HardOCP News
[H] News
- Joined
- Dec 31, 1969
- Messages
- 0
What a thrill it must be to sit in power of other people's money.
Amen to that.
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What a thrill it must be to sit in power of other people's money.
In other news, 270000 laptops were added to Ebay this week....
Im from the UK too and this is a joke. If the government wants to add IT for kids lets put more computers in schools and have the IT room open after school so kids with no internet can use them. This way its fair for everyone, i dont get it that just because you have a job and not sponging off society that you have money for these things.
I actually work for the Civil Service and i know for a fact that a lot of so called poor people have more disposible income than my wife and i, and we both work (she is a nurse).
I really hope Labour gets wiped out at the next election, they have always gone after the "poor" vote, i almost think they want to keep their voting base poor and on benefits rather than trying to tackle the problems properly.
This is dumb. The poor (generalizing) have far greater problems than no internetz. Seriously, a lot of these families could care less about tracking their childrens' progress, and this money will be so many kinds of ill-spent it's not even funny.
...
He was lucky if he had one parent show up for parent/teacher nights (contrasted with the near-100% participation he enjoys at his current school). Kids acted out often because of what was happening in their home life. They had food programs because for some kids lunch was the only real meal they got during the day. You could not count on the parents to even want to improve their own situations, and their kid's school performance was the last on their list of cares.
It's sad, but that's the way it is. You can try to help (and the staff did), but it was an uphill battle; most of the time people didn't care or want help. For this reason, it's ludicrous that this money will be spent the way it is.
Solution? Put everyone on government mandated birth control unless they can pass three separate tests.
An IQ test.
A drug test.
And a "ain't broke" test.
Worlds problems suddenly go away.
I disagree. When I was nearing the end of High School, and was applying for scholarships, I was amazed at the percentage of scholarships that are "need-based." My parents didn't pay anything for my schooling (besides transportation back and forth), but because my family was middle-class, I was ineligible for all those scholarships.Of course they should! And so should everyone else! But once again, not something that's easy to pay for if you don't have money.
That's a Great idea, Of course I don't live in the currently snowed in UK(I live in the backward republican USA that doesn't like to pay for this or that in their taxes{their a bunch of Stingy Self Centered Cheapskates}) and I already own a PC.![]()
I've entertained the idea of privatizing welfare for quite a while now, and I have become more and more convinced that doing so would be a huge boon to everyone except bureaucrats. The same goes for Social Security and Education. In none of these three situations does the US federal government add any real value.Here's a better idea.....
Set up nonprofit charities that give out free laptops and broadband. Taxpayers can choose to pay normal taxes... or they could opt to give .1% of that would-be tax money to their favorite computer/broadband charity.
Who wins? The poor win! A greater percentage of the poor benefit!
Who loses? Bureaucrats and their budget to buy new furniture for their office.
I disagree. When I was nearing the end of High School, and was applying for scholarships, I was amazed at the percentage of scholarships that are "need-based." My parents didn't pay anything for my schooling (besides transportation back and forth), but because my family was middle-class, I was ineligible for all those scholarships.
The combination of state schools, Pell grants, low-interest student loans, and low-income-only scholarships makes it quite easy for the poor to get funding for college, if they work hard in High School.
If you're rich, naturally you can afford it. If you're poor, you get someone else to pay for it. If you're middle class, you'll have to actually work for it.
Oh, and don't forget all the scholarships for only women, or only blacks, or only hispanics, etc. Can you imagine the howling you'd hear if there was a whites-only or men-only scholarship fund out there?
I've entertained the idea of privatizing welfare for quite a while now, and I have become more and more convinced that doing so would be a huge boon to everyone except bureaucrats. The same goes for Social Security and Education. In none of these three situations does the US federal government add any real value.
Solution? Put everyone on government mandated birth control unless they can pass three separate tests.
An IQ test.
A drug test.
And a "ain't broke" test.
Worlds problems suddenly go away.
Perhaps I spoke too broadly, but I think you're jumping at conclusions here.Sounds like You think the Disabled are too much of a burden(When was the last time You saw any Charity on the USA giving anything? Sure they'll accept donations for elsewhere, But here?), Sure I get SSI(Supplemental Security Income) as I'm permanently disabled, Can't work anyway(not like I wanted to break a leg in 2002 & damage the other hip joint), Considering the idea of privatizing Social Security is dead as people invested their money in 401K funds which were invested in the stock market and that Wall Street lost all of It or nearly all of It, The idea of privatizing Social Security or anything is not going to fly, Privatize Title II & XVI? I highly doubt It will ever happen, So dream on as It's dead, move on... Besides I'm Human, I have Rights, And I'm as Human as You are, I exist and I will not go quietly into the night, As I have a Right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and You have no right to take that from Me, Absolutely NONE. So pay Your taxes like a Good Person should, quit over spending & stop being so unchristian to those who are less fortunate, It's not like I wanted to be disabled(Are You sure Yer not a Scrooge??), I sure don't over spend...
In other news, 270000 laptops were added to Ebay this week....
Im from the UK too and this is a joke. If the government wants to add IT for kids lets put more computers in schools and have the IT room open after school so kids with no internet can use them. This way its fair for everyone, i dont get it that just because you have a job and not sponging off society that you have money for these things.
