72o wrote:Titanic wrote:
Or fund projects and social initiatives which means that these people do not grow up in bad environments? For example, parenting classes, child tax credits, a healthy economy, suitable housing etcc...
What you are proposing is
precisely the problem. If you give them a nice place to live and money just for having a kid, do you think you're going to reduce teenage pregnancy? Teenage pregnancy contributes to them being uneducated and having less earning power, which makes them permanent wards of the state.
Entitlements are always going to expand the problem they are trying to address.
Enabling them to fail is what causes them to fail. The only way to stop the cycle is to end the entitlements, and make it clear that you have to
earn everything that's coming to you.
I think you misunderstood me. I think the primary objective of this social care should be before the child is even concieved. The government should be doing more to life people out of the vicious cycle on single parents, too many kids, living on low incomes etc.. A healthy economy and suitable housing falls into this (by suitable housing I meant building real places for people to live, not ghettos or horrible estates where standards of living and crime are awful).
Also, I do not beleive child tax credits are an incentive to have kids. I really don't beleive anyone actually sets out to have a kid for financial purposes (even if there are exceptions who do, they are clearly idiots as you spend more on a baby then a government could ever subsidise you). My parents recieves child benefits and I think it helped a lot as they went through a rough patch financially about 15 years ago, and that extra income made sure that me and my brothers continued getting the food and clothing that we needed. For the poorer families it means that the parents continuously have a fighting chance of providing for their kids and just getting them the cheapest option (which could easily be damaging in the long run).
I honestly don't believe any of these factors contribute to teenage pregnancies. The biggest contributor to that is a lack of education. If they knew to use protection, to take contreception, to not lose their virginity at 13 or something or had decent role models and confident parents then they the proportion taking that road will be significantly less. I don't think high school girls get knocked up because they just can't wait to get child support to help them take care of a kid which will cost them huge amounts of money and time.
Strerilisations is just too far for me, as well as paying them for abortions. Its like the government saying we don't want you to have a baby and is taking away some of their liberties with it.
The government wouldn't be taking any liberties, they would be voluntarily giving them up. I bet if the federal government offered $5K each to women that received federal assistance last year to be voluntarily sterilized, they'd get a million takers. That's a lot less welfare, medicaid, housing, etc. to worry about.
...and a hidiously low birth rate which will have deeper consequences in the long run. Why not let them have as many kids as they want but try to get them integrated into society?
I would rather the government let them decide what they want to do, but do everything possible to make it as benefitial to society as is posible with minimal costs, and also so that they can enjoy a good standard of living.
Sure, I'd rather be able to teleport wherever I want to go. But I live in the real world. What you are saying cannot happen. The government can't make people beneficial to society. That's part of "letting them decide what they want to do". Many people decide to be useless. That is their choice. But the government shouldn't be in the business of making these useless people, who are useless by choice, "enjoy a good standard of living".
In your world of rainbows and unicorns, people would try to be productive members of society because it makes them feel good or something. In the real world, it's always "what's in it for me?". If it weren't for the entitlements, choosing to be useless would have negative consequences, and would thus deter the people from being useless. Since they have the entitlements, the negative consequences go away.[/quote]
I don't think the world is full of rainbows and unicorns. I've been screwed over enough times to know there are true b*stards out there, but I'm still an optimist and believe the majority of people are decent enough and know the right choices.
To those people who are completely useless and don't want a function in society I wouldn't help them, but there a ridiciously small proportion of society. To those who are less well of and want help and are willing to put the effort in if needed, I would offer them greater primary education and healthcare, social benefits to help them live a better life, employment protection to prevent corporations abusing mothers and pregnant women and so on. All these things make a huge difference and can help close the vicious cycle and prevent just another kid being born who is almost doomed to fail and become either a criminal or a state junkie.