Khross wrote:
If someone can survive on government safety nets better than they can a minimum wage job, then you have no one but yourself and your candidates to blame, Xequecal. If indigent, welfare status is better than $7.00 an hours for 40 hours a week to feed yourself, then our government is telling people they're too good for work.
I don't really disagree with that.
Quote:
Well, guess what?
Get a ****' job. If you tell me there are no jobs, then I will tell you to get new ****' skills. If you tell me you can't afford that, I will tell you to have planned better for your future when you were 14. If you tell me that's not normal, and most parents don't care, I'll remind you I was homeless for about a year after my 14th birthday and still finished high school on time without a foster home.
Really? Why should "I" get a job? What if I have cancer or a long-term chronic illness that I need Medicaid to treat, Medicaid which I will lose if I get a job? Why should I work for less money than I get for doing nothing? This isn't starting a business or working a shitload of hours as a doctor, layer, or tradesman, those jobs have a future. This is essentially paying to work at a dead-end job that gives me nothing, and you insist that I have some kind of obligation to do so. It's complete bullshit.
Like I said before, if you want to slash welfare programs, I'm fine with that. What bothers me is when it's done from the extremely dishonest position that every single person that would lose benefits as the result of the cuts deserves to suffer because they are lazy or immoral, based on nothing but the fact that they are collecting assistance. The vast majority of Americans, if faced with the choice that welfare recipients face today, would not go out and collect dog ****. Sure, they made better choices and/or had better luck in the past so they're not in the position where they have to collect dog ****, but it doesn't change the fact that they would turn up their nose at this job if it was a choice between that or stay unemployed. Their work ethic isn't any better than that of the guy on welfare. So if everyone on welfare is lazy, then so are the vast majority of Americans.
I am honestly having a difficult time even reconciling what people here actually believe "lazy" means. Are you lazy if you work less than X hours per week? Is how much money you make per hour relevant to how much you need to work to not be considered "lazy?" Like, I make $24 an hour at my current job with about 10 hours of overtime per week. It's very much in demand, so recently I was offered a second part-time job (20 hours/week) on the weekend for a similar rate of pay. Not wanting to work 70+ hours a week, I turned it down. Does that make me lazy? Do I have an obligation to work 80 hours if I can get it? What if I just worked 20 hours a week for nothing but pot and rent money? Most people I think would consider me lazy if I did that, but under your definition it seems like I wouldn't be. I honestly don't understand. Is lazy when an unemployed individual doesn't take an offered job, regardless of the conditions? I'm sure I could come up with a job description that 99% of Americans wouldn't take, does that make a welfare recipient lazy if they don't take it?