There's your key. Incapable of caring for themselves. Not lazy, won't look for work, won't relocate in some cases, to work. Doesn't like the job. "A hand up, not a hand out." should be a defining factor. I'd like a scheme where people were paid to attend a trade school, etc. We have millions of acres of forest that need clearing to prevent fires. We need plumbers, carpenters, electricians.
So I will buy that for a dollar, but I would also offer that the external factors (such as high CoL, lack of educational supports, undiagnosed or untreated mental illness) are far more of a pressure than an internal moral or personal failing.
There has to be a middle ground where we are able to provide supports to alleviate external pressures to enable self sustenance and decreased dependency on supports.
Show me generational poverty and I will show you often unmet generational psychosocial needs. Those cost money, but so do the problems created from a lack of support.
A series of physical checks should be initiated for the program. If they have beer in the fridge, a big screen TV, a car, they don't need help except to figure out their priorities.
Is it a matter of priorities or self-medicating other issues?
The mental health> impulsivity> addiction> poverty pipeline is relatively quick, and the statistics show that this can continue for generations unchecked.
My mom drank/smoked because her mom drank/smoked because
... all to "settle the nerves." When I took a grip of my alcoholism, figured out it waa ADHD, got treatment and medication... what do you know I didnt need a drink to steady myself in the morning. I no longer craved a smoke.
My medication is cheaper than my vices were and less socially/physically damaging, but then again, I have access to medical care, drug coverage, etc.
"Bad choices" aren't always skewed priorities. It is often times a lack of supports or executive functioning.
I don't agree with enabling those bad choices, but I wholeheartedly believe in providing alternatives instead of admonishment.
The truly needy need care and comfort. The ones that takes a cab to the liquor store, not so much.
Again, needy all depends on how you view it. There are people who appear perfectly fine and able to function in society, but cannot cognitively function in the world as it exists.
My daughter is one of them. She will most likely not be able to work, nor will she be able to live independently. We are luckily able to provide support to her at 17, but if you were meet her in the street you'd have no idea. There is literally nothing provided for her, and if she were to move out at 18, she'd probably be homeless in a few months.
That's my daughter. That's one real world example, not a statistic.
There are many others like her that were thrown to the wolves in the 1990s when there were massive cuts to mental health services. Those who were cast out then became the same people who needed a hand out. They also were folks who, while not visibly infirm or mentally incapable, still can't function in society without some form of support (which costs money).
We pay to support these folks so they can, eventually, contribute something. If we don't, we pay to fight homelessness, addicition, overdose, welfare, increased criminality, theft, prisons, and the list go on.