The
changes wrought by Johnson's "Great
Society" have manifested themselves in a number of societal
ills that were uncommon five decades ago. Many of those stem from an
out-of-wedlock birthrate that has skyrocketed from single-digits in 1964 to
over 40% today. With the marriage rate in steep decline,
we could call it the era of the “baby daddy” -- despite recent U.S. Census
reports indicating a female-headed single-parent family is five times more
likely to be poor than a married-couple one. Marriage
really does matter.
On the
other hand, to be poor in this day and age carries with it a number of
advantages even middle-class families could only dream of a generation or two
ago. Contrary to popular perception, the average poverty-level family likely
has a car (and perhaps two) as well as their own place to live, whether a
single-family home or apartment -- less than one in 10 live in a mobile home or
trailer. Just 4% of those considered poor are homeless at some point during a
calendar year, according to Census Bureau statistics. (The Heritage Foundation
has done an outstanding study detailing these and other facts about our
poor.)
The dirty
little secret about America's “poor” is that most of the dozens of means-tested
government programs aren't considered income for recipients. If these programs
were given an income equivalent, only a tiny percentage of the 45.3 million
Americans who fall below the poverty line would be considered poor and the
perceived need for these programs would decrease. Last year
the Cato Institute put out a controversial study claiming that welfare
programs in many states paid more than minimum wage jobs, providing a
disincentive to work but a tremendous incentive to vote in such a way as to
assure the gravy train will continue to roll. The more people who are touched
by government assistance, the easier it is for politicians distributing the
"help" to maintain power. As the saying goes, those who rob Peter to
pay Paul can always count on the vote of Paul.
In short,
the Great Society has created the great dependent underclass, a massive voting
bloc that is now beholden to statists. No longer do we hear of the generation
too proud to accept “relief” from the government. And no longer do we subject
our dependent class to the humiliation of cashing welfare checks or counting
out food stamps -- now it's as easy as swiping a credit card, only with no
payment due. Meanwhile, those from the faith-based community who used to
provide for society's less fortunate by providing a hand up rather than a
handout are more and more shut out of the process.
The stated
intention of the Great Society was to simply provide the tools to bring people
out of poverty -- they still had to do the work. But work is hard and handouts
are easy, and that simple truism has brought us to the unsustainable situation
we're in today, with no end in sight unless radical change comes from the very
government that has become the vote-gathering provider to so many. It won't be
under this regime, of course, as Barack Obama has put us on a path to throw
another $13 trillion at the problem over the next fruitless decade.
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