The Goal is to Keep the Poor in Poverty

Teach a man to fish_CroppedThe threshold for determining if a family is living below the poverty level in 2011 is an income of $22,350 per year for a family of four. Keep this number in mind as we take a brief look at some older poverty numbers. This will shock you. Well, maybe it won’t. We’ve come to expect gross incompetence from our government officials, and that’s the problem.

In 1982, the total U.S. welfare bill at all levels of government (federal, state, and local) came to $403 billion. If we take figures from the Bureau of the Census (August 1984) which state that the number of people living in poverty in the U.S. was 15.2 percent of the population or 35.3 million people, an amazing fact emerges. Had we simply divided the 403 billion dollars this nation spent on poverty at every level of government among the estimated number of poor people, each poor person could have received $11,133.

For a family of four, this would have totaled $44,532. (Remember the above number for 2011: $22,350. That’s about half of what was being spent in 1982!) Since the official poverty level per family for that year was $9,287, it is clear that America’s fight against poverty involves enormous overhead costs. Most of the tax dollars collected to fight poverty end up as Thomas Sowell notes, “in the pockets of highly paid administrators, consultants, and staff as well as higher-income recipients of benefits from programs advertised as anti-poverty efforts.” Clearly, the bucket used to carry money from the pockets of the taxpayer to the poor is leaking badly. Many think the real beneficiaries of liberal social programs are not the poor and disadvantaged but the members of the governmental bureaucracy who administer the program.

Those who administer these programs have a vested interest in their survival and expansion. Winning the war on poverty is not the goal, perpetuating the programs is. “Less than 25 percent of all the tax dollars allocated to fight poverty at every level of government reaches the poor. The other 75 percent goes to pay overhead.”[1]

Advocates of “social justice” programs implemented by the State at the expense of the mainly productive members of society will claim that there are success stories. Few would dispute the claim. When so much money is being poured into these programs, someone is bound to benefit. But if that same money — including the revenue lost in overhead expenditures that never reach the poor — were saved, invested, and spent instead of taxed, many more people would benefit, and we would have fewer social-welfare slaves.

Liberals need poor people and the programs that keep the poor in poverty. A perpetual underclass insures that liberal do-gooders will get re-elected. The worst of them are poverty pimps like Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, and Maxine Waters. Their call for more spending will only make their fellow-blacks more dependent on the State, all the while blaming the “rich” for their misfortune.

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Notes:
  1. Ronald H. Nash, Why the Left is Not Right: The Religious Left—Who They Are and What They Believe (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1996), 183. []

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  • Ron

    And this is new information? If this is new info then you must be working for the government.

  • Servant

    The statements from many of the posters above are very true. The social/welfare system is not intended to be successfull in changing poor people’s situation, but to create and maintain and/or expand employment for Public Services Unions members. Let me use personal experience to document this fact. In the past we, my wife and I, were foster parents for children from poor and broken homes. After having had several children in care, it became evident to us that this system was not designed to help the children. Once a child started to bond with us, the child was removed, and placed in an unfamiliar setting, or returned home in order to fail in the home placement because the parent(s) were not capable of providing adequate care. This crfeated a revolving door with return to welfare agencies within short time. The agencies and county Dept. of social services were given more money every year because of failed returns home for more and more children. Staff has by now increased in both goverment and private agencies, and new and fancier officwe buildings have been erected, but the children seldom return to successful re-union with their birth families. I have another example on alcohol and drug treatment services to the poor that I will post later.

  • ARMYOF69

    The so called "poor" in America , still eat every day, have cell phones, TV sets, and all sorts of goodies payed for by the TAX paying 50% of all households. If the poor ARE poor , it's because they want to be called "poor".

  • Marilynn Reeves

    Did anyone noice the FREE CELL and MINUTES ad at the start of this article? Why is my tax money being used to provide this? If you are in poverty you don’t need luxary.

  • Scotty

    To me, poverty is a state of mind, not the places you live,but the life you live where you're at.
    I am all for government assistance as long as the government doesn't control what I do…… Also your point on all the overhead paid out to so called program operators who facilitate the money is so true and such a huge scam.
    Thanks for revealing this mess.

  • T Lady

    It's interesting this article is on the forum. I was just thinking perhaps one of the reasons people like Maxine Waters, John Lewis, and Andre Carson keep getting re-elected is a matter of voter intimidation. I sincerely believe, especially in the case of Waters, they hold their constituents hostage politically. To be a fly on the wall at one of those so-called Town Hall meetings, where no one dares to dissent or ask pertinent questions ("Rep. Waters, how can you blame the GOP or T.E.A. Party, since none have ever been elected to represent this district? What have you done to address the issues and problems we deal with on a daily basis?"). You can bet that individual would probably be "escorted" to their car or bus stop by an ACORN or SEIU member, abiet with a few bruises and scars.

  • Tejano Jack

    I've been preaching this for thirty years. Democrats don't want to end poverty; nobody would vote for them. V/r, Tejano Jack

  • Neal

    Those are interested in keeping us poor are the same people who moved our workforce overseas for their willingness to work for nothing. beaurocratic ineptitude created by those who can "fix" things, over-govenmental activities, and fear of loosing their positions have led our country into a great hole, but 2 unending wars and huge tax cuts for those who already have more than enough, have drained America of its ability to be solvent. Our burden of inefficentcy and waste is the cancer that we all must fight. Beaurocracy is the ropes that tie us down. The right-wing-nuts as well as the entrenced governmenteers are playing a game that undermines our share best interests…

  • ARMYOF69

    I think the idea is to keep those who live off the taxpayers , encouraged by our government to stay there and ask for more. When the workers , taxpayers of this country have been bled dry, the streets will not be safe for anyone.
    KEEP YOUR GUNS CLEAN AND LOADED.

  • rusureuwant2know

    The vast majority of posters here have no idea what it's like to have to rely on the system for help; or how stringent the requirements are; you can't even own a life insurance policy. A dollar increase in income causes you to lose $2-$3 in aid, and you lose it on 3 fronts: housing, food and medical. Y'all ought to try it some time – btw – that means going w/o a car too. Don't know anyone who can afford a car these days on welfare or Social Security.