Hahaha, this mope thinks education means a life free from low-wage jobs.What a joke.
7/15/2013 9:38:14 PM
7/15/2013 11:09:29 PM
Eugenics ARE cool.This planet can't really handle 7+ billion people anyway, so we might as well save a buck in the meantime.Get ready for the pre-22nd century meltdown of all world democracies thanks to these pathetic worms and the new batch of dictators we will get as a result.They will combat global warming with the blanket of ash they envelop us in when they torch these dumb fuckers.
7/15/2013 11:34:33 PM
7/16/2013 7:20:52 AM
^different country, different opportunity available. Also, there are woman millionaires in Africa. Not everyone there is poor. Your point makes no sense in America. Are you saying nobody gets ahead with hard work?
7/16/2013 8:00:22 AM
7/16/2013 8:16:08 AM
7/16/2013 9:01:35 AM
7/16/2013 9:02:26 AM
7/16/2013 9:17:33 AM
Eugenics is terrible, and good parents can't possibly out-breed the legions of stupid people that can't be bothered to use contraception.How about "market" eugenics? Start paying poor people to have abortions. Problem should be resolved within a generation or so. It's an investment in our future.
7/16/2013 9:30:40 AM
7/16/2013 9:32:45 AM
http://www.ncpa.org/pub/ba680
7/16/2013 9:46:33 AM
Middle class people shouldn't have kids either. You never know when you might lose your job or get cancer, and that could plunge you into bankruptcy and force you onto government assistance.Basically, only the 1% should have children.
7/16/2013 10:28:35 AM
^I don't make decisions based on the "what-if", I do so based on the "what is". If I know I can't currently afford to have a child, I don't. If you make the decision to do so you shouldn't bank on the government with its infinite money to pay for your decision.
7/16/2013 10:39:42 AM
So we should sterilize people who continue to have children while on welfare, right?
7/16/2013 10:44:33 AM
^no.
7/16/2013 10:49:00 AM
So what's the penalty?
7/16/2013 10:49:36 AM
Starvation, duhSterilization would be cruel.
7/16/2013 10:52:33 AM
^^limits on welfare support. more kids = more money (as little as it is) isn't much of a deterrent to staying on the gov't dime. limits set personal accountability as the individual is required to make up the difference.^we also have a twisted definition of "starvation" as well. missing a meal or two isn't starvation.[Edited on July 16, 2013 at 10:53 AM. Reason : ]
7/16/2013 10:52:52 AM
7/16/2013 10:57:14 AM
Food Stamps need to be limited like Unemployment Wages. To what extend, there needs to be an in depth study on the statistics of it all and what it takes for people to get out of their situations (I'm sure there already is).I grew up on Food Stamps. As soon as my parents stepped foot off the airplane from a Thailand refugee camp, they were on Food Stamps. Wisely, my dad took advantage of some of the free education programs offered under the government programs in California. It took him several years to get acquainted to Murica, several more years just to learn English, and several more years to finish Community College. Our last day on Welfare was when I was 11 years old.So, it took us about a decade to get off of Welfare. And that's for parents who came here with only the clothes on their backs, 100% culture shock, and 0% English. Muricans should be able to do better.Of course, I can't say the same about some of my relatives. I have aunts and uncles who are still feeding off the Welfare system after 30 YEARS in the United States! Let's just say I look at them with some disdain and disgust. I really don't even want to be associated with them at family gatherings.Personally, any healthy person who's been on food stamps for more than 1-2 decades is a LOSER. Yep, I ain't afraid to say it. If you're healthy and have a functioning brain and body and are still on Welfare, then you are a LOSER. You're the scum of the earth. This is exactly what I would say to my relatives who are still on Welfare after 3 decades (that's if I had the guts to tell them in person of course ).You know how people buy drugs, iPads, or LCD TV's with Food Stamps (or EBT, the electronic debit version of Food Stamps)? They employ the concepts of trading and bartering. That's how my parents did it. Back then, Food Stamps came as a booklet of paper money. It was just a straight trade. $1 in