult boyfriend to live in their home in fear of losing benefits, 4)engage in criminal and black market activities such as selling drugs or small-time prostitution or trading foodstamps for money at pennies on the dollar--all so that they can supliment their income without losing benefits, 5)use peer pressure to encourage other teenage women in their community to do the same. Most of their clients are second, third, and even forth generation welfare recipients. Welfare is not the entire story, but it plays a leading role in the story.

21   CBOEtrader   2010 Oct 10, 8:15am  

marcus says

Not a very timely point. Most agree which is why Welfare has been decreasing for 35 years. Your link was from before “welfare reform” in 1996 (under Clinton).
General inferences about whether welfare was detrimental as structured 40 years ago, are not really relevant to the level and type of welfare going on today, which I believe is mostly food stamps.

This is a valid point--and perhaps things have gotten better. As described in my above post though, this issue is still relevant today.

22   marcus   2010 Oct 10, 8:22am  

Buchanon says:

What we have accepted today is a vast permanent underclass of scores of millions who cannot cope and must be carried by the rest of society — fed, clothed, housed, tutored, medicated at taxpayer’s expense for their entire lives. We have a new division in America: those who pay a double fare, and those who forever ride free.

It is sad, and it's not simple. Buchanon doesn't talk about prison or wages. He doesn't talk about how his bretheren who are the most appalled by this are also very much against abortion. He says "we" survived the great depression without this kind of support for the poor. So ? Many people in one way or another didn't survive it.

23   CaffeineAddict   2010 Oct 10, 8:41am  

I love it when I see patients who have nicer cellphones, clothes, jewelry than me and a good number of my colleagues. Meanwhile they get free healthcare, food stamps, "disability benefits" for themself and their 5 kids. Oh another one on the way.

Really makes me want to work harder...

24   nope   2010 Oct 10, 8:47am  

CaffeineAddict says

I love it when I see patients who have nicer cellphones, clothes, jewelry than me and a good number of my colleagues. Meanwhile they get free healthcare, food stamps, “disability benefits” for themself and their 5 kids. Oh another one on the way.
Really makes me want to work harder…

Man, you have no idea how great it is to be poor and living on welfare + foodstamps. It comes with these awesome benefits:

- Between the rampant crime and domestic abuse in your neighborhood, you're sure to have excitement filled evenings

- The horrible education that your children receive makes sure that they'll always be with you!

- With incarceration rates more than 10x higher than the gainfully employed, you'll know you will always have a place to sleep.

Really, come off it. Yeah, there are douchebags who waste what little money they do have on stupid things (frequently on credit, mind you), but that is not representative of poverty as a whole. Spend some time in poor neighborhoods and see how it works out for you.

25   CaffeineAddict   2010 Oct 10, 9:00am  

Kevin says

CaffeineAddict says

I love it when I see patients who have nicer cellphones, clothes, jewelry than me and a good number of my colleagues. Meanwhile they get free healthcare, food stamps, “disability benefits” for themself and their 5 kids. Oh another one on the way.

Really makes me want to work harder…

Man, you have no idea how great it is to be poor and living on welfare + foodstamps. It comes with these awesome benefits:
- Between the rampant crime and domestic abuse in your neighborhood, you’re sure to have excitement filled evenings
- The horrible education that your children receive makes sure that they’ll always be with you!
- With incarceration rates more than 10x higher than the gainfully employed, you’ll know you will always have a place to sleep.
Really, come off it. Yeah, there are douchebags who waste what little money they do have on stupid things (frequently on credit, mind you), but that is not representative of poverty as a whole. Spend some time in poor neighborhoods and see how it works out for you.

I'm glad you assumed that I'm a "typical conservative" that hates poor people and "don't know what it's like."

Well I grew up in a single parent household. I lived far below the poverty level. Mom refused to take government hand-outs because she didn't like the idea of being dependent on others. She worked her ass off. My siblings and I worked. A lot of times we didn't have enough to EAT. (on hindsight, we should have been mooches and leeched off government cheese...but then maybe it wouldn't have fostered work ethic)

I lived in a "ghetto neighborhood" where most of my neighbors were poor or on Section 8 housing. There was crime everywhere.

So yes I know EXACTLY what it's like to live in a poor neighborhood, grow up poor. But America is great in that if you work hard enough, ANYONE can TRULY become successful and move up the economic ladder.

