July 20, 2012

  • Every person in America who receives Government assistance is a worthless freeloader.

    Every single person in America on government assistance of any type is a 400 lb. meth-smoking, child-abusing, alcoholic, freeloader who is too lazy to work and purposely sponges off the government while they ride around in those little carts at Wal Mart in their pajamas at 4:00 in the afternoon and run into you because they are texting on their new iPhones.  

    This seems to be the prevailing belief here in Oklahoma among every Republican. And since I’m the only Democrat in the entire state (except for Miss Order,) that means I have to deal with this cringe-worthy hyperbole constantly. Every time I sign on Facebook I find myself scrolling past memes like these: 

     

    I get it. You work hard for the money (so hard for it, honey) and you find the idea of giving part of that money to someone who doesn’t share your work ethic to be offensive. I’ll be the first to admit that there are many on assistance who are scamming the system. There are also those who have the ability and opportunity to work and simply don’t want too, or are using the assistance they receive on things other than baby formula and mac and cheese. I’ll also admit that assistance has the ability to breed dependency and complacency. But to perpetuate the stereotype that everyone on assistance is completely unworthy of it just makes you look stupid, insensitive, and often – racist. 

    I often hear the sentiment: “Everyone has the same opportunities in America. Everyone can attain the American dream through hard work and perseverance.” Really?!?!? Everyone in American has the same opportunities?!?!?! I don’t know what planet you’re living on, but it bears no resemblance to America.  

    I could point to the cliched trust-fund baby as an example, but instead I’ll point to myself. My father was unemployed when I was born, and my mother was very sick. Obviously we were poor and we lived in a ram-shackled rent house in a terrible part of town. My father did finally get a job but remained under-employed until I was in my early teens. Things finally got better and we moved to a better house in the suburbs.Then, just before I was going to leave for college, my father became unemployed again and took on menial labor just to get us by. College seemed like an impossibility but I was not to be deterred. I worked three jobs simultaneously while attending college so that I could pay my way through school. 

    I sound like a typical Republican who prides himself in having pulled himself up by his boot-straps and made his way in the world despite difficult odds don’t I? After all, I never received a cent of assistance (not even a government backed student loan) so obviously I didn’t have any kind of advantage that others didn’t have, did I? 

    Duh…of course I did. I was born a white male. That automatically opened doors for me. Even though I was born poor, I got to go to a good school system that provided me with an education that made college academically attainable. I lived in a place that had clean food and water, so I stayed healthy. I had the support system of a family that cared about my success. I had advantages that MILLIONS of Americans don’t have.  

    There are people who have been seriously injured on the job that need assistance. There are single moms who are trying to raise children and work and do the best they can who need assistance. There are people who are born in a level of poverty that I’ll never be able to comprehend that need assistance. There are hard working folks who have lost their jobs who are working at McDonald’s for minimum wage while they try to find better jobs that need assistance. There are people with no access to a decent education that need assistance. There are people who have no access to health care who need assistance. And none of these people are 400 lb. meth- smoking, child-abusing, alcoholic, freeloaders who are too lazy to work. 

    Sure, there needs to be reform so that assistance is going to people who really need it and not to people who are abusing the system, but that is a long and very difficult process. 

    I’m now an upper-middle class person who works hard every day and who pays a shit-load of taxes, and I don’t bemoan a single penny of those taxes that go to entitlement programs, welfare, or Obamacare. For every person that abuses the system, there are probably five more who really need the help to have the advantages that I’ve had. I’m proud that a portion of my tax dollars go to help those people.  

    I always thought America was a country of compassion. I think it’s sad that it’s it becoming a place where it is considered patriotic (and even “Christian”) to tell others who are less fortunate than we are to go fuck themselves. 

    Edit: If you’d like to see yet another example of this typical mindset, go read Dan’s current post.

     

Comments (22)

  • I do not understand how we have become such a society of unempathetic closed minded pigs, but we have. The only opinion that matters is the one that’s shouted the loudest or has paid the most money. It’s disgusting.

