williatw wrote:
Acknowledging that part is easy, few would disagree...the question is what would you do now today to fix the problem, not whose fault you think it is that it happened in the first place. I have said what I would do, what's your idea?
This has been much discussed in the past on this website. I personally think affixing blame is very important to the solution, because if you don't understand how we got into this mess, how are we going to prevent getting back into the mess the same way? As for solutions, I have long pondered how things can be made better. I generally fall back to basic principles which have been known to be successful. The first thing which needs to be done is to Stop giving money to people who do not know how to manage money.
Years ago I worked as a stock and check-out boy in a Grocery store. Day after day I saw people using food stamps to by crap they should not be buying. Candy, soda, chips, Ice Cream etc. and then abusing the system to buy cigarettes. They would buy a piece of bubble gum and then pay for it with a food coupon. The store would give them the difference in cost in actual change, which they would combine with change in their pocketbook to buy cigarettes. I saw many abuses and much fraud. The general practice was to sell food stamps for cash at a 2 for 1 ratio. ($2.00 of food for every $1.00 in cash.)
This system is far too convenient for the users of the system, and far too prone to abuse. However, the politicians like the system because it gets them votes, and the grocers like the system because they get their product bought and it requires little effort to process it. Grocers don't want to be food police for welfare recipients, they just want to make money.
Welfare recipients NEED food police. They need someone to prevent them from engaging in food stamp (nowadays EBT) fraud, and they need someone to prevent them from buying crap that is not a basic food commodity or that is excessively extravagant. The system is too easy for them. There is no incentive to get off the system, and many find it perfectly comfortable to continue using the existing system. The system needs to be inconvenient to the users, and it needs to be as efficient at feeding people as possible without permitting indulgences. One possible idea could be a weekly food truck where staple foods could be delivered directly to families in need, but without frills. The staple foods could be bought wholesale by the state, and delivered to individual families that need them.
The point is to feed people but not make them comfortable in their usage of the taxpayers money. It is SUPPOSED to be unpleasant to remain poor. Without an incentive to get a better life, too many people are content to just linger in poverty and let others foot the bills for their needs.
‘What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the damned fools said would happen has come to pass.’
— Lord Melbourne —