Phatscotty wrote:That is the real end result where the fruit will be bore. Not only less people needing help, but more people paying into the system. Not to mention the pride and satisfaction, especially for someone who was knocked down into the dirt or in a rut for a few years.
This is a nice goal, but the above plan has so little to do with the real causes of welfare it won't impact it at all.
You pointed to your friend as a "classic example".. except he is more of an exception. Even when drugs are part of why someone is on welfare, just getting them off drugs is not usually enough to get them out and working, particularly in today's economy. People on welfare generally just don't have the skills.. and I mean as much "social" skills as straight things like adding and reading. In fact, the reason a lot of people wind up on drugs (weather on welfare or not) is a sense of dispair and hopelessness, often from real circumstances. Those "real circumstances" might be anything from physical pain (sometimesthe result of lack of medical care, sometimes the pain is just not readily treatable), mental health issues, circumstances.
You have been quick to criticize folks claiming "depression" as essentially lazy..but ask yourself how you would feel after being turned down from your hundredth job application, losing a child, or becoming physically incapacitated because you could not afford even basic medical care.
You want 2 direct correlations, very cost effective ways to ensure people work more? They are EXACTLY the thing you already dismissed... medical care and education. Universal and available to ALL.
As noted above, it won't keep everyone off welfare. Some people are always going to be poor, make stupid choices. However, for all the money it takes to rehab a heavy drug user, a little more money to help educate the kids and provide all around medical care will benefit society and the people involved far, far more.