- Dec 18, 2010
- 18,811
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There have been some threads lately that have got me to thinking. In a republic, how much should citizens contribute back to society?
Is there an obligation to contribute?
What should society do about people who "refuse" to contribute?
Lets use 2 groups of people as examples:
1 - criminals.
2 - individuals who make a career out of welfare.*
Society frowns upon criminals, probably because the criminal takes more from society then they contribute.
Historically, society has tolerated and frowned upon welfare.
Over the past few decades, any shame that was associated with welfare has all but disappeared. Why is that?
Why do people vocally complain about the money spent on criminals, but are less vocal with people on welfare?
Why should different groups, both of which contribute almost nothing to society, be treated differently?
Group A - too lazy to get a job, so they sell crack.
Group B - too lazy to get a job, signs up on welfare, then does nothing to improve the quality of their life.
* There is a difference in someone that uses welfare as a helping hand to get back on their feet, and someone who lives their entire life off the system. This is about people who expect society to provide for them, while returning nothing to very little back.
Is there an obligation to contribute?
What should society do about people who "refuse" to contribute?
Lets use 2 groups of people as examples:
1 - criminals.
2 - individuals who make a career out of welfare.*
Society frowns upon criminals, probably because the criminal takes more from society then they contribute.
Historically, society has tolerated and frowned upon welfare.
Over the past few decades, any shame that was associated with welfare has all but disappeared. Why is that?
Why do people vocally complain about the money spent on criminals, but are less vocal with people on welfare?
Why should different groups, both of which contribute almost nothing to society, be treated differently?
Group A - too lazy to get a job, so they sell crack.
Group B - too lazy to get a job, signs up on welfare, then does nothing to improve the quality of their life.
* There is a difference in someone that uses welfare as a helping hand to get back on their feet, and someone who lives their entire life off the system. This is about people who expect society to provide for them, while returning nothing to very little back.