Winstonm, on 2013-November-06, 09:43, said:
While there may be some who have that view, I think you are being a tad unfair in your analysis of those people. If I understand the thinking correctly, the objection is not that poor people deserve to be poor and screw them. Rather, the idea seems to be that some means of alleviating the harms of poverty have an unintended consequence of increasing poverty and dependency.
I mean, consider that one of the good arguments for universal health care is one of avoidance of increased poverty and dependency in a conservative-type thinking. If you create a safety net from the government solely for those who fail to get insurance until it is too late, you take away the risk of not getting insurance until it is too late, thereby increasing the number of people who do not get insurance until it is too late. Thus, the safety net itself creates, in a sense, the poverty and dependency that we sought to alleviate. By forcing people to get insurance before it is too late, which is not really conservative or liberal but rather authoritarian, whether for good or evil, we actually address the problem without encouraging further poverty and dependency.
The contra to that, though, is that health care is yet another benefit in a total package that is driving poverty and dependency. If the poor get subsidized everything, the incentive to work is reduced, and a larger and larger number of people opt for the benefits package rather than work. Hence why the Great Society efforts are often deemed by many as a failure.
I would venture to say that some might actually be OK with single payer if all of the other entitlement programs that seem counterproductive net were dealt with more effectively. I would imagine that even more would be OK with some sort of mandated insurance laws and subsidies if counter-balanced with reduction in other areas to compensate. What angers people is not that the poor are taken care of but rather that the poor have grown in size, including people who really can work and people who continue to make idiot life choices, with the benefits packages making the effective benefit to working substantially lower than stated wages. I mean, if you make $30K a year working, but would get $20K in net benefits if you stopped working, then your net benefit to working is only $10K a year, meaning roughly that you earn $4.80 or so per hour of effective work value. Granted, if your job pays substantially more, the effective hourly wage goes up, but at the lower end, the benefits are small. This is even more problematic if benefit-takers can work under the table, which is very common, to the point where even courts know that this is done and calculate that into expected child support payments! When you calculate all this in, and then add into the mix subsidized health care, your disincentive to work gets stronger and stronger. Plus, those who work anyway get angrier and angrier.
Summarizing this type of concern into "they hate poor people" is unproductive. However, say that long enough and you may convince people that they actually should hate poor people.