traptunderice wrote:
while Marxists bend the law in order to prevent the implicit threat that Western society never wants to talk about, that some people live in awful conditions which can be rectified.
Dude, a lot of people lived in dreadful conditions in the Soviet Union and other Commie crapholes.
Socialism/Communism failed miserably.
And in Australia at least social security is so good that unemployed people live in 3 bedroom homes with a yard, pay next to nothing for medication and get discounts on everything from food to cinema tickets and haircuts. And if you have more than 4 kids, Government even gives you a Tarago people mover.
It's so good a lot of them don't want to work. Hence institutionalised social security dependency on a grand scale. There's whol suburbs full of people who don't work and have found ways to get out of mandatory work programs (e.g. dodgy education courses including doing University degrees over 8-12 years, carer's leave when they're not caring for anyone etc).
There are some people that live in dreadful conditions and are homeless but many of these people are drug addicts and alcoholics or are mentally ill.
Government and aid agencies would give them benefits, a home and all the perks if these people wanted to.
Very often they do not and you cannot force people to be something they don't want to be.
Some aborigines in the North also live in bad conditions. Again Government and aid agencies provide massive amounts of aid including housing and $60,000 4WD/SUVs.
Again the massive drug and alcohol problems in these communities coupled with social welfare dependency means they don't often try to improve their lot.
traptunderice wrote:
Where recognizing that some people starve and live on dimes is something that it's hard to argue against always seeking to correct.
People make their own choices and create their own circumstances.
I lived in a poor suburb where unemployment was rife. I went to University and got out of the poverty trap. My brother got a good paying job as well.
Yet so many of my friends became drug addicts (mainly thanks to Pulp Fiction - that movie inspired a lot of my friends to get onto the hard stuff) who are uneployed. Even many of the one's that didn't become drug addicts became unemployed "dole bludgers."
They had the same opportunities as I did. They just chose not to exercise one them and instead came up with lame excuses as to why they can't work.
Funniest one was at a party where one guy was sitting smoking pot.
He had blue eyes and blond hair. He considered himself Aboriginal (so many white Australians do because the social security benefits are better than for non-Aboriginals).
As he was smoking bongs, he talked about how he couldn't get a job because he was Aboriginal.
Truth was he couldn't get a job because he sat around all day smoking drugs. Only "work" he did was the odd burglary or casual assault at the local pub.
These are the results of income distribution policies.