Westernskies
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
- Joined
- May 5, 2008
- Messages
- 3,864
I prefer not to have tax dollars spent on illegal drugs...but hey, that's just me.
no, bbamI, that's not just you...
I prefer not to have tax dollars spent on illegal drugs...but hey, that's just me.
If the Congress critters and White House can get angry about allowing large bonuses to be paid to employees of a company receiving government assistance, why can't I be angry when I see welfare recipients use money for food and rent buy drugs. Laws are being contemplated to stop the bonuses, why can't laws be passed that will protect the taxpayers role in providing assistance to those individuals who ask the government for a bailout?
Don't give me the crap that it's all about their civil rights. The bonuses paid were specifically allowed by law. There was nothing illegal about them, yet that doesn't seem to have stopped the critters from demanding some onerous tax scheme to seize the property of the populace. Using drugs is illegal. Using my tax money to buy illegal drugs is not and has not ever been legal. Why can't I demand those people who have shown an inability to manage their lives be required to live their lives in a legal manner? What costs more drug testing and rehab or the cycle of dependence with intermittent periods under correction control.
Why not?
My momma was and still is a card carrying member of that group. A lot of hugging and a few spankings...One group believes that we are all responsible for our own actions, both the good and bad.
Where you and I would see a drug addict, others will see a "troubled individual downtrodden by society". One grouip belives that we are all responsible for our own actions, both the good and bad. The other group claims the only reason people ever do bad things is because of a "misunderstanding" or were forced into doing it by "society" pressure. Essentially, one reason or another why an individuals actions are not his/her personal fault.
I'm in the group that believes there are more than two groups. The "shades of grey" group.
harley, I also find myself in the "shades of grey" group on many issues. It's usually easy to think of an extreme situation where most would agree one way or another. There is the case of a person who takes welfare to fund a drug habit and is not really benefiting from the subsidy. How about the person who is trying to quit drugs and has a slip up? What happens to the kids in these cases? The "shades of grey" make things much more complex.
Take the death penalty for example. Most of us can think of an act so heinous the death penalty would seem to make sense. Hey, if Hitler survived WWII, how many people would have argued he should be spared? The problem is, where do you draw the line? Most of us would be all over the board if presented with a number of potential death penalty cases.
Almost nothing is black and white.
Or even right here!Put 10 people in a room and tell them to come up with a "consensus" where no person in the room has any more power or authority than anyone else. Then sit back and watch the fun begin. In short order it will turn into an endless and often circular debate that will NEVER get resolved. I have watched this one happen in countless business meetings.
I don't disagree with the general premise, and you're more than welcome to be angry about it. And I don't see where the bonus issue even applies to this. A completely different boondoggle.
I'm just saying that in this case the cure is worse than the disease. IMO it's not about civil rights, it's about possible success. So you take away the benefits from the parents (and the children). You have a bunch of poor people living and starving on the streets? With their children? This would certainly result in increased crime as some of them tried to find other ways to get the money. Or you put the parents in jail, and turn the children over to our oh so functional and well funded Social Services and Foster Care systems? I just don't see the benefit from either a personal or cost basis.
Every time I see the goverment(s) do something like this, it either never actually gets off the ground due to being mostly hot air poorly thought out and executed, or it falls victim to the law of unintended consequences and creates so many problems they end up passing 16 other laws to try to control the mess. Beware politicians trying to "do something". If they were smart enough to solve these problems, or even think them through, they'd either get a real job or maybe even be FIREd. IMO, it won't make it better and will probably make it worse. I say leave well enough alone.
harley, I also find myself in the "shades of grey" group on many issues. It's usually easy to think of an extreme situation where most would agree one way or another. There is the case of a person who takes welfare to fund a drug habit and is not really benefiting from the subsidy. How about the person who is trying to quit drugs and has a slip up? What happens to the kids in these cases? The "shades of grey" make things much more complex.
Take the death penalty for example. Most of us can think of an act so heinous the death penalty would seem to make sense. Hey, if Hitler survived WWII, how many people would have argued he should be spared? The problem is, where do you draw the line? Most of us would be all over the board if presented with a number of potential death penalty cases.
Almost nothing is black and white.
IMHO...You cannot legislate morality or abstinence from drugs above and beyond what law enforcement is able to do at street level.Sigh.... so true... There is no way to "legislate" responsible behavior. I guess the best you can do is make it as difficult as you can to "milk" the system, and then hope for the best.
I agree with you the very notion of the govt telling me, or anyone else what to do with their lives, rubs me just about every wrong way..
Overcoming Bias: The Fallacy of GrayThe Fallacy of Gray
The Sophisticate: "The world isn't black and white. No one does pure good or pure bad. It's all gray. Therefore, no one is better than anyone else."
The Zetet: "Knowing only gray, you conclude that all grays are the same shade. You mock the simplicity of the two-color view, yet you replace it with a one-color view..."
-- Marc Stiegler, David's Sling
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Addendum: G points us to Asimov's The Relativity of Wrong: "When people thought the earth was flat, they were wrong. When people thought the earth was spherical, they were wrong. But if you think that thinking the earth is spherical is just as wrong as thinking the earth is flat, then your view is wronger than both of them put together."
Dang, I'm confused now. Heck, I've gone through most of my life being confused....but maybe confusion is a good thing
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Did you leave a "not" out somewhere?
IMHO...You cannot legislate morality or abstinence from drugs above and beyond what law enforcement is able to do at street level.
What you can do is provide a major deterrent to continued daily drug use. Fail the test, no check. Try again next week.
Theoretically, with emphasis on the theoretical part, drug abusers who may still be reachable just may be able to stay clean for a day or two before the check date. Most won't and will resort to other means (robbery, hooking, barter) to get money for the fix.
As far as black and white, this just wouldn't be the same without the shades of grey.
At the end of the day all decisions are black and white. You will choose to go left or right.
My momma was and still is a card carrying member of that group. A lot of hugging and a few spankings...
Somehow I thought you might.....I vote for more spankings...