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Brian4Liberty
02-11-2014, 03:26 PM
FDR: Welfare is "a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit."

Instead of jobs for Americans, it's food stamps, extended unemployment payments, Medicaid and welfare. A more effective plan for destroying the human spirit and personal dignity could not be devised in hell itself. Keep the people helpless and dependent, and there will always be demand for Big Mommy government.


The Great Society’s Great Cost
By Patrick J. Buchanan • February 11, 2014

The Congressional Budget Office did not exactly say Obamacare would cost the nation 2.5 million jobs.

But what it did say is vindication of what conservatives have preached since Barry Goldwater stood in the pulpit 50 years ago:

The more liberal the welfare state, the greater the disincentive to work and the more ruinous the impact upon a nation’s work ethic.

The CBO has just given us a statistical measure of that truth.

The Obamacare subsidies, it said, will cause some to quit work, others to cut back on the hours they work, and others to hold off going to work, so as not to lose the benefits.

The cumulative impact of all these decisions will be equal to the loss of 2.5 million jobs by 2024. A devastating blow to an economy where the labor force participation is at a 30-year low.

The CBO has put a number on what everyone knows to be true: If people don’t have to work to provide the needs of their daily lives, some will drop out and become permanent charges on the public purse, deadbeats.

The father of modern liberalism, FDR, never disputed this. As he warned in 1935, welfare is “a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit.”

This used to be called common sense. Growing up, we all knew or read that those who inherited great wealth often ended up never holding a “real job” and spent their days in a life of self-indulgence.
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Yet, if we judge the Great Society by its goal, providing the poor with their basic family needs so they can go out into the marketplace and find jobs and join their fellow Americans, it has been, writes Rector, “a catastrophe.”

Scores of millions of Americans are today less able to achieve self-sufficiency through work than were their grandparents.
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More:
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-great-societys-great-cost/

Brian4Liberty
02-12-2014, 02:24 PM
433274266658689024

DamianTV
02-12-2014, 05:02 PM
And people respond to incentives...