Food Stamps, for $1 greenbacks. Though, they didn't buy drugs, they would use the money to buy other things for around the house. Relatives on food stamps still do a similar trade today, though it's a little harder now with the electronic version of Food Stamps.The life on Welfare isn't all it seems. We never got presents for Christmas. One year my mom gave me a bag of oranges in a brown paper bag for Christmas. We drove around in clunkers and beaters. We wore hand-me-downs and Salvation Army stuff. My BEST meal was at the school cafeteria. We only had one meal at home, and that was dinner. I never got the latest toys and gadgets, just whatever we found at the flea market or yard sales.So, part of me sympathizes with folks on Welfare because I've been there. I think Welfare is a good thing. But, it's deeply flawed as it currently is. Like the wise saying goes, "Give a man a fish and feed him for a day, teach a man to fish and feed him for life." No one told my dad to go to school, lucky for him he's not a loser and wanted to work for his keep. Welfare needs to be a proactive program. Not a reactive one. People who are on Welfare for decades need someone to step in and poke, prod, and push them and get them into education and work programs. It's almost like we need Welfare probation officers. Same with the health industry, a proactive medical program is better than a reactive one.You can't fix everyone. Some folks are just natural losers and scumbags. But, for those that can be helped, I think they just need to be forced to get out of that situation. Otherwise, people get comfortable. That's when Welfare becomes THE WAY of life and not THE PATH to a better life. And I think by limiting the amount of time you can be on Welfare is a good first step in forcing people to move on. The next steps are proactive education and work programs.SIDE NOTE: I just remembered that in the 2000's California passed stricter Welfare laws. It forced a lot of my relatives to move to other states with looser Welfare laws, like Minnesota. You see, some people are just scum.[Edited on July 16, 2013 at 11:06 AM. Reason : just remembered something]
7/16/2013 11:01:05 AM
Those kids in poverty should just lift themselves up by their bootstraps. So what if they miss a few meals on the way to school? They should be getting good grades at their terrible school in the middle of the ghetto or else their family will lose benefits while they're starving. It shouldn't matter if they come from a broken home where their mother has to work two shit minimum wage jobs to make ends meet to help pay for the grandmother's diabetes treatments and doesn't have any time to help the kid with his homework.
7/16/2013 11:03:18 AM
Also if being poor is so awesome, why don't you all quit your jobs and live on foodstamps? It seems like it's fucking awesome. You don't have to do any work and you get free cellphones and XBoxes and shit!
7/16/2013 11:04:43 AM
^^their parents should lift themselves up by their bootstraps. not everyone on food stamps lives in the ghetto.^free cellphones are available.[Edited on July 16, 2013 at 11:31 AM. Reason : ]
7/16/2013 11:29:50 AM
Exactly. So why don't you quit your job and live on foodstamps? I mean, it seems idiotic to actually work a job when the government will give you a great life for free.
7/16/2013 11:37:28 AM
^because I feel I should take responsibility for my own success and not rely on the government and other people's money to provide it for me.
7/16/2013 11:49:03 AM
*goes to publicly funded college**receives student loans and grants**complains about other people relying on government*
7/16/2013 11:50:20 AM
first one, yes. second one, no. worked to pay tuition and room and board completely on my own. third one, my complaint is on relying on the government, not government assistance itself. two different things. Government isn't some infinite money maker that can pay for everything.[Edited on July 16, 2013 at 11:59 AM. Reason : ]
7/16/2013 11:56:25 AM
So you're okay when the right people rely on the government.Here's afripino's argument in a nutshell: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTwpBLzxe4U[Edited on July 16, 2013 at 12:03 PM. Reason : ]
7/16/2013 12:02:53 PM
7/16/2013 12:11:28 PM
^in state tuition, but no loans or grants.
7/16/2013 12:17:12 PM
How did you get your job?
