I don't know, this thread has given me some food for thought, if you will.
As a conservative (btw, conservative is tossed around with bad vibes the same as liberal is to the left crowd), I never watch Rush, or Hannity. I liked Hannity for awhile, but the more I watched him, the more irritated I got that he found NO fault within his own party. As I've stated, I am a conservative too, but I can surely find a lot to disagree within a party that I feel I agree with on most issues. The thing to ask yourself though is, why are Rush and Hannity so successful? Disagree with them politically or not, they have HUGE audiences. I feel they have these audiences because the majority of the press is extremely liberal and there are very few to speak for the conservative's point of view.
Where the welfare systems is concerned, I too would love to see a lot done to help get people off the system and living lives where they contribute to society. In all honesty however, until jobs are created that will pay single mothers enough to support their families, I don't see it happening. I feel that some people sit on welfare, day in and day out, year in and year out till the oldest child reaches 17, then they decide to have another child. I'm not talking about those people. There are many people on welfare that would love to work. Taking a job means, you need transportation, you need new clothing, or descent clothing, you need child care services, and on and on. In reality, if the job doesn't pay X amount per hour, there is no way that family is going to make it! They'd pull their food stamps, or cut them back considerably, aren't some of the medical benefits pulled as well? There are no easy answers though.
I don't feel the government (according to the Constitution) owes us any of these benefits. If they're going to tax us to death though, they owe us something.
and....I'll take a lot of flack for this, but I think they should get rid of the earned income credit. I wonder how many millions/billions go out a year in these checks?
My take on the OP's original question has been answered by many already, but I think the Internet has done a lot to both educated the public and give the public a voice to express what they agree with, but to also speak out against what they don't agree with. This wasn't available through what, pre Clinton era?