Indeed a lot of people don't comprehend the implications of the fact that we've shifted dramatically away from being a manufacturing led industry to a service one.
Thing is not everyone is the same and none the least you had motivation that a good many don't have. If your not a reasonably outgoing person naturally that kind of stuff is a LOT harder than if you have a reasonable level of self confidence (or just don't care) and have good social skills - working hard is just one part of the puzzle.
EDIT: No doubt there are a lot of time wasters and scroungers on JSA but there are some living off those kind of benefits through force of circumstance - in my old job there was a lad who was there "voluntarily" doing some course related to JSA whose self confidence was completely shattered by an incident in his life (and left with a disability that meant he lost his old job but didn't stop him being able to do other jobs) and it took him quite awhile to get back on his feet.
You've not really thought this through have you? I suggest you go look up the costs of keeping children in care...
It is expensive, I do get that. Surely it's better to take them out of that environment, though. Remember, we are talking about the "lower" part of the JSA claimants. We all know that there is a large percentage of those that use the system how it is designed to be used.
It's a recurring theme to all his posts.
I love it when people walk blindly into a subject they know nothing about & declare they have discovered a silver bullet solution to a complex social problem.
Hallelujah we are saved!
Dude - no reason to call me an idiot, when you know nothing about me. Wind it in a bit. Perhaps I'm walking too closely to my quasi-anarcho-capitalist ideals, but that's me looking at the world from my own frame of reference. We all have different points of view, and like I tell my daughter, "if we were all the same, the world would be a
very boring place". So chill out and have a Horlicks.
To oversimplify my view on this: Government are not our keepers. Humans are awesome and do awesome things. We have created a system where some people are better off not working than contribution to society. This is wrong.
Also, the government doesn't have any money. It's
our money, and it's not fair on an individual to be forced to support, via proxy, someone they've never met, and might not even like if they did meet them. It's more a property right issue, in my opinion. My money = my property.
With that being said, I am also a realist, and understand why we have the welfare state we have. Being jobless with no means to support yourself is horrible, I've been there, and I suspect lots of people on this forum have. With the government being the intermediary between the taxpayer and the benefit recipient, they have an obligation to ensure that our money is being spent in the most cost effective way possible. Maybe that's giving the bottom of society types money for booze to keep them compliant, I don't know; but to me it seems that morally it is wrong to give people money for things they need, like food, shelter, water, etc, and allow them to spend that money on alcohol/fags/drugs/gambling. That's all I'm saying - otherwise, we should all just get £70 sent to us each week to subsidise the lifestyle we want.