Personally I am sick of liberals assuming that "oh it's so horrible to be poor, they can't help it and can't dig themselves out with nonstop handouts." I think nonstop handouts PROMOTE the behaviors that keep them poor.

26   nope   2010 Oct 10, 10:01am  

Oh calm down.

CaffeineAddict says

So yes I know EXACTLY what it’s like to live in a poor neighborhood, grow up poor. But America is great in that if you work hard enough, ANYONE can TRULY become successful and move up the economic ladder.

Ah, this old line. Sorry, but it just isn't the case, or at least not the case any more than it is in just about any other country. America is not special in this regard, and that's not really the point here. The point is that being poor sucks, and the idea that you "wonder why you work so hard" is amusing.

Shit, it's contradictory. If you "work so hard", why aren't you way ahead of these people? I mean, why don't you have an expensive cell phone and clothes and whatnot? Maybe you just don't work hard enough? Or maybe, just maybe, those people are simply making shitty financial decisions, and it has very little to do with welfare.

Personally I am sick of liberals assuming that “oh it’s so horrible to be poor, they can’t help it and can’t dig themselves out with nonstop handouts.” I think nonstop handouts PROMOTE the behaviors that keep them poor.

Well, it is horrible to be poor, and most people can't really get out of it. If you don't get a solid education and have good role models as a child, your chances of success as an adult are slim to none. Poor begets poor, ignorance begets ignorance.

I'm not claiming in any way that "nonstop handouts" are the key here, but I am saying that people who say things like "really makes me want to work harder..." (implying that people who don't work as hard as they do have a better life) are full of shit. You would never in a million years trade your life for the one that those expensive cell phone sporting, expensive clothes wearing, probably hasn't actually owned anything not bought on credit in 5 years people are living.

It's not so black and white as "people who sponge off the system" and "hard working, honest people".

27   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 12:19pm  

CaffeineAddict says

I’m glad you assumed that I’m a “typical conservative” that hates poor people and “don’t know what it’s like.”
Well I grew up in a single parent household. I lived far below the poverty level. Mom refused to take government hand-outs because she didn’t like the idea of being dependent on others. She worked her ass off. My siblings and I worked. A lot of times we didn’t have enough to EAT. (on hindsight, we should have been mooches and leeched off government cheese…but then maybe it wouldn’t have fostered work ethic)
I lived in a “ghetto neighborhood” where most of my neighbors were poor or on Section 8 housing. There was crime everywhere.
So yes I know EXACTLY what it’s like to live in a poor neighborhood, grow up poor. But America is great in that if you work hard enough, ANYONE can TRULY become successful and move up the economic ladder.
Personally I am sick of liberals assuming that “oh it’s so horrible to be poor, they can’t help it and can’t dig themselves out with nonstop handouts.” I think nonstop handouts PROMOTE the behaviors that keep them poor.

A GREAT post that deserves to be read over and over again.

28   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 10, 12:26pm  

"I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them. My reading of history convinces me that most bad government has grown out of too much government."

Thomas Jefferson

29   elliemae   2010 Oct 10, 2:40pm  

CBOEtrader says

Seriously, typos happen. As proud as you are of the spellchecker in your computer, get over it. It makes you appear petty.

I am my own spell checker, and I am proud of my ability to communicate effectively with the written word. I worked very hard to learn this skill and appreciate that you mistook my (mostly) correct grammar and spellling as computer generated. I shall count you as one of my biggest fans.

Come to think of it, I believe that rayray inhabits the persona of what he believes to be a model American - rendering my statement correct in that context.

CBOEtrader says

...Welfare is not the entire story, but it plays a leading role in the story.

Yea, I've heard this before. I've seen my share of people who have no desire to change. I've also seen my share of people who do desire to change. The lifestyle funded by welfare programs ain't pretty, and while some people are institutionalized to it, others choose not to be. I was poor and disabled and decided to change my life (and made some major sacrifices to do so). I've never drawn food stamps nor have I ever received a welfare check. I'm not special, I just wanted it. But when you refer to my bleeding heart, I shall mention that my profession lends itself to such an attitude.

CaffeineAddict says

So yes I know EXACTLY what it’s like to live in a poor neighborhood, grow up poor. But America is great in that if you work hard enough, ANYONE can TRULY become successful and move up the economic ladder.