  • I hear you.

    what part of Oklahoma are you in? I’m in the NW part of the state.

  • It’s interesting that, when you really come right down to it, almost everybody receives some sort of government assistance at some point in their lives.  Student loans, healthcare, social security, medicare, rebates (eg for purchasing energy-light appliances), education, farm subsidies of various types, reduced utility rates, and so forth are all at least partially government-funded benefits available to any who need them. 

  • money and power. they are dangerous. and addictive.

  • Will the corn and soybean farmers avert disaster withthe drought? I believe farmers need a little bit of help when the weather turns against them.

    Similarily people have their health turn against them and a lot of families are only one health disaster way from money problems.

    Banks are getting too big to fail and we are forced to bail out some banks. That is a sign of an advanced economy, where safeguards are built in and we can survive small disasters. I hope our government is able to face the next disaster, Japan did survive their natural disaster.

  • I think a large portion of people on assistance have issues with mental illness which most people in this country won’t acknowledge. A person with mental illness cannot pull themself up by their bootstraps until they are successfully treated for that issue.

    It saddens me that so many people in this country not only don’t want to help the less fortunate but have been brainwashed by the likes of Rupert Murdoch and his network to hate them and worship the rich.

  • Hey, there is one more Dem in OK.  That would be me.  I thought I might be the only one.
    There is certainly a lot of ugly thinking in our state. 

  • yup. i’ve never balked at paying taxes. i don’t necessarily like where all of them go but when they go toward education or to lending others a hand i am proud to be a part of that. there are other factors too. in my early 20s i had some money saved and got an apartment with a friend in Queens, NY. i didn’t have a job though and was worried because i had enough money to last maybe a year. i got to Manhattan at about 10 AM to look for a job. by 1PM i had 6 solid job offers. solid like, “How soon can you start?”. i didn’t realize it at the time but later i realized it was because i was tall and good looking. people liked the way i looked when i walked in the door. my character at the time was less than stellar and i really didn’t have much qualification for the jobs i was offered.

    since the 2008 crash of the economy i’ve heard several people who are making big bucks now on TV tell how they were once on food stamps. they were obviously not lazy people. there are many people who at some time or another needed assistance and are now giving back.

    i’ll drag Romney into this. speaking to an audience a few months ago he criticized the President for wanting to hire more firefighters, police and school teachers. Romney then said it’s time we stop government spending and do something for the American people…to cheers from his crowd of course. i’ve never before heard anyone insinuate firefighters, police and school teachers are not American people. have those people forgotten the people who rushed in on 9/11 were firefighters and police and other emergency workers? i was there. i saw them first hand. in my 35 years living in NYC whenever i was aware the bunch of guys over there in a bar i was in were off-duty firefighters i sent them a round of drinks and thanked them for what they do every day. i thanked NYC police whenever there was an opportunity and i wish i could track down and thank many of my teachers. maybe i’m a little off-topic but i think it’s important and pertinent to the subject. i don’t care who you are. you did not make it on your own. there were tons of people around you and tons before you who have helped you along the way.

    sorry but one more thing. i read a story about Ed Schultz of MSNBC. he played football for a short time with the Oakland Raiders and spent time in the Canadian football league. he later became a conservative talk show host. he was of the mind that people taking government assistance were lazy good-for-nothings. one day his wife coaxed him to come with her to the Salvation Army shelter where she volunteered. he went reluctantly if i remember the story correctly. what he saw opened his eyes. most of the homeless people making use of the shelter were military veterans. the experience led him to reconsider his conservative principals. conservatives now hate him and consider him a traitor to the cause. good for him and others like him.

  • interesting thoughts you have there. my family received food stamp when i was little (single mother, raised three children, one of them was me). Now i work at a Social Work Department upon grading from UCLA (just finished paying off my loans). I agree with you that there are definitely people that abuse the system, I guess some people see drug users and gangs as people who need help too. I don’t really know what to say about those folks, i mean, maybe there should be a prioritization system or something…

  • I’m not a Republican but I don’t believe that the majority of Republicans actually believe that all people on assistance are lazy good for nothings. A lot of my friends are Republicans and they don’t talk that way.

