Kasz216 said:
richardhutnik said:
Kasz216 said: Well yeah, they were for much more efficent social welfare programs however and would never support the beastly monstrousities we have today. (Nor a crapload of the worthless stuff money gets spent on.) Like the negative income tax as mentioned. It's a way to get the poor what they need without crippling government inefficency.
|
I first went into finding this info, when I was trying to look into what note free market economists and individuals who offer a foundation for philsophical thought, had to say about how to help the poor. I have seen what looked like increase meanness for the lack of a better word here, for the current political discussion and wonder what the thoughts where on the subject, so it was look up Hayek and Friedman and see what they had to say. I was surprised to see that they were advocating a forum of income redistribution, which is now see as communist, and evil. Looking back at the time they discussed things, the idea was redistribution of wealth, not income. The idea of own owned the means of production is what the battle was fought over. Now, it looks like capitalism won, but the issue has to do with income redistribution, with individuals arguing now that NONE should take place at all. I remember seeing where Mises stormed out of a meeting of the minds that had Hayek and Friedman were at discussing issues and he called the entire lot Socialists. I also was curious to see what Ayn Rand had to say, and you have her defenders saying she didn't hate the poor. Well, I guess ignoring isn't hate, but the effect would be the same.
It could be also that the shape of the political debate now is to score points. You want to put individuals who want less government involvement in a box as hating those in need, so they have more programs to support, and the less tax, less money, less everything camp also including having those poor and in need as seen as lazy (interesting to go watch some Milton Friendman talk, and it is far more compassionate than what we see today). What I get most annoyed at is discussions and political views get less nuanced and more, washed in a simple mix of blue vs red.
|
Well very few people i've seen say the poor should get NOTHING, no more then usual anyway. Something worth noting though is the difference in what we think of as quality of living vs what was thought of as quality of living in Friedman and Hayek's time.
Back then quality of living was more "Literally not starving on the streets."
Now a days quality of living tends to involve all kinds of stuff involving many comforts we take for granted, like television, microwaves, a car.. etc.
|
The meanness I refer to comes when the poor get labelled with all being lazy and so on. Or, something like a reply on a blog that I should kill myself so his taxes would be lower and he wouldn't hear me whine. There is also a belief anyone can find a job, if they just look hard enough, so thus everyone who isn't working is just lazy. The belief is they should get nothing.
Besides this, the second one is that, the government should get out of the business completely, and have charities pick up all the slack. It was also expressed that if somehow, if you just cut taxes enough, then there would be a large amount of money flowing and people would suddenly engage in charity in a much larger degree. Any word this ever happening?
While I would be pressed to say that there are many people who blanketedly would say that the poor should just up and die, there are individuals who stereotype them as all lazy, or with drug problems, or have some reason to explain why they are poor, and if just "toughen things up" and if you threaten starvation to them, they would just get off their lazy behinds and work. I would say there is also a flip side, where liberals would confuse government run programs with charity (this line is what was said by Scrooge, when asked if he gave money, and he said he paid taxes).