frenchyd said:
Duke said:
In reply to tuna55 :
This.
In the first half of 1990s not much was getting built in the private sector, so as an architect one of our revenue-generating specialties was renovating public housing projects. We spent a lot of time touring and surveying typical taxpayer-funded public housing.
In about 1993 or so we were renovating a development of housing authority townhouses in southeastern Pennsylvania. The residents were always extremely interested in what was going on, of course, so we would talk to them a little.
I met an older woman who was considered the 'queen' of this particular housing project, because she had lived there since it was built.
In 1967. So tell me again about how the average stay is 13 months?. Now, this woman was maybe in her mid-60s. Which meant she had moved into this taxpayer-funded complex at about age 40... and never left. She had no full time job I ever saw because she was always there during the week with her nose in our business. Maybe she worked nights or weekends - but I have no reason to believe it.
She was also getting other public assistance because I saw her food stamp books all over the dining room. This was back in the day when they were actual coupons. I can only assume that she had been doing so since 1967 as well.
I can tell you a hundred stories about things I saw in public housing units all around the PA / DE / MD area, which I'm sure are typical of those in the other 47 states.
Most units were pretty shabby, and shabbily kept by their tenants; unclean and a bit crowded with junk. About 2 in 10 looked like a 'normal' lower-middle-income household, reasonably clean and taken care of. About 2 in 10 were jammed full of expensive rental furniture, big TVs and stereos, gaming systems, etc. Way more stuff than we had as a young double-income professional couple. Funny how those units always seemed to be smokers, too.
And about 1 in 10 was scrupulously clean, neat as a pin, and furnished with maybe an obvious thrift store sofa, a couple milk crates, and a small old TV. I never minded helping those folks. The others, not so much.
So now you are condemning a whole program because of the conduct of a few? I'm sure the lady in question did in fact move in as claimed. That happens. What wasn't explained is how did she wind up in public sector housing? Is she retarded? Some serious medical condition? Does she suffer from Down's syndrome Is she crazy? Only sane if on her medication? or some other severe medical condition? I do know no one gets on welfare if they can avoid it.
If you doubt me please try to apply.
Public sector housing is not welfare. It is an assistance program because few people on welfare can afford housing. Most of that receives major funding from the government or charities. Or a mix of state, local, federal,government and charities.
While individual workers don't profit from such programs the power behind the company often bribe their way into a winning bid through political contributions. So the profit must be high!
However it is rare indeed to get such housing. There is massively higher demand than availability. . I'm sorry I'm really tired and hungry so I won't look it up but off the top of my head one in every 3.? (May be a whole lot worse one in 7 ? ) Gets a place in government sponsored housing.
Yes I can believe some/ most places are pigsties. You're dealing with the lowest of American's. Inbreeds, retarded, mental instability, Down syndrome, And their children and their children-interbreeding with others of such dubious character. Yes, sex goes on in such places.
My question for you is. None of these people are really Stirling examples. So what should we do with them if not for Welfare and other programs that take care of them?
Remember, doing nothing is the most expensive choice.
I think it's important to completely exorcise case studies from debate. There is always "that one person" or "that small group" that can be used as an example, but it doesn't represent the whole population.
Its incredibly powerful for Oprah and Springer, but it doesn't further any cause in the grand scheme.
I'm all for the capitalist endeavor. If you make money, great. If you don't, great. You do you. What I can't abide is the government intentionally and corruptly giving $1.22T back to the 1% and asking us to shoulder the burden because our legislators benefit from it while we have real, solvable, tangible problems that could be entirely eliminated with a small fraction of that tax revenue. I also can't sit by while people turn away from the real issue, shift the blame to "lazies," and support the intentional unequal distribution of wealth. The same people who clamor about capitalism and "let me keep my money" are completely disregarding that they are the victims of the very problem they fight against. They scream "don't take my taxes for welfare" while ignoring the fact that their taxes are being ripped from them to support the 1%. They may talk about being charitable, but they are just passing the money up the ladder and further raping the lower income people.
I'm not suggesting we take all the money and give it out equally for everyone, but it has been a proven, known fact for hundreds of years that societies in which the law provides greater opportunities for people to achieve sustainable wealth and therefore a more equitable distribution of wealth are stronger and more successful than those that don't. I'm not talking about socialism or governments giving handouts to poor people, I'm talking about setting up a system in which success is facilitated, not thwarted. By that I mean not taking trillions from the middle class and stuffing it in the pockets of the already rich in return for campaign donations and swaying political favor. I want to see a system set up to facilitate a less biased distribution of wealth so that we can achieve success on our own instead of disproportionately giving it to the rich. We can't get there by dictating that we spread it out, we need to set up a system where you can succeed in your own way. We don't have that by a long shot.
Hundreds of studies have shown how a capitalist society that incorporates things like UBI, universal or single payer healthcare, and subsidized education are among the happiest and most successful societies on the planet. We do the opposite. We have the highest cost for healthcare, welfare dollars for those who need it are incredibly difficult to attain, and we destroy people's financial lives with student debt... all while ignoring some of the main causes of the compromised population; mental health. It's little wonder we have high crime rates and high suicide rates. We're broken.
So any argument for increasing exclusiviity, tightening welfare restrictions, or furthering the "I wanna keep my money" are not really valid to me when there are trillions of dollars that the government gives to the 1% while we fight amonst ourselves by shooting a person over french fries. Taking a step toward more exclusivity is a step toward serfdom. We need to evolve, not devolve.