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Old 01-09-2014, 06:41 PM
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dellinger63 dellinger63 is offline
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Default The War on Poverty Our Longest War

Viet Nam lasted eight and a half years and was our longest until June of 2010 when Afghanistan surpassed that mark and took over the title of the longest at eleven and a half years and still running, though I believe we’re now officially peace keeping and no longer at ‘war’.

However just this week we were reminded of a war we’ve been involved in for fifty years and still counting. This is of course the war on poverty.

The programs started and formed to fight this war were noble and well-intended, however what started out well-intended quickly became destructive.

Brand new public housing projects were built with the best intentions and quickly became urine stained, gang infested, crime laden slums no matter where they were built. Though I must acknowledge who could foresee anyone relieving themselves in the stairwells of the same building one calls home?

When welfare programs were designed and set up with focus on single mothers they were put in place to aid single mothers not encourage children to be born out of wedlock, but that’s exactly what occurred. The war on poverty was initiated a year after MLK’s I have a dream speech. I don’t think President Johnson or Dr. King ever foresaw in their wildest dreams, fifty years later, over half, 54% of black children would be born out of wedlock. That Baby Daddy would be more common than Dad.

This trend isn’t exclusive to race as children in white and Hispanic households also have experienced a rise in single parent households albeit at a lessor percentage. Study after study have shown children born and raised in a two parent household do better in virtually everything sans dropping out of high school or being arrested. Unfortunately we are now reaping what we unintentionally sowed.

In 2013 $1.143 trillion was spent on social programs excluding social security. That comes to $3.13 billion a day or $26 a day spread among 120 million taxpayers. Imagine the influx to the economy if every taxpayer had an extra $200 in his pocket every week? How many jobs would that create? How many would escape poverty and no longer live as taxpayer dependents?

The war on poverty is certainly a war we can’t surrender however the plan of attack needs to be drastically changed. What we’ve done the last fifty years has not only been costly but it’s also been destructive to the very people it was designed to aid. It’s time to withdraw and go into peace keeping mode. Allow and have faith/hope in America to do what she does best without government interference.
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Old 01-09-2014, 07:04 PM
Ocala Mike
 
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Default The War on Poverty Our Longest War

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Originally Posted by dellinger63 View Post

Allow and have faith/hope in America to do what she does best without government interference.
We did that during the 20's, and it resulted in a near-fatal brush with economic ruin. America is at its best with a government responsive to its citizens' needs.
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Old 01-09-2014, 07:13 PM
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dellinger63 dellinger63 is offline
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Originally Posted by Ocala Mike View Post
We did that during the 20's, and it resulted in a near-fatal brush with economic ruin. America is at its best with a government responsive to its citizens' needs.
What was the percentage of children born out of wedlock and of those, how many were raised by their birth mothers?

Just because a leader, Pastor and almost head of a movement has a bastard child doesn't make it right religiously, secularly or financially.
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Old 01-09-2014, 07:30 PM
Ocala Mike
 
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I fail to see how "America being America" would solve the illegitimate birth rate situation, although I certainly see how changes in cultural norms have enormous impacts on the economy.

Not sure who you are referring to in your last sentence, though.
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Old 01-09-2014, 07:41 PM
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Not sure who you are referring to in your last sentence, though.
My apologies it was the impetus of my post and thought I included:

http://www.suntimes.com/news/politic...n-poverty.html
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Old 01-09-2014, 07:44 PM
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I fail to see how "America being America" would solve the illegitimate birth rate situation, although I certainly see how changes in cultural norms have enormous impacts on the economy.
How many high/grade school mothers chose birth over abortion/adoption because of the support the government gives/promises, not only likely ruining/limiting their lives but also those of their children?

If we're going to invest let's invest wisely!
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