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Not necessarily. Of course, the original constitution was aimed toward land owning white males so it really doesn't matter what their intent was, it was self destructive because of the hypocrisy...
iRoyalty
reply to post by trumpet
The founding father weren't too particular to privatisation, I believe they described a private own banking system more dangerous than a standing army.
Nephalim
reply to post by ketsuko
Whats the alternative? We don't need to know the problem we need to know the solution.
Telling people to "go work" is not the solution. If it were as simple as "go work" a person could "go work" whenever they pleased and get money right?
What can you think of to establish what I just said because that's all your pushing for, go work. Ok, well there are all types of "work." I'm working right now because I'm thinking and typing. You and I are discussing an issue, that's work. Work = the expenditure of time&energy in order to accomplish a task. That task must be of worth or value for compensation. Why are we typing for free and discussing this issue right now? We don't get paid for it, even under a capitalist system.
I don't believe the constitution is a socialist document Op.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on it.
kyviecaldges
reply to post by OrphanApology
Not necessarily. Of course, the original constitution was aimed toward land owning white males so it really doesn't matter what their intent was, it was self destructive because of the hypocrisy...
That is because the land owning white males were the only literate human beings at the time.
John Adams, the 2nd president of the united States, was against universal suffrage because he was of the opinion that the uneducated masses were too easily swayed by demagogues.
How can I not see the humor in the fact that the more voting rights were extended to certain classes, the more the actual behavior of the government has trended toward socialism.
NOT words, but behaviors.
The founding fathers were adamantly against democracy.
They called it the tyranny of the masses.
Before you start trashing the white male land owners that created the US, maybe take time to read the federalist and anti-federalist papers to see what you are missing.
Because you are missing a whole helluva lot.edit on 12/1/2014 by kyviecaldges because: Because I made a stupid error. That is why we edit.
ketsuko
reply to post by Treespeaker
The problem with the safety net is that it's all or nothing here. You are either all in or you are all out. There are a lot of people who are pretty much trapped. They could get a worthwhile job and start making themselves independent, but if they do, the lose a lot from the state - all or nothing. What they would receive from the job they could get to start out with wouldn't go anywhere near replacing what they would lose in benefits value.
For example, there are some numbers that show that a single of mother of three in Connecticut working full-time minimum wage and working the system for all it can provide can get enough in benefits that she winds up with more disposable income than a family of four making $64K/year. Now, if she makes a little too much, she starts losing those benefits and it won't be at all comparable to what she had before, so she is disincentivized to better herself. Considering the average income in the US is between $50 and $55K/year, she is going to go backwards for long time, maybe forever, before she has a chance of going forward again.
No social safety net should be structured that way. It traps people and it's what we mean when we say state dependents. They become dependent on the state to enjoy that standard of living because there is no way to wean them off. It is, in short, a ploy to create reliable voting pools. Who are you going to vote for: the guy who promises you a raise to your benefits, or the one who tells you he's planning to cut that? Oh, and at the same time, you have another army of state dependents who are created - the bureaucrats who administer all those welfare funds in all those programs. They depend on the government programs in another way for their own livelihood.
Often people mistake a reluctance and distaste for social programs as a indifference to the poor, but that's not what it is at all. It's a recognition of what's really going on with the system. Something else needs to be done with it to make it better able to actually do what we are told it's intended to do - give people a hand up rather just be a perpetual handout.
The answer? Let the churches, foundations, and local communities handle welfare and shelters. The system is much harder to game when the support is coming from a person who knows your name, can look you in the eye, and knows how often you waste charity on booze, women, drugs, and loafing. If government is in charge of these things, it's only a matter of time before camps and furnaces must be used to achieve an efficient economic homeostasis. The latter has happened in every single welfare state that's every tried it.
The system is much harder to game when the support is coming from a person who knows your name, can look you in the eye, and knows how often you waste charity on booze, women, drugs, and loafing.