I just saw your response and even tons of posts later, I feel it necessary to respond. Forgive me if I’m misinterpreting the gist of what you’re saying but it seems to be that those receiving Gov’t assistance in our nation today are by and large “lazy” and they “don’t measure up”. We disagree on this (I have seen no proof presented for your viewpoint), but the difference is not irreconcilable.
My stance is simply this: if it is really true that the poor are largely lazy and milking the system, the solution needs to be one that
- strengthens eligibility guidelines,
- provides methods (for everyone, including people like you and me) for monitoring and reporting of fraud/waste/abuse by recipients (like the messages on health insurance bills that encourage people to report fraud and provide a number for doing so)
- ensures that recipients obtain/seek employment/training unless they are disabled or otherwise unable to
I could go on, but the gist is that measures to make people accountable should be strengthened, if they are presently lax (which I believe they are). However, simply cutting programs/funding across the board is like having a butcher doing a facelift instead of a plastic surgeon. I have trouble believing that the real objection many people have to gov’t assistance programs is waste/abuse/fraud, simply because I see very little suggestions offered to target the same. The real undercurrent I see is one that blames the poor for their situation in life and disavows any responsibility either in contributing to their predicament or in helping them out of it.