I actually work for the Civil Service and i know for a fact that a lot of so called poor people have more disposible income than my wife and i, and we both work (she is a nurse).
I really hope Labour gets wiped out at the next election, they have always gone after the "poor" vote, i almost think they want to keep their voting base poor and on benefits rather than trying to tackle the problems properly.
Sounds like You think the Disabled are too much of a burden(When was the last time You saw any Charity on the USA giving anything? Sure they'll accept donations for elsewhere, But here?), Sure I get SSI(Supplemental Security Income) as I'm permanently disabled, Can't work anyway(not like I wanted to break a leg in 2002 & damage the other hip joint), Considering the idea of privatizing Social Security is dead as people invested their money in 401K funds which were invested in the stock market and that Wall Street lost all of It or nearly all of It, The idea of privatizing Social Security or anything is not going to fly, Privatize Title II & XVI? I highly doubt It will ever happen, So dream on as It's dead, move on... Besides I'm Human, I have Rights, And I'm as Human as You are, I exist and I will not go quietly into the night, As I have a Right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and You have no right to take that from Me, Absolutely NONE. So pay Your taxes like a Good Person should, quit over spending & stop being so unchristian to those who are less fortunate, It's not like I wanted to be disabled(Are You sure Yer not a Scrooge??), I sure don't over spend...
Perhaps I spoke too broadly, but I think you're jumping at conclusions here.
>>First of all, by privatizing social security, I was referring to supplementary income benefits, not to disability insurance.
>>Second, Privatizing SS does not imply investing in the stock market, as the liberal left would have you believe. Investing in lower-risk bonds (corporate or government bonds at whatever level you choose) would be available as a choice. And so would putting your money in the vanilla SS program. The idea is to give people a choice, rather than squeeze them all into a one-size-fits-none government program.
>>Third, I know quite a large number of charities which distribute money/food/other services within the US.
>>Fourth, I was in no way advocating the abolition of charities, but rather the transfer of the administration away from the government into the hands of private companies. People would be able to choose where their charity dollars go. Charities compete for the money (low overhead, better screening of recipients, etc).
>>Fifth, I actually give a significant percentage of my income to charity. And I know a fair number of people who give a similar percentage who have been audited because it is such an unusually high percentage.
>>Sixth, you are correct that I have no right to deprive you of life, liberty, or happiness. However, I am also under no obligation (beyond the requirements of the law) to provide it for you on a silver platter.
>>Seventh, a busted leg and hip may leave you physically disabled (and you have my sympathy), but it does not prevent you from getting a job which does not require that you be ambulatory. My job, for example, involves sitting at a desk for several hours per day. Physically, you could do my job.
Lastly, (and this might help you find work) it might do you a bit of good to work on your grammar, punctuation, and capitalization. Good written communication skills are very valuable in today's workforce.
I notice that you didn't mention HOW you broke your leg, or damage the other hip joint. I see that you can type, so your not totally disabled, you just need a new career. I worked with a man who recieves disabillity from the Gov for a leg lost in Vietnam. Yeah, he was drunk and flipped a Jeep.
Oh yeah, the bible says " if a man does not work, he shall not eat"
So take your "unchristian" statement (which BTW was also non-christian) and stick it!!!
I notice that you didn't mention HOW you broke your leg, or damage the other hip joint. I see that you can type, so your not totally disabled, you just need a new career. I worked with a man who recieves disabillity from the Gov for a leg lost in Vietnam. Yeah, he was drunk and flipped a Jeep.
Oh yeah, the bible says " if a man does not work, he shall not eat"
So take your "unchristian" statement (which BTW was also non-christian) and stick it!!!
Joker, if tax money was diverted into privatized organizations that were regulated to help, there would be more to go around for the disabled.
Humans, by nature, do better in life when there is one or both of these things: competition and accountability.
I've entertained the idea of privatizing welfare for quite a while now, and I have become more and more convinced that doing so would be a huge boon to everyone except bureaucrats. The same goes for Social Security and Education. In none of these three situations does the US federal government add any real value.
You raise two different issues, so I'll take them one at a time. The value of transitioning welfare from government administration to private administration is in the introduction of competition. Right now, there is no competition--the government merely taxes you and distributes the money as the bureaucrats see fit. There's no incentive for efficiency (% of income actually dispersed to the needy) or effectiveness (e.g. getting folks back into a productive lifestyle). If multiple options are available, and taxpayers are given the opportunity to decide where their welfare-tax dollars go, then competition will improve the result. Personally, I would tend to send my welfare-tax dollars to a charity that works to get people in productive jobs, that refuses to help people who only want a handout, and that strictly enforces a no-drugs policy. The mechanism for distributing the funds to the private charities would be similarly simple: each qualified charity gets an ID number, and you fill out a line on your 1040 form with that ID number.What real value does the corporation add to the exchange when you're talking about directly providing money from the government. It took them long enough to cut the banks out of the government subsidezed student loan market. They were making billions a year from the tax payer just for handing the money given from the government to the borrower. What exactly did they do to deserve their cut?