Imaginos1892 wrote:What leads you to believe that the Democrats give a rat's ass about The Poor And Weak? The Democrat leadership are some of the world's most arrogant elitists and they feed The Poor just enough bullshit to get their votes. They are told they are helpless victims of some unspecified sort of discrimination and oppression and that the only way they can get what the world "owes" them is for their political masters to take it from somebody else. Those who succeed by their own efforts and prove it a lie are damned as traitors. Is it because successful people don't need anything from them, while failure and dependency keep them in power?
The leftists seem to believe that the primary purpose of government is to take money from people who earn it and give it to those that do not. The result of their misguided actions is to punish work and success and to reward indolence and failure. They call this "progressive" but it sure looks like the opposite of progress to me.
"The Poor" are supposed to believe that because I have a little money and property it proves I've been "oppressin' and 'sploitin' dem po' folks" and has nothing to do with the fact that I took the trouble to acquire useful knowledge and skills, get a job, work every day for 35 years, and save up some money, and they didn't. Now I see losers with no knowledge, no skills, no experience, and no work history protesting for "income equality". They got plenty of time to demand "equality" but no time to earn it.
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Why do the politicians keep calling their runaway government spending "investment"? Because "flushing your tax money down a rat-hole" just wouldn't play well?
I'm somewhat in the middle on this. Your statement are largely true for the middle class and even most of the lower reaches of the upper class which work for their money. However at the top crony capitalism is becoming more and more of a problem. Trump is a case in point. He uses his connections to arrange sweetheart tax deals and make sure someone else takes the fall when he loses money. Similarly even at the local level connected contractors somehow manage to get environmental waivers that are difficult for the non-connected to get. Etc Etc.
So that puts me somewhat in the middle on this issue. You and the majority of the middle class aren't gaining your wealth unfairly but a growing number of people ARE. My biggest concern isn't the levels of this problem we have now but the levels we are likely to have in the future if this trend continues. I don't want to see the USA deteriorate in to a 3rd world style kleptocracy where the only way to prosper is to be connected.
I do agree that a subsection of the Democratic party is exploiting this fear and that this subgroup (mostly politicians and the like) genuinely couldn't care less about the poor between elections. Which is why the rank and file idealists who do care are so enthralled by Bernie Sanders. I disagree with their solutions on entirely pragmatic grounds (I don't think they will work) but I empathize with their emotions.
I also tend to agree that this exploitative subgroup is doing an enormous disservice to the poor by convincing them not to try and not to work hard. At least currently (if not in the future) it is still possible for most of the poor (but not all) to improve their economic standing. And there is a great deal we as a society could pragmatically do to help.
1. Improve adult education. We're lousy at giving second chances in the education arena. It is horribly underfunded relative to the need. If poor teenagers make the stupid decision to drop out of high school but wish to complete their education in their 30s when they are older and wiser and realize what a stupid decision they made when they were young and stupid they don't have many options.
2. Expand 2 year public tech schools and crack down hard on exploitative for profits. Right now the poor wanting opportunities tend to drift to the for profits to gain skills. Unfortunately that is very much a buyer beware market. Many for profits are great schools which do a great job of preparing their graduates for real world jobs. Others are exploitative parasites existing only to drain their victims of what little money they can scrounge up. Which is which? For the potential students it can be very hard to tell.
3. Set up childcare coops with (vetted) mothers. One of the biggest groups of poor is mothers. Finding affordable childcare is a nightmare, which big government has only made worse piling on compliance requirement after compliance requirement driving up costs. And finding a job where you only work 9-2 while the children are in school is rare. Vetted mothers (check for child abuse history etc) taking care of each other children is one solution to the problem.
Etc Etc
Unfortunately I don't see many of the Democratic politicians focusing on pragmatic solutions of this type. At best they mention such things occasionally. Mostly they focus on taking money from others using the Donald Trumps of this world as an example but failing to mention that the majority of the money will not come from corrupt crony capitalists but from hard working members of the middle class.