Personally I am sick of liberals assuming that “oh it’s so horrible to be poor, they can’t help it and can’t dig themselves out with nonstop handouts.” I think nonstop handouts PROMOTE the behaviors that keep them poor.

Many people have a difficult time climbing out of poverty. It's not just liberals who make this assumption.

So far as comparing other's lifestyle choices, such as clothing, cellphones, jewelry, etc to yours - well, you've got a lot of time on your hands.

30   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 11, 2:45am  

"Give a Man a Fish, Feed Him For a Day. Teach a Man to Fish, Feed Him For a Lifetime."

Lao Tzu

Note to Liberals: I've been quoting the Founders, along with Ike, FDR, etc. Lau Tzu is not a Founding Father. I hope this fact helps to clear up at least some of your confusion.

31   Vicente   2010 Oct 11, 2:57am  

This dude named Jesus once fed a hungry multitude with a few loaves of bread and fish. I don't recall him lecturing them on that occasion about how they all absolutely deserved to starve.

32   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 11, 3:54am  

I'll break this down for the Duck Dude with the lost hope that he just might get it:

GIVE a person a fish and he will DEPEND on the GIFT in order to eat on a daily basis.

TEACH a person to fish (a SKILL to be applied to HELP HIMSELF SURVIVE) and THAT SKILL will feed him and provide for his entire lifetime.

33   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 11, 4:00am  

This discourse should (but it probably won't) prove to you why virtually no one takes what you say seriously.

34   Vicente   2010 Oct 11, 5:55am  

I wonder how many people on here commenting about food stamps, know anything about the matter personally or at least second-hand. I see a lot of "welfare queen" sort of comments which are just not fair. There's a lot of people out there that are scrambling on the edge of eviction or foreclosure and the program keeps them from making the choice between food OR having a roof over their heads. By and large, being on food stamps is not a "life choice" it's a stopgap until people do find some way to earn a living. Even some in the military draw food stamps.

35   RayAmerica   2010 Oct 11, 7:29am  

CBOEtrader says

The government should focus its efforts on trade schools for the majority, instead of trying to send every American student to a cookie-cutter crap public university. University education should be used to educate the scholarly minority. In fact, we should copy the German system of splitting students into the college bound and trade school bound groups at the age of 12. The trade school kids still must get a higher education, but it will have a focus on baking, or a mechanical trade, or whatever. The German people take great pride in teaching their youth the skills necessary to work as a tradesman, for good reason. Only around 12% go on to an American style University.
As far as handouts to the poor, we should feel comfortable to give (healthy) food to the poor. I have no issue with helping someone eat, as long as its food staples and not potato chips and coke. If an able bodied person requires government housing, I think we should give that to them as well, in exchange for working simple manual labor jobs for the local government 2 to 3 days per week. If they want government healthcare as well, they get to work anther day per week. Perhaps we could allow these people to enter into government sponsored jobs training–with minimum performance requirements. If someone needs extra money for a child, that child should be held to minimum grade standards. We should basically make sure that anyone on the public dole is trying to better themselves and their lot in life.
Simply giving people everything, without requiring anything in return is a horrendous system.
If someone pays unemployment insurance, they should recieve unemployment benefits for some period of time without any work or education requirements.

A perfectly reasonable plan, but the Democrats & Republicrats will never support it. Why? It would damage them politically because so much of the Liberal/Moderate base is made up of people (voters) that have their hand out.

36   marcus   2010 Oct 11, 10:55am  

CBOEtrader says

The government should focus its efforts on trade schools for the majority, instead of trying to send every American student to a cookie-cutter crap public university. University education should be used to educate the scholarly minority.

I don't see that it's governments choice. The system has built up around an elementary and secondary system that doesn't do well enough, for spoiled american kids who feel entitled, and who often continue adolescence well into their 20s (at least). My point being that solutions to this can't come from government.

Often times, a couple years in a junior college or in one of the public universities you refer to, can bring an underachieving kid up to the level where they deserve the option of continuing toward a college degree or if they so choose they can work toward a trade of some kind.

We probably could do better in with training for trades, but it's not that bad. And some trade type jobs such as becoming a nurse, or other type of health technician, or law enforcement work, and others, are all areas in which we do fairly well.

It's a market, and it works. Our market for job training which includes various forms of higher education has adapted to the needs of american kids, including the fact that american kids are spoiled and often have a prolonged youth.

