Wow. Wrong on so many levels.
- 'Hasn't handed out cash with both hands.' Where, then, has that $2 trillion or so of spending above and beyond the last budget that Congress actually passed gone to? The majority was handed out to car companies, banks and insurance companies, states, foreign countries, etc etc etc.
- 'Supporting the 10% of unemployed.' No, you support them with policies that spur long-term job creation, in order to take them out of the situation that has them needing support. He hasn't done anything remotely close to that, and has no plans to do so after 2 1/2 years in office.
- 'health support for 20% of Americans [no idea where that number comes from, but okay], and story about jail health care.' Just 2 minutes ago I did a search for "socialized medicine waiting list". It ain't pretty. We have roughly 9% without insurance (some ~30 million, a large percentage who are getting along fine without it because they're healthy) but who can still get care if they pay out-of-pocket, while many nations with social med have months-long waiting lists for simple screenings and procedures. Remind me, again, how that's better?
- 'sensible, reasonable, etc, conservative candidate.' Does the DNC have one? The candidate they have now, Obama, doesn't meet any of the criteria listed. If the GOP puts up a bad candidate, it'll be a perfect match for the Democrat's bad candidate.
SmCaudata: The other issue of course is that entry level work pays to little to support anyone but yourself. When minimum wage was established it was enough for one man working 40 hours per week to support a spouse and one child. Now, to do that you need to make about $16-20 per hour. Some people are going to work retail jobs for the rest of their lives. Why is this not an acceptable way to take care of a family?
When the minimum wage law took effect in 1938 (25 cents per hour), it was NOT enough support a wife and kid. In fact, adjusted for inflation today's rate is almost double what it was when established in 1938. Speaking for myself, in 1986 I made about 50% above the then-current minimum wage at a job fresh out of high school, working full time. To get by I lived in a cramped 2-bedroom apartment with two roommates, and it was touch-and-go more than a few times. It was paycheck-to-paycheck the entire time, without a wife and kid, and with sharing the rent and utilities.
So I gotta ask: if one is at entry level and earning just the minimum wage, then why is that person taking on a family that he or she can't support? It's a pair of complete morons who decide to get hitched and have kids at $7.25 an hour, and expect to get by. While I sympathize with those who already have families and circumstance puts them into that situation through job loss, I have a tough time feeling that we should chip in to support the dimwits who get in over their heads right out of the starting blocks. Time was that a young feller would get himself established in life before taking on the responsibilities of family.
Instead of asking why a person on minimum wage can't support a family, we should ask why an entry-level person at minimum wage is
trying to support a family. It's a parallel to part of the current recession this nation is struggling with, in particular the mortgage troubles that made the recession much deeper than it otherwise would have been.