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I am glad that I have sparked some debate about this issue. What I wish people would do is to lift their thought process above their emotions and discuss the issue not the feelings.Lakemac, Chops has just beaten me to saying how offensive I find your comments. You speak as someone who has never faced chronic illness, whether physical or mental, adversity in any form, or unexpected setbacks.
The notion of a society where we refuse to care for people who need help is one I hope never to see. Certainly, there is middle class welfare which should be means tested but to suggest all welfare should be abolished is simply heartless and completely unreasonable.
Under your "utopia" what would happen to people who had no family?
How would people with severe mental illness look after themselves without support?
I doubt from your comments whether you have ever encountered people who are genuinely disadvantaged and in absolute need of support from those of us who can cope. If you did, I imagine from your disparaging comments that you would simply term them "losers" and ignore their plight.
Just to clarify, I have no personal stake in needing welfare. I've been fortunate enough to be able to provide for myself. Not everyone can do this.
But for many years I have worked with e.g. people with mental illness, victims of domestic violence etc, and understand that there is a whole other sector of society out there which we simply need to support. I gather you would just cast them on the scrap heap.
Now onto Julia's comments: You assume I have never faced adversity. Without going into details your assumption is very wrong. I speak in fact coming from experiencing that adversity and having direct experience of the adversity of others at the very bottom of society. The difference is how you respond to that adversity. Do you expect to sponge of the government or help yourself? The choice is a personal one.
Also you are getting confused with the source of the assistance rather than its existence. I am not advocating a society in which we refuse to help anyone. I am advocating a society in which the government does not perform that role. Having government look after welfare is inefficient. If you really want to assist the needy then go private enterprise (in a very loose sense I use the term - we commonly refer to these organisations as charities) they are far more efficient at it. I hold up the Salvos as an example. In your approach LESS assistance is getting to the needy not more. How does that help them. It doesn't.
In your senario of the government handling welfare, you are pointing that gun at my head saying "pay up or else" - that is coercion. It is no different if I was to do the same thing in reverse and say "Owing shares is now illegal". You are being coerced to do something against your will. (This happened in a slightly different way in the US when the government made it illegal for their citizens to own gold - Executive Order 6102 April 5 1933 - funnily enough it was partially related to what was then their anti-terrorist acts... hmmm... lesson there for those asute enough to see it). Back on topic - people don't respond well to force yet that is what you advocate.
As to those who don't have support from family, re-read my comments about the privately run charities that existed prior to government intervention. I am not sure how much historical research or background reading you have done in this topic but I would be interested in some more references myself. If you can prove to me that having a government run welfare is more efficient and results in more assistance (dollars as well as support) getting to those in need then we have something to discuss. Otherwise a privately run system will always outperform a centrally planned government one.