A really common issue I have heard with the welfare system is that there are many cases where
one can get paid more if they were on welfare than from remaining at their actual job. Especially in the US, the minimum wage in many states is not even a living wage. The point of having a job is to be able to live off of what you make. A lot of people assume that only teenagers have minimum wage jobs, but we know that in 2013,
half of all minimum wage workers were over the age of 25.
So when the choices are between working minimum wage and being unable to feed yourself and/or your family, versus going on welfare, is it really so surprising that people will choose the latter? That should be a clear sign that we need to rethink our priorities and
ensure everyone earns a living wage in the first place, because it will have an effect.
Reread my post.. I strictly said "unemployed and able to work". I bet 90% of people (not including disabled) on welfare are fit to work, or close to it.. They either can't find work, or they would rather take a free ride because they're too lazy to work. This work would consist of basically the work volunteers would do, or simply a community service job. If a volunteer is willing to work for nothing, why can't a fit unemployed person do the same work for welfare and food stamps? That is the question.
If you really want to get technical... Even a mentally disabled person could pick up trash for a couple hours a day, js.
A lot of assumptions to unpack here.
First off, where are you getting the idea that "90% of people on welfare are fit to work"? Can you provide actual statistics and studies to back up this number? You're using a few anecdotes as confirmation bias, and that's a completely backwards way to think. Yes, there will always be people who abuse any system - but that doesn't mean the system isn't just beneficial, but
life-saving to the majority of those using it.
But if you're concerned about people taking advantage of the system, look at all of the corporations who take advantage of tax loopholes and bailouts! It costs a country
significantly more money to give "handouts" to corporations than to those on welfare, but as someone who claims to worry about wasted money you don't seem overly concerned by that.
Next, while I like the idea of ensuring people give back to the community via volunteering, there are a number of issues with this. First off, it ceases to be "volunteering" if you're only doing it to receive welfare, and if you have to volunteer in order to literally ensure your family doesn't starve, that is kind of the opposite of what volunteering is supposed to be. Second, you're assuming that anyone is able to volunteer at any time. Volunteering requires giving your time and energy to something for free, and to assume that just anyone is in a position to do that reveals a certain level of privilege. Because
you do need a certain level of privilege in order to volunteer, because not everyone has the extra time and energy to do so.
Lastly...you do realize that not all mental illness is the same, right? Sure, some people with a mental illness could theoretically do so, but to make a sweeping generalization about the capacity for all such people is ridiculous.
So people on welfare that can work but don't shouldn't have to do something productive in society to eat, have a place to live, etc? They should just have it given to them while they sit on their ass? I saw a video of a girl who's living off the system and feels she shouldn't have to work so she refuses to even search for a job. She feels society owes her and that everything should be free. Why should the taxpayers, people who are productive to society pay for them? Sounds like a typical liberal logic.. This isn't a matter of helping those in need that are already productive to society.. It's a matter of those that aren't.
You do realize that a lot of people on welfare have payed and/or will pay taxes, right? The whole point of this system is that it creates a safety net for anyone who finds themselves in that situation.
Again, sure some people will take advantage of that system, but the solution is finding ways to change that instead of buying into ridiculous stereotypes and assuming all people on welfare are X, Y or Z.
With women you have to understand they are built for the home. Back in Rome BC we had these women up for slave trade. Again a slave could become a governor at this time. A wife would have more actions then words depending on her husbands level of power.
Take that idea today. We have "freedom" and now a woman could spend her days inside her hen box living like a "cheap slave" she is. Being wined and dined on. When i went to high-school I probably spent over $100 dollars on one woman I barely knew. Her friend was even trying to get me to buy more stuff for her.
Point being in today's world women are living inside hen houses called apartments and every 30th of the month they lay eggs that nobody eats or impregnate. Again I really doubt you know what your talking about.
LMAO, where the heck are you getting your information? "Women are built for the home"? I would love to see some evidence, because history literally tells us that A) there have been a ton of societies where women also worked (ever heard of a
"hunter-gatherer culture"? Women were the gatherers), and B) in patriarchal societies, men have a tendency of trying to force women to stay in the home. That's like saying "black people are built to be slaves" because they were enslaved throughout so much of history.
But please, keep telling us your nonsensical conspiracy theories. I did so love hearing about how you think there are no LGBT Jews because we only watch TV from the 1920's and 1950's. ;)
~Psychic