7/16/2013 12:39:17 PM
^found an entry level position posted online (monster.com), applied for it, interviewed twice, took a drug test (hair test), and accepted the position when it was offered. worked my way up to a higher position once it became available.or were you asking about my jobs during school?[Edited on July 16, 2013 at 12:44 PM. Reason : ]
7/16/2013 12:42:27 PM
7/16/2013 12:57:37 PM
It's because Black people are lazy, get it.
7/16/2013 12:58:57 PM
^^I know some people that are comfortable with living on welfare, yes. just because I am not comfortable, doesn't mean that everyone else feels the same as I do. ^that's racist!
7/16/2013 1:05:47 PM
Responsibility for one's own career isn't something that applies to children.If you strive for a developed state of living, then you have a part in the responsibility of assuring that the amount of resources for the development of children exceeds the need. That includes assuring that they have something to eat.Yes, you have a responsibility to other stranger's children. Why? Because they didn't chose to be born to those parents, and they will continue to live in the world that (I hope) you strive to make better. That includes all stranger's children, epically including the impoverished and irresponsible. If you think restricting births is the best way to do this, I don't disagree with you. Most conservatives, however, are terribly schizophrenic on this, both encouraging more unplanned births and fewer resources used for those children.I would hope that this kind of compassion also extends to the elderly, but at least in their case, neglect won't trigger knock-off effects that tear down societies. At worst, it's a painful and lonely death.
7/16/2013 1:10:54 PM
7/16/2013 1:11:27 PM
7/16/2013 1:12:14 PM
Wait, people hold other opinions than me about things?
7/16/2013 1:13:01 PM
Orphanages ftw.At least as long as this page continues the downward spiral.Everything God touches turns to doo-doo.[Edited on July 16, 2013 at 1:30 PM. Reason : and by doo-doo i mean black people]
7/16/2013 1:29:55 PM
7/16/2013 1:51:29 PM
^
7/16/2013 2:41:50 PM
http://www.deathandtaxesmag.com/202172/mcdonalds-suggested-budget-for-employees-shows-just-how-impossible-it-is-to-get-by-on-minimum-wage/
7/16/2013 3:17:10 PM
this isn't a "let's raise minimum wage" thread. one topic at a time people.^^I don't follow. am I supposed to reply with quotes from you?[Edited on July 16, 2013 at 3:19 PM. Reason : ]
7/16/2013 3:18:09 PM
this where you start trolling because you've been thoroughly trounced by multiple people
7/16/2013 3:35:55 PM
^this isn't chit chat. perhaps you'd like to make a valid point?
7/16/2013 3:40:38 PM
7/16/2013 3:49:50 PM
I dont think a minimum wage discussion is off topic since we are discussing the value / devaluing of work.More to the point that article shows the disconnect between a minimum wage employer and their employees (as evident by the somewhat ridiculous budget).
7/16/2013 4:03:37 PM
No one is stuck making minimum wage. You get a job at McDonald's, work your ass off and show up to work on time every day, you'll get a raise and eventually a management position.But maybe that's not the point. Maybe some people are actually lazy, they had a tough childhood, they never had anyone that encouraged them, they got a really poor education, or they were never taught how to handle finances. There are plenty of reasons why people are poor and stay poor, and it's not simply that CEOs are relentlessly shitting on them at every turn.Sending these people a check isn't going to help them succeed. They need family and a supportive community. They need two parents, not a single mother on welfare and 4 brothers and sisters. That would require that we end the policies that destroy families. That would require that we actually address and talk about the patterns of child abuse and child neglect in low-income communities. We'd have to talk about how corporal punishment rates in poor (especially black) families are FAR higher compared to the total population, and then we'd have to talk about how those practices impact brain development, crime rates, income, and virtually every other success metric in life.Politicians don't want to have those discussions, though. They want to send someone a check, because checks guarantee votes. Tackling long-term problems that are resolved over several generations doesn't get you re-elected.
7/16/2013 4:04:31 PM