OceanAnnie
I guess I have a thing against
- Joined
- May 5, 2004
- Messages
- 17,394
Can we come to some agreement here? Yes, there are people who lie and cheat the welfare system. Just as there are people that lie and cheat on their taxes (or just flat out don't pay them: The IRS has a huge gap between what taxpayers should pay and what is collected and have estimated that the annual net tax gap the amount of taxes that go unidentified and uncollected each year amounts to nearly $300 billion), lie and cheat on their spouses, lie and cheat whenever an opportunity comes up to allow them to lie and cheat. I don't like liars or cheaters, and I doubt that anyone does. Many of us also don't like liars or cheaters who try to justify their lying and cheating.
For some reason the issue that prompted this post causes more ire than when lying or cheating is tied to another issue. There have been oodles of threads on this topic over the years. They all end up bashing the majority of people on welfare. I honestly don't feel that the majority of people on welfare are lying or cheating. Every thread here on this issue takes a turn away from lying and cheating to harp on people who are on welfare for long periods of time, and how they spend their money, regardless if they actually qualify for these programs or not, or happen to be honest people.
I also think that there are many who respond to these kind of threads need to education themselves more about the culture of poverty. Middle class culture and the culture of those in poverty are like night and day, and those of us blessed enough to not be poor have a very difficult time understanding or relating to the thought processes of those who have grown up poor and know nothing else. It is easy for so many to point our well-fed fingers and tell others to "pick themselves up by the bootstraps" because those doing the finger pointing have the skills and knowledge to allow them to do so. I am saddened when I read how judgmental and uncompassionate some in our society have become.
I agree wholeheartedly. It is a cultural difference and in a lot of cases generations grow up entrenched in the culture of poverty. It's all some have known. It's an awful cycle.