C
cargau
Guest
Congress is scheduled to consider adding another 43 weeks to the 99 they have already approved.
I own a small business. I pay for my unemployment insurance for the benefit of my employees. They pay nothing. When the bill comes due to pay for the expected increases to cover 2.5 years of sitting home all day, guess who pays? And, in reality, we all pay because I have less money to provide other benefits and or raises.
Look, I understand that there are needs. But, Unemployment insurance is supposed to be a bridge, not a way of life. And, extending the benefits perpetuates the unemployment rate because many are comfortable collecting the check that the business owner and the working stiff is providing.
Our country is too soft. Hardship builds character. I heard one politician comment that extending benefits will keep families together. Really? What happened during the depression? Families buckled down and came together and they survived. Then they prospered. I know the social justice proponents will be aghast reading this post. While I acknowledge that as Catholics, we need to be sensitive to the needs of our brothers and sisters, at the same time too many entitlements allow folks to drift into a sort of productive coma. Is that good?
Actually, I am 100% behind the idea that we have to look out for the sufferings of others. I just don’t think that the government taking money from the producers and giving it to the leaches is real social justice. Again, I realize that there are exceptions. But, the way this government thinks scares me. We are creating a whole social group of dependents.
OK, fire away…
I own a small business. I pay for my unemployment insurance for the benefit of my employees. They pay nothing. When the bill comes due to pay for the expected increases to cover 2.5 years of sitting home all day, guess who pays? And, in reality, we all pay because I have less money to provide other benefits and or raises.
Look, I understand that there are needs. But, Unemployment insurance is supposed to be a bridge, not a way of life. And, extending the benefits perpetuates the unemployment rate because many are comfortable collecting the check that the business owner and the working stiff is providing.
Our country is too soft. Hardship builds character. I heard one politician comment that extending benefits will keep families together. Really? What happened during the depression? Families buckled down and came together and they survived. Then they prospered. I know the social justice proponents will be aghast reading this post. While I acknowledge that as Catholics, we need to be sensitive to the needs of our brothers and sisters, at the same time too many entitlements allow folks to drift into a sort of productive coma. Is that good?
Actually, I am 100% behind the idea that we have to look out for the sufferings of others. I just don’t think that the government taking money from the producers and giving it to the leaches is real social justice. Again, I realize that there are exceptions. But, the way this government thinks scares me. We are creating a whole social group of dependents.
OK, fire away…