
Originally Posted by
time4fun
Part of why this is such a tough topic to talk about is that (US) conservatives and liberals have polar opposite perspectives on the issue. Conservatives are very concerned with the notion of who deserves help, while liberals are largely concerned with who needs help.
Ultimately though, the issue of poverty is not an individual issue: it's a social issue. Failing to address poverty has massive consequences for everyone, and treating it as an individual issue not only completely misses the structural problems that enable poverty in the first place, but it also exacerbates it and creates more need for the social safety net programs.
Take Welfare, for example. Right now about 45% of SNAP recipients are children. Another 20ish percent are their parents. The rest are more diverse, but the elderly and the disabled make up the majority of them. If we focus on whether or not the parents "deserve" help, then we're actually disproportionately harming children- literally taking food out of their mouths. All we're doing at that point is perpetuating poverty which just expands the need for the program in future generations.
Literally no one benefits from trying to cut a program like SNAP back. And doing so only serves to punish people for where they come from, not who they are. That's the opposite of a meritocracy, which is a concept that has historically been very important to conservatives.
There are over 45 million Americans living in poverty right now (~10% of all households), and our Welfare benefits are already so stripped down and have such convoluted eligibility criteria that only 70% of them quality for any assistance. 20% of our children live below the poverty line, and about 60 million Americans get some form of help from Welfare.
Taking money and resources away from such a massive percentage of our citizens just makes it harder for them to climb out of poverty. It also deprives local businesses, especially in areas with high poverty rates, of income. In turn that deprives people in the area of job opportunities (and often basics like nutrition) and causes massive spikes in crime from people who don't have enough to get by. Again, no one actually benefits from this.
But if we look at this as a social problem with the goal of providing support to families to help them climb out of poverty, we'll actually reduce long term poverty and create more opportunities for people who happened to have been born in the wrong zip code. Despite the commonly believed narrative that if you take money and resources away from poor people, that will somehow make them more likely to get out of poverty...it's actually the exact opposite.