No, individuals committing fraud does not indicate that the system is
not working and laws aren't being enforced.  If those committing fraud
were being ignored or not arrested when the fraud is exposed, that
would indicate a problem, however I see no evidence that those who are
found to commit fraud are not dealt with.  In fact, the procescution
of fraud in welfare and medicaid has increase drastically over the
last decade.

I read the 2% figure as 2% of recipents, not 2% of the nation, so
those committing fraud would number in thousands, not millions, and
while some may be committing fraud, I see no evidence that those who
are caught are "getting away with it"..

On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 2:09 PM, Bruce Sorge <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Wouldn't  "some" individuals committing fraud indicate that the system is not 
> working? That the laws are not being enforced? If even if that "some" is only 
> 2% of the nation, that's still about six million people committing fraud. So 
> if the system is working, and laws are being enforced, how then can millions 
> be cheating the system and getting away with it?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Order the Adobe Coldfusion Anthology now!
http://www.amazon.com/Adobe-Coldfusion-Anthology/dp/1430272155/?tag=houseoffusion
Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/message.cfm/messageid:364427
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/unsubscribe.cfm

Reply via email to