Dearly Beloved friends,
Cordial greetings and a very good day.
Fortunately here in Britain we have the Welfare State, which was designed as a safety net for those who, through circumstance, unemployment or sickness (mental or physical), lack the necessary competence to provide for themselves. Prior to the creation of the Welfare State multitudes were reliant upon charitable relief from the Anglican parish, which was simply unable to meet all of the demands made upon it from the poor. Sadly, the present government are implementing some jolly punitive and inequitable welfare ‘reforms’ which are causing untold misery to the sick and jobless, depriving them of the vital support they need to survive. Certainly welfare dependency should never be seen as a lifestyle choice, but the state should make provision for those who have, for one reason or another, fallen upon hard times through no deliberate fault of their own.
However, dear friends, even here there has been a hardening of attitudes towards the nation’s sick and unemployed, mostly stirred up by the ultra right-wing press and some very unpleasant commentators. Thus your sick and jobless are branded ‘skivers’ and are accused of being feckless freeloaders who are a considerable burden on ‘hard working families’, language itself which is both discriminatory and unkind in the extreme. The vast majority of the sick and jobless are deeply ashamed of having to be reliant upon Social Security benefits and are decidedly not work shy. How very sad that wealth, personal comfort and security can make some people strangely insensitive to the needs of others and even oblivious to their divers distresses, but this is what is currently taking place. As I understand it, the very same thing his happening Stateside as well and its seems that the prosperous West is becoming increasingly intolerant of those who are losers in the struggle to survive.
Many people, dear friends, appear deeply affronted and enraged that the Welfare State must be funded via taxation. This is jolly selfish and demonstrates a want of basic humanity, if I may say. There is a growing feeling that looking after the country’s sick nd jobless is exclusively the preserve of the charities and no business of the government. However, the charities, as vital as they are, can never be a substitute for the infrastructure of the country. The charities simply do not have the financial wherewithal to support all the weekly needs of all the nation’s sick and unemployed. Moreover, it would be imprudent to leave the sick and jobless to the charities to meet their vital needs,such as ‘housing benefit’ which must be paid on a regular basis if one is not to face homelessness.
The stock argument against taxation to fund the Welfare State is that the wealthy especially will be driven out of the country to avoid what they consider as punitive taxation. These are your so called tax exiles who no longer feel that the country of their birth is rewarding them sufficiently for all their hard grafting. This attitude is utterly deplorable. How can men who have financially prospered so much be so terribly mean when it comes to the equitable distribution of wealth to their poorer fellow-citizens? They should not begrudge a percentage of their taxes being re-directed to those who have fallen on hard times or who are neither able nor capable of earning their own living. It is all very well saying that this should be provided by the charities, but the charities themselves are now starved of money and are finding it exceedingly difficult to keep afloat.
The urgent need of the hour, dear friends, is for the government to educate the masses to adopt a compassionate approach to the sick and unemployed and not grumble about some of their taxes being used to alleviate their plight. We are our ‘brother’s keeper’ and we do have an obligation towards those who cannot paddle their canoe for very genuine reasons. Man in his fallen estate cannot be relied upon to always give to charitable causes and this is why state taxation is imperative if people are not to suffer want and homelessness. State taxation ensures that the chronically poor always have a safety net, which provides the costs for food, shelter and clothing on a regular basis.
As a British citizen I am tremendously proud of our Welfare State and it is a myth to suggest that it perpetuates the dependency of the poor. That may be true in a very small number of cases but, contrary to ignorant popular belief, there is no ‘burgeoning benefits culture’ where abuse is rampant. Rather, there are individuals who exploit the Social Security system, but there always have been and always will be such shameful abuse.
Let those that name the name of Christ not begrudge their taxes being redistributed to the poor and needy by central government. No society, dear friends, will attain lasting peace if its government neglects the poor and the sick in mind and body.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait
In Christos