How are entitlements breaking our country's bank? I simply do not understand this. While I wish we could kick a ton of these low life's off of entitlements forever, the majority are simply doing their best to survive the life that's presented to them.
I don't think entitlements produces many votes because most of the money suckers are too lazy to vote. A party that atleast acknowledges poverty and doesn't blame inner city laziness will of course get the votes of people who come from that background however.
66% of the budget is entitlement spending.
I disagree that the majority on public support are simply doing their best to survive. I just know too many working poor (who are really doing their best to survive) and their neighbors riding on assistance. Drive down any streets in my small city during the day and you will see plenty of evidence there are a lot who are simply bidding their time until their next check. Now they will tell you they are looking for work and nothing is available, but then when you offer them an actual job the truth comes out. I have two good friends who run jobs programs in town. Both have plenty of opportunities that pay above what you get on welfare. They provide free training, help the person get the right clothing for interviews, the whole deal. One of the programs actually pays the salary for the first 90 days to reduce risk to the employer.
The hardest demographic for them to first place in a job and then have them stay beyond 3 months are young, 18-30 year old men. They are only about 30-40% successful in this group staying employed beyond a year. The next group is single moms with more than 3 kids. Older men and women, younger moms with 1 or 2 kids, tend to make it beyond the first year.
Now you tell me what this means. These young men, in my view, are key to those families escaping poverty. Instead, they continually fall back into it and continue to rely on their girlfriends to support them.
I can't tell you what the percentages break down to. I can only tell you that more often than not, when I meet the parents of my kids classmates, the married men seem to have jobs, the boyfriends always seem to be unemployed. And my count would be around 25% of the ones I've met are married. It is all anecdotal evidence, but that is the trend I see.
As to the voting issue, well you need to educate yourself on that. Spend an election day in downtown Philadelphia if you aren't sure.