Dash wrote:
Yeah it's not even a matter of taking out more than you put in. It's a matter of do you deserve it. Do you need because you can't do for yourself or because you simply dont do it yourself.
If we're limiting ourselves to the subset of people who accept a handout lesser than or equal to the amount they've paid in, I don't see that I'm qualified to judge whether or not they're deserving of getting that portion of their own income back. I don't care if someone's being a complete slack ***, right up until they cross that point at which they stop consuming their own money and start consuming someone else's. Of course that's all a bunch of theoretical BS, because who knows definitively how much anyone pays into any one item or other on the budget.
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I'm talking about the bullshit "I'd love to work but I tweaked my back stocking shelves when I was 16" from a 45 year old man. Yeah he needs ridicule. Or the woman on her 5th child with 5 different guys and no job. She needs ridicule and she also needs to have a clause that says she gets nothing if she doesnt agree to go on birth control.
This I agree with 100%. It's clear cases of abuse like this that give other recipients of benefits a bad rap.
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On the other hand, the family that just hit a rough patch in tough economic times or had a tragic illness or whatever. Different category.
Again agreed - these are the cases I'm more okay with. The ideal for me would be the absence of such an expansive safety net in the first place, regardless of who's deserving or undeserving. On the other hand though, currently, we do have one. What I was getting at is that if someone's money has been taken for a social program in the first place, I fail to see the issue in them reclaiming what they put in (and no more than that) regardless of need or sloth or whatever. It's their money.
For instance, I'm paying who only knows how much into social security, and the most recent statement I got in the mail about it says that they expect it to be depleted in 2037, and that current estimates are (I think it said that) I'll see about $0.76 on each dollar I put in. Now, I've never taken a dime in aid myself, but given that the aid does exist, and it's coming from somewhere, I'm perhaps a little more lenient than many in gracing someone with my approval for their getting something back out. Realistically, I don't think any real aid money is actually coming from any of our own incomes any more - we pony up to service debt, and then we create more debt to perpetuate the fraud of the state of our social institutions. We're what, $13 trillion in the hole? It's laughable to say there's anything in any coffers at this point - anything we spend is pretend money that won't even be earned for decades if not centuries.
In Internet-land, it's easy to say that we'd love to just abolish social programs altogether, but political reality is that we're unlikely to see any officeholder with a sense of self-preservation say they think we should pull the plug on it. Given that reality, pragmatically speaking, who's to say that a position of "take it for all it's worth" isn't just as valid? Okay for some reason I'm thinking of Khross now, and having a perverse desire to facilitate whatever puts it all in flames the fastest