http://www.learntheconstitution.com/social-welfare.html
Zim: I found this to be an interesting article.
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In the Preamble of the Constitution we are told that one of the reasons the U. S. Constitution was set up was to promote the general welfare of the people.
This provision anticipates the RIGHT of Americans to have its government serve the welfare of the people in their collective needs–that is, their GENERAL welfare–and not use the resources of the people for the benefit of certain states or certain people, which would be SPECIAL welfare.
The term “general welfare” was used in the Articles of Confederation and elsewhere to refer to the well-being of the whole people. The Founders did not want the power and resources of the federal government to be used for the special benefit of any one region or any one state. Nor were the resources of the people to be expended for the benefit of any particular group or any special class of citizens. (Making of America p 244)
The entire American concept of “freedom to prosper” was based on the belief that man’s instinctive will to succeed in a climate of liberty would result in the whole people prospering together. It was thought that even the poor could lift themselves through education and individual effort to become independent and self-sufficient.
The idea was to maximize prosperity, minimize poverty, and make the whole nation rich. Where people suffered the loss of their crops or became unemployed, the more fortunate were to help. And those who were enjoying “good times” were encouraged to save up in store for the misfortunes which seem to come to everybody someday. Hard work, frugality, thrift, and compassion became the key words in the American ethic.
Within a short time the Americans, as a people, were on the way top becoming the most prosperous and best-educated nation in the world. The key was using the government to protect equal rights, not to provide equal things. Samuel Adams said the ideas of a welfare state were made unconstitutional by the Founders:
“The utopian schemes of leveling (redistribution of the wealth) and a community of goods (central ownership of all the means of production and distribution) are as visionary and impracticable as those which vest all property in the Crown. (These ideas) are arbitrary, despotic, and, in our government, unconstitutional.”
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Zim: The article does go on - about how we should
help our needy. But a section credited to Benjamin
Franklin is most telling:
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Franklin wrote a whole essay on the subject and told one of his friends: “I have long been of your opinion, that your legal provision for the poor (in England ) is a very great evil, operating as it does to the encouragement of idleness. We have followed your example, and begin now to see our error, and, I hope, shall reform it.”
A survey of Franklin ’s views on counterproductive compassion might be summarized as follows:
Compassion which gives a drunk the means to increase his drunkenness is counterproductive.
Compassion which breeds debilitating dependency and weakness is counterproductive.
Compassion which blunts the desire or necessity to work for a living is counterproductive.
Compassion which smothers the instinct to strive and excel is counterproductive.
Nevertheless, the Founders recognized that it is a mandate of God to help the poor and underprivileged. It is interesting how they said this should be done.
Franklin wrote: “To relieve the misfortunes of our fellow creatures is concurring with the Deity; it is godlike; but, if we provide encouragement for laziness, and supports for folly, may we not be found fighting against the order of God and Nature, which perhaps has appointed want and misery as the proper punishments for, and cautions against, as well as necessary consequences of, idleness and extravagance? When ever we attempt to amend the scheme of Providence , and to interfere with the government of the world, we had need be very circumspect, lest we do more harm than good.”
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Zim: There is much more to the article than I
cross posted. If one truly desires to learn what
made America great, and how we are consigning
ourselves to a slow painful death, this is worth
reading and cogitating over.
Zim.

Mad Poet Strikes Again.