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No, I didn't. You're dodging the question. I'll rephrase: Explain why creating and supporting generational welfare dependency should be considered a successful social program. If you feel that it should not be considered successful, explain the mistakes that were made that allowed generational welfare dependency to exist and grow, and why those mistakes weren't corrected.
Let me be blunt:
THE QUESTION IS STUPID.
The welfare system has had both positive and negative effects. You cannot summarize it's performance with a binary pass/fail assessment.
Location: By the sea, by the sea, by the beautiful sea
68,329 posts, read 54,400,252 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SourD
Why? I mean, like the Euro, NWO, flipping a switch to go green and dump fossils in one fell swoop, Wealth redistribution, promote diversity to no end, want illegals to become legal, tear apart the HC system, etc.
These are ALL social EXPERIMENTS! Experiments that they have no idea how they will turn out. Experiments that HAVE led to the starvation and deaths of millions of people! Why must they experiment on the human race like they do? I think they are dangerous as all hell for doing that. Just about ALL Communist regimes have tried these experiments in one way or another, they ALL end in misery for the people.
The welfare system has had both positive and negative effects. You cannot summarize it's performance with a binary pass/fail assessment.
That's just stupid.
That is my answer. Live with it.
You won't answer the question, and try to pull off a kindergarten-like 'that's stupid' excuse. Interesting...
What that tells me is your plan, like the progressives, is to have no intention whatsoever of analyzing social programs for problems and taking corrective action.
Given such, it's pretty easy to see how we ended up with a generational welfare dependency problem.
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