Quote:
|
If only this could be written off as a joke, then we could all laugh heartily.
|
It can because it is a conclusion based on flawed logic. Government programs are not the only way to help the poor or show compassion, so we can not assume (logically) that those who don't support X government program do not help or support the poor, though we can conclude if you are in support of said government program that they don't support them in the same way you do, but that they don't support them at all is not a conclusion that can be drawn.
Anyway, as the haves pay taxes and those taxes support social programs I guess they
do support the poor. So even if we were to assume only those who support various social programs support the poor they do in fact support the poor. Of course that assumption is flawed. Bill Gates, one of those haves, he has this foundation, called the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, it helps the poor. Guess it is possible to help the poor without being a government or via a government program. There are also various charities and organizations, they also lack government status and yet they help the poor. One can also, though not quite as loaded as Bill Gates, help the poor without any programs, government or otherwise, by providing individual help.
I guess you
can help and have compassion on the poor without supporting some various social program of the government or another. That is why we can have a hearty chuckle, because that the only way to help is not through the government is so blindingly obvious that the conclusion that if you aren't for some random government program you have no compassion is laughable in its logic and pretense. Now are there those that don't support government programs and lack compassion? Surely, just as there are those who support them and lack compassion, but it isn't a given. Treating it like it is, that is when the chuckles start.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Moksha
By social compact, the government stands as the concert conductor for such action.
|
Depending on who you ask, a large part of the social compact of which the government is involved is property rights, of which money is included. Personally I don't have any money for the government to take, hopefully I will someday so how they plan on spending that money and if it is achieving its goals is of interest.
I don't have a problem with social programs, but the mantra of, "You don't support this particular program or you question its effectiveness or the ability of the government to manage it effectively you ipso facto have no compassion!" gets old because quite frankly it is false. You want to argue that you feel X social program should be maintained/supported even despite possible inefficacy go right ahead, even claim compassion as your reason. However, it does not follow logically that if you don't support X social program, or feel it is ineffective and a waste of money that one has no compassion. It could be the case, but it isn't a given.
Heck, who is more compassionate? He who supports a program that is more effective and has less overhead (meaning for the same amount of money more people can be helped)? Or he who supports a program with significant overhead meaning that less of the money that is donated makes it to those it is intended to help? What about a program that is efficiently run but has questionable practices and effects (say the made up Cadillacs for the Poor, even with low overhead surely a better use of the money could be discovered)? And finally what about a social program that actually through various reasons makes the situation of those it is supposed to help worse than it was? Why shouldn't we question if the way money is being spent is the most effective possible? Cries of, "Incompassionate person! How dare you question if spending money like we are, or if something proposed will actually help anything or is worth the cost?" doesn't help a honest discourse and introspection that can help make the social programs that exists or are proposed better. It is no more conducive to finding solutions than cries of, "Where is your patriotism!" when discussing foreign policy or the one that steals the ability to think and reason the most, "Think of the children!"
P.S. In the future Moshka using a conclusion based on intentionally flawed logic isn't the most convincing route to go. Especially when directed at the person who used the intentionally flawed logic in the first place to reach the flawed conclusion.