zippy2006
New member
I agree with your summary of the article. However, the argument fails on the second point on the grounds that the laws that establish these "subsidies" do not name procreation as any sort of qualification, nor is it a standard that anyone applies to those marriages.
It doesn't matter if they aren't explicitly outlined. I doubt there are any explicit reasons given for the benefit at all. This is the narrow-mindedness I spoke of.
Would you care to justify that with a response to my reasoning, or are you going to simply respond to rational argument with lazy dismissal? Again.
Here it is, in case you missed it. The article claims that collecting the Social Security benefits of a dead spouse is an incentive to have children. I say that this is ridiculous, because clearly if you are collecting a dead spouse's SS benefits, you aren't going to have any more children with them.
It's like, if you buy a car, and then it gets totaled in an accident. Would you expect that the car dealer who sold you the car in the first place would give you a further incentive to buy the car at that point in time?
Thanks for actually giving an argument :thumb:
I already noted, and you agreed, that the article is essentially:
1. The government subsidizes married couples
2. An important aspect of that subsidy is aimed toward helping those members of society who are fully capable of raising a family (procreation and all)
Your car analogy is terrible. The government doesn't give anything if the partner is dead. If part of the contract of getting the car in the first place was a sort of insurance in the case of an accident then it would make perfect sense that he receives something from the dealership after the fact. The dealer offered a benefit to buying the car because he felt that the purchase would be worthwhile. So again, I don't see how your question even hits the mark.
As a further challenge to the reasoning, I'd point out that remarriage of a widow results in the loss of SS survivor benefits, so these benefits could actually be a disincentive to marry and have children within marriages. These benefits are primarily about supporting the longer-surviving member of a couple, not encouraging children.
I'd say they aren't, and I'd say that the government isn't trying to extend the life of particular members of society. The government is rather offering an incentive to marry. The fact that the incentive carries into the future isn't problematic in the least; you are reaching.
:e4e: