President Bill Clinton signed a successful welfare
reform law in 1996, which required able-bodied welfare recipients to either
work, prepare for work, or look for work in order to receive aid. This law ended the policies that helped
generation after generation to receive handouts from the government without
doing any thing to get it. President
Barack Obama gutted the law by ending the requirement for welfare recipients to
work for what they receive. He did this
because he needs more people to be dependent on government in order to be re-elected!
Liberals predicted that the poor and needy in America would
suffer dire consequences if the reform bill were passed; however, just the
opposite happened. There was a surge
upward in employment and earnings among welfare recipients even as the welfare
caseload dropped by 50 percent. In
addition, the rates of child poverty fell after the reform. This reform bill from the mmid-1990s freed
nearly four million adults and three million children from the government
plantation and gave them the opportunity to escape poverty.
Robert Rector at The Heritage Foundation reported:
"As welfare dependence fell and employment increased, child poverty
among the affected groups fell dramatically.
For a quarter-century before the reform, poverty among black children and
single mothers had remained frozen at high levels. Immediately after the reform, poverty for
both groups experienced dramatic and unprecedented drops, quickly reaching
all-time lows."
Successful welfare programs help people to help
themselves. Millions of people need help
at one time or another in their lives and deserve to be assisted; however, it
is better to give them a "hand up" rather than a "hand out". The old adage is still true: It is better to teach a man to fish than to
give a man a fish.
The policy change by Obama was not only illegal,
but it is detrimental to all welfare recipients. Instead of being required to work, look for
work, or receive training for work, recipients will go back into a welfare
cycle of being dependent on the government and will never escape poverty. They will continue to live on the plantation
of the federal government.
Benjamin Franklin understood this principle well
because he said, "I am for doing good to the poor, but I differ in opinion
of the means. I think the best way of
doing good to the poor, is not making them easy in poverty, but leading or
driving them out of it."
The importance of working for our daily needs was
instituted by Heavenly Father at the time He expelled Adam and Eve from the
Garden of Eden. "And unto Adam he said, Because thou hast
hearkened unto the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree, of which I
commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it: cursed is the ground for thy sake; in
sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life;
"Thorns
also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat the herb of
the field;
"In
the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, …" (Genesis 3:17-19; emphasis added).
Work is a valuable part of life and can bring
feelings of self-worth, achievement, and happiness. President Gordon B. Hinckley said,
"Without labor there is neither wealth, nor comfort, nor progress….
"I believe in the gospel of work. There is no substitute under the heavens for
productive labor. It is the process by
which dreams become reality. It is the
process by which idle visions become dynamic achievements. We are all inherently lazy. We would rather play than work. We would rather loaf than work. A little play and a little loafing are good -
…. But it is work that spells the
difference in the life of a man or woman.
It is stretching our minds and utilizing the skills of our hands that
lift us from the stagnation of mediocrity….
"Without hard work, nothing grows but
weeds. There must be labor, incessant
and constant, if there is to be a harvest….
"Work is the miracle by which talent is
brought to the surface and dreams become reality" (Teachings of Gordon B. Hinckley, pp. 704-707)
Parents must teach their children the importance
of work by word and example; otherwise, the rising generation will believe that
they are entitled to having their needs met by others. President Spencer W. Kimball quoted President
David O. McKay as saying, "We are living in an age of gadgetry which
threatens to produce a future generation of softness. Flabbiness of character more than flabbiness
of muscle lies at the root of most of the problems facing our American
youth" (Faith Precedes the Miracle,
p. 122).
Work is a valuable way to spend our time. Youth and adults who are not required to work
for their daily needs have too much time on their hands and tend to get into
trouble. I wonder how many of the people
involved in the "flash mobs" of today come from homes where the
principle of work was not taught or modeled.
Obama did our nation a huge disservice when he gutted the welfare reform
act and took away the requirement for welfare recipients to work for their
daily bread.
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