If the threshold of being in poverty is say $20,000 and you make $18,000 and get $3,000 in government benefits. To you, that's someone in poverty. To me, that's someone no longer in poverty.
Nope. That simply means that someone is still at the poverty level being artificially propped up with taxpayer money. That is someone who is still in poverty. When that person can live on their own unassisted, then they are no longer in poverty.
I care about the output more than the input and I'm in no way required to adopt your definitions.
These are not my definitions. These are the charter mandates of the Great Society programs. I didn't write the rules.
So I think that government benefits are extremely relevant to this thread, PARTICULARLY if people are going to talk about the costs associated with these programs. Otherwise you have a situation where dishonest people like Paul Ryan call out the costs of these programs while attempting to ignore the benefits.
And I am stating that by your definition above, you are trying to alleviate the symptoms rather than attacking the problems. That is where I believe you and the progressives in general are on the wrong track.
I would contend the opposite. If you control for other trends, dollar for dollar spending on social welfare programs such as these has done a great deal to lower poverty in the US. I linked a study earlier in this thread that shows this to be the case, in a reply to you no less if I'm not mistaken.
And yet you have not really responded to my evidence that instead of reducing poverty, we are artificially making these people dependent on these programs and not solving the problems. You are saying that it is right to continue to keep these people on has burdens to society rather than raising them to the point where they can prosper on their own.
There is much more to reducing poverty that giving people free handouts. Programs based on merely giving people something for nothing and making them semi-permanently dependent on these programs is not reducing poverty. It is alleviating the symptoms of poverty at the cost of the American taxpayers who do take 100% responsibility for their lives.
Absolutely not, considering the evidence. Why abandon effective programs?
Because they are not very effective in their mission. We should not be trying to alleviate the effects of poverty. We should be trying to reduce the number of people in poverty, and steer them towards being productive members of society, not continue to prop them artificially through expensive programs. Thats the point.
Liberals have this mistaken belief that they are actually helping these people by hiding the effects of poverty and making them dependent on social programs. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
You cannot help someone by giving them something for nothing. You help them by showing them how to be 100% responsible for their lives, and showing them how to be productive.
I have no problem in assisting people. I know people make mistakes and suffer the consequences. I know people deserve second chances in life.
However, I refuse to support programs that make people dependent on them, that teach them it is okay to have a victim mentality, and that receiving something for nothing is not only an entitlement, but a right.
That doesn't solve societies problems. I makes them much worse.