• Tim Walz Says He Won't Help His Mother Buy Groceries: She Depends on th

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Mon Oct 21 07:18:21 2024
    XPost: humanityquest.compassion, alt.social-security-disability, alt.politics.usa.republican
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    Truthfully, that is NOT exactly what he said, but there is a point to
    my headline: Democrats think that social obligations should be
    fulfilled by the government.

    The social insurance state was not originally intended to substitute
    government for family and church assistance to people in need but as a
    backstop to ensure that people without others to assist them didn't
    fall through the cracks. All else failing, the government would ensure
    that nobody starved to death or was left to rot on the side of the
    road.

    Civilized societies do not view people as disposable; smart societies
    do not try to substitute bureaucracy for the much more enlivening love
    and community that are necessary to sustain us.


    Tim Walz's story about his mom is unintentionally revealing in this
    context. If we were to believe Tim, his mother would starve without her
    Social Security check arriving on time.

    That says more about Tim than about Social Security, the government,
    Donald Trump, Republicans, or whoever he is trying to make a point
    about. If this were literally true, Tim Walz is a monster.

    Of course, it is not LITERALLY true. First of all, you have to work
    hard to be food insecure in the United States. The only reason somebody
    becomes food insecure is that there is some fundamental dysfunction in
    the person or their caretaker. A child may have a drug-abusing parent,
    for instance, which is a tragedy, of course, but not a failure of
    society. We live in a country where, when people are in need, strangers
    will fly in helicopters and drop off food and supplies at the drop of a
    hat.

    So what Tim is really saying is something different: the government
    ought to be the primary caretaker for everybody, including his mother.
    He shouldn't have to care for her; caring is a job to be outsourced.

    That has been the ideological foundation of the welfare statists for
    over a century. It is a foundational principle of Marxism, which aims
    to substitute the state for the family. "It takes a village," as it
    were, because it shouldn't be the parents themselves who raise children
    or children who take care of their parents as they age.

    Child care centers substitute for families. Schools substitute for
    parents. Social workers determine your child's gender. Colleges teach
    morality instead of churches. The government is there to take care of
    you; in exchange, you only need to give your labor and your soul.

    Friedrich Engels, it turns out, was the real prophet of Marxism. Karl
    Marx believed in the economic inevitability of communism; Engles, on
    the other hand, believed that communism would come about through the destruction of the family and social institutions. It was a project,
    not a historical inevitability, although a project that runs in
    parallel with the historical inevitability of communism.

    Both Marx and Engels see family relationships as an artificial
    construct, and modern liberals basically concur. Walz has worked
    assiduously to undermine family ties here in Minnesota--children can
    liberate themselves from parents who disapprove of their gender
    transitions and become wards of the state. They call it a "trans
    sanctuary" state, but it is another way to divorce children from
    parents and substitute the state for parents. Schools keep secrets from parents; teachers substitute state morality for that taught at home and
    in churches.

    No doubt Tim Walz loves his mother and would not let her starve. But
    his message is clear: the state over the family. He assumes his
    rallygoers will sympathize with the notion that taking care of his
    mother is the state's responsibility, not react in horror at the notion
    he presents that she would languish in filth and starve were it not for
    a monthly check from the government.

    Social Security is here to stay. We have paid into it, and our economic security is tied to it, so my quibble is not that it needn't be run
    efficiently and reliably. I have paid into it for more than four
    decades, so I want my meager return on investment.

    But it appalls me to see a son so cavalierly describe his mother as
    nearly destitute without the government's help. This man is a governor,
    a candidate for Vice President, and a lifelong government employee.

    If his mother needed a basket of groceries, couldn't he help her out?

    It never occurred to him to answer that question.

    https://hotair.com/david-strom/2024/10/19/tim-walz-says-he-wont-help- his-mother-buy-groceries-she-depends-on-the-government-n3795954

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)