Friday, January 10, 2014

Welfare is now #1 occupation in US

Build it and they will come!

Warning Sign Posted: Please do not feed squirrels. Feeding makes squirrels dependent on humans and increases their population so that pest control may be needed. Help the squirrels by not feeding them. - - - The City of San Diego [facebook.com] undated
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Might want to think twice about this. 1/10/14

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Clips from MARYLAND TAXPAYERS ASSOCIATION

Upcoming Event: Nov 18, 10 am-12 noon, Board of Education, 200 W. Baltimore St, statewide protest march demanding local control of education and questioning top down, dumbing down of education with the new common core system being imposed by both federal and state governments. This is American Education Week when parents are invited to schools.

Note: 2008 was the start of recession and our economy is struggling. You would think that instead of continuing to copy Great Depression policies of higher taxes, regulations and bigger government spending, politicians would change to opposite policies of lower taxes and less spending and regulation to spur job creation and improve living standards across the board. Below is a mind-numbing set of grim statistics.

Investors Business Daily, Oct 25, 2013


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Welfare, Not Full-Time Work, Is Now America's No. 1 Occupation

Dependency: "Is Welfare The New Normal?" we wondered in an editorial last Thursday, and we didn't have long to wait for an answer. On Friday an answer came back in depressing new data from the Census Bureau.

CNSNews.com's indefatigable data hound, Terence P. Jeffrey, dug into a few routine Census releases recently and discovered something shocking:

More people in America today are on welfare than have full-time jobs.
No, that's not a misprint. At the end of 2011, the last year for which data are available, some 108.6 million people received one or more means-tested government benefit programs — bureaucratese for welfare.

Meanwhile, there were just 101.7 million people with full-time jobs, the Census data show, including both the private and government sectors.

This is a real danger for the U.S. — the danger of dependency. Anytime more people are being paid not to work than to work, it imperils our democracy. No one votes to cut his own welfare benefits. So welfare grows.

In recent years, the welfare state has expanded to create an all-encompassing security blanket to protect Americans from all vagaries of economic life. For everything from losing a job to having trouble paying the rent, there's now a welfare program for it.

Those who say the poor deserve such largess will find no argument here.

Sometimes people have such dire need that a helping hand may be necessary, if only for a limited period of time. But this goes way beyond that.

According to official data from the government, 46.5 million people live in poverty in the U.S. Doing the quick math, that means just 43% of all those on welfare are officially considered poor.

When you add in other government programs with a check attached — Social Security, Medicare, veterans benefits, unemployment and other non-means-tested benefits — you find a whopping 151 million Americans get a check from the government other than an income-tax refund. That's over half our population, folks.

A Cato Institute study in August found that welfare now pays more than minimum-wage work in 35 states. Indeed, the federal government has 126 separate programs to help low-income earners.

"The current welfare system provides such a high level of benefits that it acts as a disincentive for work," the study said. "Welfare currently pays more than a minimum-wage job in 35 states, even after accounting for the Earned Income Tax Credit, and in 13 states it pays more than $15 per hour."

Given all the disincentives, it seems as if the government doesn't even want people to work. But why would that be?

Perhaps it's in the interest of those on the so-called progressives — those most responsible for the uncontrolled growth of the welfare state — to keep Americans out of work and dependent on government.

Sure looks that way. After all, for Democrats, dependent voters are reliable voters.

In recent years, government at all levels has hogged more than 40% of national income, an all-time high. This means the private sector — source of innovation, productivity and wealth — has never been smaller as a share of GDP.

This is a big reason why the government keeps issuing what Wall Street calls "unexpectedly weak" jobs reports. That there are as many as 31 million people, according to IBD/TIPP Poll data, who want to work full-time but can't find a job is a disgrace.

This United States of Welfare isn't the fault of the financial crisis or the Tea Party or President Bush. Nor are Americans lazy.

It's the fault of big-spending Keynesian policies put in place under President Obama that punish entrepreneurs, overregulate the economy, and hit small business with new taxes and uncertainty at a time when growth should be robust.

Workers without jobs turn to big government. Sadly, America, land of the free, has become America, land of the dependent.

Source: Undocumented email from a friend on 11/1/13

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