ok doser
lifeguard at the cement pond
Thats just it, who gets to define legitimate need?
why, the libs do, as long as they're spending other people's money
Thats just it, who gets to define legitimate need?
Everyone has something their tax dollars are spent on that they find objectionable. That's why a while back I noted the Amish.Sure they are, or tax money wouldnt be spent on things like tranny surgery and hormones for lifers in a mans prison to make them more feminine.
We the people, through our duly elected representatives. But if someone wants to dispute the need for shelter and food I think we should debate the need for a commitment hearing next.Thats just it, who gets to define legitimate need?
Everyone has something their tax dollars are spent on that they find objectionable. That's why a while back I noted the Amish.
What I'm speaking to are programs that feed and house those who cannot feed and house themselves.
We the people, through our duly elected representatives. But if someone wants to dispute the need for shelter and food I think we should debate the need for a commitment hearing next.
Is OP trying to make the case that we should support the government welfare state because there is a beggar in the Bible?
What a stupid notion.
For a start, begging is work — and characterized as such in scripture.
Moreover, the rich man is criticized because he did not act out of charity, not because he did not endorse state interference.
Government welfare is not work; it is stealing from the rich and providing a disincentive to work. It is demonstrably inefficient and destructive.
Our resident "scholar" has nothing. Again.
Rather more a case of drawing a comparison between the callous indifference of the rich man...
i wonder if it's beyonce? :chuckle:
You must have missed a few posts then. I'm objecting to those who believe (and a few have been clear enough) that welfare isn't a legitimate interest of the state and that attempting it with tax dollars is tantamount to thievery.Seems like you are moving the goalposts to me since no one has objected to those who have real needs being given help.
I'd say people with that sickness are in need of compassion and assistance in more, not fewer, ways.I would argue though about a drunk/addict who cannot house themselves because they refuse to stay clean and prefer to live on the street rather than be held to anyones guidelines for help
Not unless you're among the group I'm speaking to, which would surprise me.Think i need to be committed now?
I thought it was only a matter of time before you might.Oh snap.
I thought it was only a matter of time before you might.
No thanks to your efforts to conflate the two.I don't think anyone is confused on the point.
Charity is not achieved through the welfare state.Then money given to assist those in legitimate need shouldn't give them pause. I doubt anyone is completely satisfied with how their tax dollars are spent, but I'm speaking to this one, not everything else you feel like piling atop it to obscure the point.
Nope. When I make an assertion I am willing and able to explain my position.That's literally your methodology, declaration without supportive tissue.
:AMR:That's a lot of assumption. The weakness of it is easy enough to illustrate: "It is demonstrably harmful and destructive for a government to force people to obey the law by threat of prison."
Nope.Or, a consequence for failing to do what we ought to do, before we even get to professing a willingness to do, is a consequence that should only be feared or resented by those who don't mean to actually do it.
Names.Rather more a case of drawing a comparison between the callous indifference of the rich man in the story to that of several on the hard right to those out of work or down on their luck etc.
Yes.So a homeless person asking for spare change is 'working'?
All of those people who still pay their taxes even though it gets wasted?What exactly is charitable about the attitudes of those who would do away with a system where without it the poverty rate would skyrocket? Some of you lot don't even think people should be entitled to water for Pete's sake.
Government welfare — which is not an individual's charity — is not work; it is stealing from the taxpayer and providing a disincentive to work. It is demonstrably inefficient and destructive.
Complete nonsense. So you're right back in your wheelhouse.
Government welfare is not work; it is stealing from the taxpayer and providing a disincentive to work. It is demonstrably inefficient and destructive.
...Complete nonsense....
So we have a coherent idea that you disagree with, but instead of addressing it sensibly, perhaps by asking me to explain my position more, you call me an idiot.
... declaration without supportive tissue. ...
I'm "keen" for people to read what I've said on the topic. You're "keen" to cherry pick a sentence without broader context and place it out of order to attempt a distortion that makes you look good, which is a bit sad.Because you're so keen for people to review what you say, here it is:
Except that the sentence you use to mischaracterize me didn't do that and isn't the answer to the sentence you actually posted before it. Now here's what the truth looked like:So we have a coherent idea that you disagree with, but instead of addressing it sensibly, perhaps by asking me to explain my position more, you call me an idiot.
Caring for our neighbors in need is a public virtue. The exercise of our collective will is both noble and good where that will serves those who are not in a position to help themselves and anyone callous enough to believe the disabled, children, and the elderly who constitute the lion's share of that national charity, along with others who for legitimate reasons can't fend for themselves in a moment, anyone who believes those people or the nation that responds to them are thieves and the collective largess of a nation is thievery? Those people have a heart condition that isn't covered by health insurance and are only exhibiting signs of their own disability, which I suppose means the thing to do is be charitable as we can be without allowing them to harm others.Government welfare is not work; it is stealing from the rich and providing a disincentive to work
Complete nonsense. So you're right back in your wheelhouse.It is demonstrably inefficient and destructive.
Nope.
Rather, government can present the most efficient means to meet a serious problem of larger need by virtue of its ability to organize and present resources. That's why we don't cross our fingers and hope enough people figure out what to do on the heels of a natural disaster.When there is need in society, charity is efficient and real when a man sees it and meets it.
Except, of course, government aid is predicated on qualification by need and the "threat of force" I've answered prior. Stripe thinks that slathering the ominous on it will stir outrage, but he already tried it a bit earlier. Only instead of "threat of force" he used imprisonment. Here's how that went:The government taking money at threat of force to dole it out based on qualification — not need — is a completely different scenario.
That's a lot of assumption. The weakness of it is easy enough to illustrate: "It is demonstrably harmful and destructive for a government to force people to obey the law by threat of prison." Or, a consequence for failing to do what we ought to do, before we even get to professing a willingness to do, is a consequence that should only be feared or resented by those who don't mean to actually do it.It is demonstrably harmful and destructive for a government to force charity out of people at the threat of prison.
Yes, you can't just hand out money and hope for the best.It involves hiring scores of people, writing lengthy regulations and scrutinizing people to make sure they qualify.
It is public charity, where the state does what Stripe would leave to the individual and does it better.Welfare is not charity.
Except that the sentence you use to mischaracterize me isn't the answer to the sentence you post before it.
(welfare) is public charity, where the state... does it better.
I see ... doser ...
... trying to bury ...(my) response ...