The "solution" that I would like to see is if mating and even dating decisions were more heavily skewed toward a person's potential to provide. This is a cultural thing, and my hope is that eventually it will be that way in American culture. That is, if the prevailing perception of sexiest attribute for a potential mate was having a high aptitude, and a high potential future income, and a desire to raise like minded children, then the entire education problem would be gone within a few generations.

37   CaffeineAddict   2010 Oct 11, 11:50am  

What makes you think I can't have all that stuff?

I can pay for all that if I wanted to, however I choose to live frugally, pay down my student debts, save for my future retirement.

Of course, I am going to be punished for my choices of living responsibly by having my taxes increased because when I am attending, I "make too much money!!!!!!" despite my 20+ years of sacrifice and frugality...

It's painfully obvious our nation supports sloth and spending, and punishes sacrifice, work, and saving - just look at our federal income tax!

38   CaffeineAddict   2010 Oct 11, 11:58am  

I personally think we society SHOULD help the poor some. I know I probably would have eaten much better as a kid!

But it shouldn't be through food stamps. WAY too much fraud for that. I remember easily being able to buy food stamps in my neighborhood in a 7:10 ratio through middle-men - who knows what the food stamp recepients were selling it for? (for cigarettes, alcohol, drugs I'm sure)

They should open food banks where people can come in for some food in exchange for some labor - even if it's something as small as cleaning up the parks, streets, etc.

This may be somewhat offtopic and more of a rant than anything:
This probably sounds rather "cruel" but I personally have a huge hatred for single moms who KEEP pumping out kids. I think if welfare single-moms are getting free healthcare, welfare they should be:
1) encouraged, educated, and given free contraceptive (which we do but they refuse anyway)
2) be forced to take Depo shots every 3 months for birth control. (which we offer free but they refuse anyway)
I know it's a touchy subject, but a mom with 5 kids with 4 different dads (I've seen so many of these) really shouldn't be having MORE kids. They're not doing themselves a favor. They're not doing their current kids a favor by splitting the attention. They're certainly not doing the tax payer any favors.
If they don't want to stop having kids, then their free support is cut off. That's their choice to make.

39   nope   2010 Oct 11, 1:21pm  

CaffeineAddict says

But it shouldn’t be through food stamps. WAY too much fraud for that. I remember easily being able to buy food stamps in my neighborhood in a 7:10 ratio through middle-men - who knows what the food stamp recepients were selling it for? (for cigarettes, alcohol, drugs I’m sure)

WIC is pretty difficult to defraud these days, now that everything is done on cards. The only scam that I'm aware of that is effective goes something like this:

- Low income but not on WIC person A wants to stretch her dollar.
- She finds someone who is on WIC
- Person on WIC buys groceries for Low income person
- Low income person gives the on WIC person somewhere between 25 and 50 cents for every dollar's worth of food purchased.

That's pretty uncommon though.

Mostly the crack heads and the like just suck dicks, sell drugs, or steal to make extra money.

The "baby daddy" cycle is pretty common though. The reason these women do it is because they tend to be all of the following:

- Uneducated (high school drop outs if they're lucky)
- Depressed (low self esteem causes them to seek out a man's attention)
- Addicted (to crack, meth, or alcohol at least)
- Religious (no abortion, frequently no birth control)

If a poor woman has her first child before the age of 21, the odds are pretty good that she'll remain poor for her entire life.

There is no good solution for the problem that is also realistic. Good luck trying to "force" people to do anything.

40   EightBall   2010 Oct 12, 12:04am  

CaffeineAddict says

1) encouraged, educated, and given free contraceptive (which we do but they refuse anyway)
2) be forced to take Depo shots every 3 months for birth control. (which we offer free but they refuse anyway)

Sorry, wrong answer. They aren't having kids because they fail to see the value in birth control. They have kids because it's the only thing they can achieve (from their perspective) of value in life. Perhaps we should force people with genetic diseases to get Depo shots as well? Where does this end? How about giving granny a pill instead of the hip replacement (this is Obama's idea not mine)? How about we develop tests for expensive diseases and force women to have abortions to reduce the cost of health care? The extreme low value placed on life is the real problem. These are real people with real problems and the only solution you have is to limit their biological capacity to reproduce? How about raising the standard of living for these people instead of exterminating them? People constantly argue about taking away social services (the extreme right) or forced extinction (the extreme left) of those they don't see productive. How kind of both of you!

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