kenberg, on 2014-July-11, 14:29, said:
I suspect I would be opposed to this, but I will wait for the details. For example, do you envision that every America, as a right of citizenship, be entitled to have at least X thousand dollars a tear? Say $25,000 per year? If s/he is not working, by choice or not, we would just give it to him/her? We do give SNAP, I believe it requires no proof of any attempt to find a job, so giving everyone 25K would be like SNAP on steroids, as the expression goes.
Here is a thought behind my question: There are two frequent ways of presenting the idea of helping the disadvantaged. Roughly put, one is to give them things, the other is to help them in their quest to become self-supporting. Of course we do both already, SNAP is very much of the first sort, Pell grants are of the second sort. I support both, quite possibly we need to do more of both, but first we need to recognize that these two kinds of help are of a substantially different sort. The second sort envisions people eventually no longer needing as much help. The first just sort of hopes that maybe they won't.
There are work requirements in SNAP. See
here for the details.
For the first kind of program, I'd rather think of it differently than "give
them things". More like "
we all have certain universal and inalienable rights". There rights include things like free speech. They also include freedom from want (E.g., right to adequate food; right to safe and adequate housing; right to health and to ensure all medical service and attention in the event of sickness; right to education and intellectual development). So for our society to be just and moral, we all deserve as part of our humanity, these rights and society should be designed and aligned to deliver on these rights.