1:Your implied disdain for people on unemployment benefits is misguided. In order to qualify (at least in Michigan) you must have held a full time job within a certain time frame beforehand; and held it for I think at least 6 months and to have lost your job through no fault of your own, IE the company fails or downsizes. This is also I think about 2/3s of whatever you made at your last job. If "Joe Dropout" was being paid minimum wage at his last full time job, and "Joe McFactory" made $30 an hour operating heavy machinery before being laid off through no fault of his own, "Mcfactory" is actually taking much more of your taxes than the dropout. The same goes for "Joe McMastersinbusiness." Wisconsin could have a system that is vastly different I suppose, but Michigan's really isn't heavily geared towards benefiting the poor, uneducated, or lazy over the wealthy, learned, or industrious. Even if it's on a sliding scale, the scale would have to be extreme for the benefits to scale dishonestly as your former wages become lower.
Woah, now. I didn't even mention unemployment benefits. I'm a janitor - I make $9 an hour, and I'm happy with my life. Sorry this wasn't clear - I'm being entirely sarcastic, as I qualify completely as 'Joe Dropout' in a way. My education is going towards my own private interests, and I fully intend to work physical jobs as long as is feasible to balance out the fact that I spend all my free time sitting on my ass writing and programming. This means I don't make a hell of a lot, as I said in my first post.
Not complaining mind you. I could make three times as much working an office job. It'd just drive me batshit insane.
He's not saying private solutions are destroying mass transit; he's saying private solutions are destroying state-funded mass transit, so why are city and local governments even bothering?
I'm not giving an opinion, just trying to clarify his, since you seemed to be hot to spot a contradiction.
I'm actually saying that the lower class is vital to Milwaukee's manufacturing- and service-oriented economy, and that they will move elsewhere if they have no viable solution to get to work. Hell, I'm moving south to Racine next Thursday, though that has more to do with the fact that I've been staying temporarily with my brother and I have three responsible roommates with benefits waiting, hehe. As I said, private solutions have not materialized that are any cheaper than the bus, which is becoming a fairly large problem for people at my income level (by choice or by force)
In simplest terms, I believe that Milwaukee's voting base (unfortunately mostly middle to upper-class) is shooting themselves in the foot by not supporting better funding for transit, though I can hardly blame them with how many other issues there are to take care of in the area.