Point me where I said "All poor are saints."
What I'm saying is that "The aggregate of people know enough about what they need that they don't need to be hand-held by an expensive voucher system. What they need is the money to put into practice what they already know."
If you are *REALLY* worried about people wasting money like that, then funnel the money you would spend on the voucher system into child services, the foster system, and economic counseling. But don't say "Some of you aren't responsible so we're going to hold ALL of you by the short leash."
Hey, people can be as irresponsible as they want
with their own BI checks. Now I'm not saying you can't introduce a bit of variety into your childrens' diet, or anything like that, but all children need milk, all children need basic fruits and vegetables, some form of protein, housing, books, etc. If you're cashing the entire financial value of your kids' vouchers- and these don't need to be strictly regimented, they can be more fluid, but they still split the money into different budget items, all of which are fairly essential parts of raising a kid- isn't that maybe a tip-off that hey, maybe something is up? Now that's not to say that that should be enough to get CPS called- because as you correctly point out it shouldn't be-, but maybe you'd call the kid's teacher, maybe you'd call the kid's doctor and see if there's enough to start piecing together. Or maybe you only let teachers or doctors put in spending review requests.
It's not a short leash, it's a long leash. It's a very long leash that covers most normal, well-intentioned spending by most people making rational decisions.
Moreover, is there really anything wrong with trying to implement some sort of social engineering with BI? For example, a very large proportion of lower-class households in America have video game consoles. I grew up in a fairly poor part of rural Virginia- all my classmates had them. A very small proportion of lower-class households have lots of child-appropriate books. It's such a widespread problem that it's structural as much as it is personal- but
it is still an aggregate of millions of spending choices. Is giving people a $20/month book voucher for their children really that objectionable, when we know that it helps solve a huge problem, and when we know that just giving the equivalent amount as a check labeled "entertainment" will in many cases be spent on XBox games?
It's not as if I'm a right-wing lunatic. If I were a right-wing lunatic I'd be completely opposed to the idea of BI in any form. I'm asking perfectly normal questions that most voters are going to have if/when BI ever makes it to the polls, and if the only defense you have is "you're being problematic!", you're not going to like the reception the idea gets.
Except he really didn't. Like, didn't to such a degree that I can't imagine where you'd have gotten that idea from.
It was more a reaction to "the left seems to think the poor can do no wrong." It's a strawman.
I said that there's a
strain on the left that seems to think that. I'm not saying that that's what everyone on the left thinks, or that The Left (whatever that's supposed to mean) enforces that as a matter of ideological purity, but I'm seeing echoes of the thought in this discussion.