With the military, roads, police, fire, courts, etc. we all bennefit and have access to the services rendered. Welfare is different in that the people who pay by default do not bennefit.
If fewer people have an opportunity of going to college as a result, does this not hurt our country in the long run? If the hospitals are overcrowded and the sick do not get better, this will not affect the rich at some point?
My original point had little or nothing to do with welfare, but since you asked, here are my thoughts. Welfare is intended to be a helping hand up, not a hand out. This is in the best interest for the whole country, not only in the long-run, but also in the short-run.
If someone can work, they should. If they can’t work for various and legitimate reasons, it would be nice if a private charity helps them, but if it does not, then the government should help.
Everyone is enclined to covet or at least have desires. Many poor people would not be poor if they were willing to use their skills to satisfy the desires of others. All this talk about the needy and I have only ever had one person offer to cut my grass for money, (an enterprising young boy who will undoubtably never have the opportunity to call himself poor).
I don’t fundamentally disagree with you here, but it sounds like you are a little out of touch. Yes, we are all tempted to covet, but some realities only foster this vice.
There are increasingly skilled workers who are out a job, and will have a very hard time making it. There is a shrinking middle class. They are making less, working more, and have weaker purchasing power.
Some of their problems are self-induced: debt, foolish expenditures, unhealthy habits, etc. But some of it is our crumbling economic system which is largely set up to suffocate working families, and encourages us to buy into many deadly allurements.