strigori
New member
Take a drive through some poor areas in a city, there are plenty of people who do not have a reasonable 'place to start' they are starting so far in a hole that it is not a fair chance. Decades past simply a will to work hard was enough to get ahead. Its not anymore. So much emphasis is erroneously placed on 'higher education' that makes getting ahead a serious hurdle. College or job training takes some serious money. And there simply are not enough grants or scholarships to go around for those who would make good use of them. Jobs that used to pay well without a piece of paper are very few and far between anymore, as more and more companies put degree requirements to even app, and they don't even care about what a degree is in.Sure it gave people a place to start. The land was unsettled, basically wild wilderness. I still don't think it is very appropriate to compare the land grants to current day welfare handouts. Now if you want to compare it to college grants and job training programs, I would agree those are things to help give people a start. I don't view those types of things as "government handouts" even though technically they are funded by the government (taxpayers). I view those types of expenditures as worthwhile investments in our future. Things I do not consider worthwhile, in many cases, would include; extending unemployment benefits, food stamps, housing assistance, basically just handing people money to exist. I realize that there is a small portion of our society that is incapable of taking care of their own basic needs due to mental and physical reasons- those are not the people I am against helping. Hell, I'm not even against short term temporary help for capable people. What I am against is the system that teaches them to expect help from the moment of birth, that more kids equals more benefits, and that uncle Sam has their back in every endeavor. I don't totally get the whole notion of needing the government to provide a "place to start". I would need it explained in detail how anyone born in this country in the last 50 years didn't/doesn't have a place to start. The one thing the government will never be able to provide, no matter how much money is thrown at it, is drive, determination, and perseverance. If you were born in this country and want a better life, you can achieve it. It may not be easy and nobody is going to hand it to you but, you can get there from here. (why in the heck can I not enter/return to create a new paragraph. ughhhh) How do you know that 2nd number includes people on social security? I would be interested to see that ratio with/without SS benefits.It gave people a place to start. Many people on assistance right now have nowhere to start. Min wage jobs and no avenue to job training. The land grants would be more comparable today with the gov giving grants for college and job training programs. It gives people a place to start. Which one party is very much against.Strig- Getting land from the govt in that time period cannot be compared to the govt handouts of today. To make that land payoff a person had to do something with it. It was basically worthless without adding your own toil and sweat.
The thing that most caught my attention in this article was the statistic; 1.25 taxpayers paying for 1.0 persons on assistance or govt employees. That is simply not sustainable long term.
The second number includes all the social security people, which is largely due to the upset population pyramid due to the Baby Boomers. And the 'tax payer' number also only includes income tax citizens. But pretty much the entire population pays all sorts of other taxes.
We seem to be on the same page at least when it comes to actual job training and the like. That would be the equivalent of 'teach a man to fish' and I think attaching that to some of the welfare programs is a good idea, even though with the current state of one party, it would never get funding.
In one of the other threads there is a chart or two about the social security spending and the budget. Past that its just demographics of the massive number of baby boomers set to retire. Wall St will not be happy when that occurs.