    The problem is, there are far too many who abuse the system and it’s coming to the point where those who work aren’t going to be able to sustain those who don’t. It’s frustrating to get by on paycheck to paycheck only to be told you should be forking over more money to someone else who didn’t work for it. That means less clothes or food for your own kids. As a parent, it’s disheartening. I’m not against all welfare programs. But I am tired of the abuse. I have multiple family members who game the system and it sickens me to watch them do it. It’s ruined our relationship.

  • People who do meth are really skinny, they aren’t 400lbs.

  • I like to think that most of the time I’m able to put myself in the other side’s shoes, to understand their point of view, but not lately. What really frosts my cupcakes are the number of people claiming that this is the Christian way. I know that my Catholic version of the Bible is not considered legitimate by some, but I really don’t remember the part where Jesus said “Get your own and fucketh the rest.” I think he would be ashamed of us, as a nation.

  • “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and most important commandment. The second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets depend on these two commandments” (Matthew 22:37-40).

    Not a whole bunch of THAT going on, huh?

    In college, I wrote an opinion paper based on the idea that welfare recipients should be required to take birth control.  When I started the paper, I thought that sounded like an ok idea.  After researching, however, I did a 180 and completely changed my opinion.  Contrary to common belief, those who are legitimately “in the system” are not by any means getting rich off of having extra children.  Having said that, though, I realize that’s not exactly what we are discussing………There is a huge difference between those who are “legitimately in the system” and a whole lotta people who have found ways to abuse it.  When I was a poor single mom raising 5 kids with no child support I am certain that I was qualified for SOMETHING, however the system as it was required me to lie about this or that in order to receive assistance.  It was such a hassle, that I pushed the entire idea aside and instead worked 2 jobs and went to school.  Somehow, we survived, and I feel good about the way it went.  My children suffered, though.  They had an exhausted mother who loved them incredibly but had a difficult time meeting their emotional needs, and an absent father who was just plain unconcerned.  The system for sure needs an overhaul, but the poor need to be looked after, which will strengthen families, which will ultimately benefit the country as a whole.  What’s so hard about that?  And anyway, you can’t take it with you. 

    We are having an unbelievably difficult time this month ourselves, but as far as I know, there are no resources for temporarily poor people.  My husband is paid by commission, and this is the slow time.  By slow, I mean stopped.  Ordinarily, we would be prepared for these “seasons” but we have been completely devastated by the economy for nearly our entire relationship.  First, my husband’s divorce financially devastated him, and ultimately cost him his well-paying job.  (He did not initiate the divorce in any way; she cheated on him & took him to the cleaners.)  Then, he took his entire retirement account and started a modular home business, and just when that was beginning to turn a profit, the economy collapsed.  We lost our business, we lost our home.  So we have no savings and it is almost August, and we’ve yet to pay July’s rent.  Thank God we have the best landord on Earth (except for Miss Order, I’m sure!) but knowing that this is over our heads is giving me an ulcer.  I know that God loves us and He will provide, but this is all I can think about right now.  And this is how I think most people who are in this situation get there, or at least in a similar way.  Sure, I could’ve made different choices somewhere along the way, but hindsight is 20/20 and this is where we are now.  We are not bad people.  We’d much rather be taking care of the poor, than being needy ourselves.

    Mark 10:23 (ESV)

    23 And Jesus looked around and said to his disciples, “How difficult it will be for those who have wealth to enter the kingdom of God!”

  • “This seems to be the prevailing belief here in Oklahoma among every Republican.”

    Oklahoma – with the climate change high temps i’ve seen posted for oklahoma on the weather maps these summer days, i guess that explains a lot. too much sun and extreme heat on those oklahoma brains.

    i shall have compassion for those fried brains, and forgive them their insensitivity.

  • Thank you for this. There’s a lot of this misguided nonsense in Canada as well.
    And I will not give Dan’s site any traffic/hits/footprints.

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