I know or knew people in Georgia, Virginia and Arkansas. And yes, there are studies backing it up.{/quote]
I’ve been searching for these studies, and I can’t find them. Can you provide them for me?
vern humphrey;2492874:
You seem to assume that people always spend all their money caring for the extra child. They don’t.
Those I know on welfare do. Again, I understand that some people abuse the system, and I am 100% against that. My problem is, though, that if we stop providing basics that people need to live a semi-decent life from people who cannot afford them, just because some bad apples muddy the system, then we hurt innocent people who need government help. People who DONT have family to help.
How does providing money, foodstamps, housing, health care, and many other things entice people to have children out of wedlock? By adding up to a way to make a living, of course!
Well, since the “extra” health insurance one would receive for having another baby would only further benefit that other baby (as the other family members are already covered with or without that extra baby), I can’t see how health benefits provided by the gov’t would entice someone to have another child.
Then why not re-state it?
It just keeps evading you, doesn’t it?

I did restate the question! (It was in the quote box at the bottom of my last post.) I’ll do it again:
Okay, then. Based on my examples of real people, specifically, how do we help them?