... man, it's from yesterday and the conversation has moved on and all sort of shit, but I didn't notice anyone saying anything about it in the interim and it's something that honestly needs saying so.
Welfare might do more than just feed people and reduce work incentives a little (though the vast majority of people still work even in countries with decent welfare).
Welfare reduces incentives to make money any other way, so not just in the way we say is "good", but it also reduces incentives to make money in ways we say are "bad". i.e. crime.
Welfare does not reduce incentives to make money any other way. Most of the bloody
point of welfare is the
exact opposite of reducing incentive to work, and most that I've seen actually goddamn manages that to one extent or another. If someone is seeing welfare as something that makes people want to work less, they are completely ignoring what the damned stuff is implemented for, near to the point of it having to be intentional to miss that badly.
The point of welfare is to address glaring
disincentives to work and
live. When you're one major problem from exposure or starvation, have to skimp on healthcare for yourself and/or your family, have significantly limited transportation options, are incapable of building capital to pretty much any extent, and on, and on, and on, you cannot find good work, do a good job, improve your life, or frankly do bloody anything but suffer
nearly as well as someone that's
not being persistently sodomized with varying degrees of literalness by such issues. Meaningfully contributing to society from an economic standpoint or otherwise becomes both significantly more difficult, and less effective to the extent it
is possible.
Really, people need to stop thinking that misery or bad conditions improve someone's incentive to function in any way beneficial to themselves or society. People that succeed in those situations do so in
spite of them, not because. The whole thing about starving artists somehow doing better is complete goddamn
bullshit, and just about every other iteration of the concept applied to other walks of life just as much so. Most -- the vast friggin' majority of -- people do not need to be beaten (however metaphorical) until they stop being lazy. They need obstacles to them doing things they want to do (or just
could be doing, that's a net gain to themselves and others) removed, and then let loose. The point of welfare, among a great many other things, is exactly that. Get the bullshit out of the way so people can do more than whatever it was they were previously limited to.