Welfare State

in #freedom6 years ago (edited)

One of the noblest elements of our nature is our desire to help the less fortunate. As members of the human family, we want to see each other succeed. It hurts any compassionate person to see others suffer. Governments love taking advantage of this and when they have the capacity to steal from everyone and control the conversation with propaganda, it’s easy to convince people that they want to steal from the rich to give to the poor. In reality, most government welfare programs steal from the working class to give to the poor in a way that entrenches government so it can continue to steal from everyone to give to the super rich.

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People support government welfare programs because they like the immediate effects. The problem is they don’t see the bigger picture and the hidden consequences. It is naïve to think we can simply elect politicians and trust them to address problems of poverty and wealth disparity. Governments have been the primary tools of creating wealth disparity. If we want to achieve a legitimate goal, using coercion will usually result in the opposite of what we want. The warped incentives of welfare lead to warped behavior like basing major decisions on qualifying for benefits. This is true of welfare programs that end up creating huge dependent classes of people who will always vote for more coercion. Welfare turns its recipients into government apologists who will promote a system that keeps them down because they think it’s in their best interest.

In the name of “fighting poverty,” governments create massive and complex bureaucracies that control housing resources and manipulate the labor market to force people into bad jobs. They spend stolen money on no-bid contracts for anything they can get us to believe will help the poor. If the people who genuinely care about helping the poor were directing those resources, they would be used far more effectively.

The realization that welfare programs are destructive presents another problem: how do we phase out these programs without pulling the rug out from underneath so many dependent people? The answer is quite simple: restore the power of local communities where people are affected. It might not be easy, but we will all be better off when peaceful solutions displace violent ones. It is also essential to remove economic barriers that stifle upward mobility and self-sufficiency, such as minimum wage laws, regulations that make it impossible to start a new business from nothing, or the laws that, in some places, make selling goods on the side of the road illegal.

Despite so much being taken by governments, most societies still have a great capacity to help the poor. There is nothing wrong with taking money from a government. Money spent on welfare is money that can’t be spent on violence. Nonviolent solutions are always more effective than violent ones. When we choose to help the poor, it is far more effective than governments taking our money “to give to the poor.” We can build the institutions and culture necessary to elevate the least among us without coercion. We can be compassionate without using force to help those in need.

Chapter 7 Section III From FREEDOM! by Adam Kokesh

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I am the author of FREEDOM!, a book endorsed (I mean banned) by the US Department of “Justice.” You can get a copy here. I’m running for Not-President in 2020 on the platform of the peaceful, orderly, and responsible dissolution of the United States federal government. You can find out more here. You can find an event near you here. Whoever has the top comment on this post after 24 hours can claim a free signed copy of FREEDOM! by sending me a message with their address.

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Great post. Resteemed. The government loves programs like these...they can take money from the working class and redistribute to the lower class, creating a class of people that become dependent on this government, which in turn keeps these officials in office as career politicians. The politicians give the contract deals to their buddies, and these buddies return the favor by giving campaign distributions. Leaving the hard working people struggling to get by and seeing their wealth handed out to the less deserving.

Exactly, thank you for the resteem!

Hear hear,

"......When we choose to help the poor, it is far more effective than governments taking our money “to give to the poor.”......"

Maybe there should be a Basic Universal Income managed by a cryptocurrency and totally automated. It could be using a similar inflation system as Steem does.

Agree, a BUI based from cryptocurrencies as a basis for everyone. Should people want to make more money with other means, they would be able to. Win-win for both sides of mindset on money-making.

Have you checked out grantcoin? There are others too but grantcoin is the only one I've researched so far. "The first cryptocurrency based UBI" I might have a referral link I could try and find if anyone is interested...

Beep!Beep! @shadow3scalpel & listkeeper @chairborne have your six new veterans, retirees and military members on STEEM. We’ll be patrolling by to upvote your posts (because you are on the list) and we'll answer any questions you leave us. Comment by @shadowspub. This is a opt-in bot.

Thanks as always!

another a nice entry in ur b n w challnge like ur always photos it is also best,,its really a wonderfull shot u take and black and white effects make it more attractive

Your Welfare State Post Is nice,

this content is absolutely momentus..i appreciate to your content..carry on your activity my friend...resteemit..

Thank you very much!

Removing barriers to lower skilled workers would definitely be a great start. The licensure statutes, taxes fees etc. are absolutely crushing to small start ups and those who want to do small odd jobs and day labor. Some cities hand out fines for people shoveling snow without a permit!

I also heard somebody talk about giving those who live in housing projects the option to buy their units. How much more productive would it be for them to own something that could be taken care of that was theirs, or even sold later to "trade up" rather than being stuck in a hamster wheel of dependency.

Voting for the next santa to dole out crumbs hasn't budged the poverty level an inch since the welfare states inception.

one of the few posts on Steem that I can get behind but still not really controversial enough to prove the use case. I still feel this place is still full of posts saying how awesome steemit is and very few posts that display any evidence of the promise of censorship resistance. As such I am still firmly in the "Steemit is a pile of shit" camp. Hope for better results in my next 6 monthly revue https://steemit.com/steemit/@jeza/bi-yearly-steemit-review

I am all for it however, the biggest Welfare recipients are big corporations. They receive way more money than the poor do. Of course we call this form of welfare subsidies, tax breaks, or tax havens and various other names.
With that money we can actually fix what keeps the majority of Americans poor, and that is the failing education system in America. There is plenty of evidence when looking at the type of education kids received prior to the seventies and the education they received today. From pre-school to graduate degrees everything is failing.
‎ Don't get me wrong I do agree that the current system of welfare for the poor needs a major overhaul overhaul.
While you are at it try to find the trillions of dollars the the pentagon has lost.

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