2009/5/27 paul perrin <[email protected]>:

[snip]

> In the past, older generations often felt guilty about taking 'hand
> outs' so a lot of work (and public money) was put in to encourage them
> to 'take up services that they had already paid/worked for'.
> Unfortunately we now have a culture that feels no such guilt (even if
> they have never worked at all) and they really believe that they
> should claim everything that is available regardless. Not so different

Do you have any evidence of that? Sure, it is commonly repeated, but
that doesn't make it true.

When I had time to study such things (about 20 years ago) I ran across
some cuneiform literature (I think originating in an edubba so
plausibly 6000 years old but it may have been Babylonian and a bit
later) in which two scholars are discussing how the morals of youth
have declined, they show no respect &c &c. The belief that people now
are morally inferior to those in the past seems universal even
diachronically.

My experience differs: not long ago I dealt with a girl recently out
of local authority care who was having great difficulty paying her
rent (I was trying to stop her from being evicted). She was
*extremely* reluctant to claim income support or other state income
supplement She felt terribly ashamed for not being able to pay her way
(though as far as I could see she was trying pretty hard to find work
and did find occasional bits and pieces which of course made things
worse).

I certainly don't detect a difference in attitude to state support
between the young and the old - but I am as ready to admit that my
sample size is rather small. Real evidence would be interesting. If
the effect you describe is real and not anecdotal then I wonder what
can be done about it.

> from MPs claiming allowances because it is apparently within the rules
> - even if the money is not actually needed... or gordon browns
> attitude in his book 'how to scrounge off the state'.

'Alternative Edinburgh'.

Rather makes my point that reticence about claiming benefits is not
new, though in the case of "Alternative Edinburgh" it does not appear
to distinguish between things that state offers (for good reason for
the benefit of everybody) from things that can be obtained by
deception and dishonesty. The two are different even if GB confuses
the two (a trap you fall into if you fail to distinguish).

>
> Every single thing the NHS does has been paid for by money taken from
> some individual who earned it from the sweat of their brow. People who

Its not helpful when trying to think usefully about the proper way to
fund public services (or if they exist) to use really silly emotive
phrases like "sweat of their brow". Its hard to know what that is even
supposed to convey - are you implying that advocates who spend lots of
time in the supreme court (when those wigs make your brow sweat like
mad) are somehow morally superior to those whose work is merely to sit
in an air conditioned office? I am sure you aren't, but then what?
That those who have an income are somehow morally superior to those
who don't? If that were true we'd be in real difficulty because most
primary care is unpayed (and therefore untaxed) though of vital
importance to society.

And besides, some tax (I know not much) comes from capital gains and
inheritance tax which may well have involved the sweat of no brows at
all (well at least of the person whose money it is).

> use 'public' services should feel rather less 'entitled', and should
> be rather less grateful to the well paid 'public servants' and a
> rather more grateful (and acknowledging) of the people whose hard work
> has been usurped to pay for them.

Rubbish. We have public services like the NHS because they serve us
all in the following really practical sense: whether or not I wish to
use the NHS or can afford to pay for it myself, I need its efficient
existence because lots of people can't afford the health that I need
them to have. Lots of sick and dying people can make me ill, can't
work for me and support the infrastructure my business relies on and
so on.

Its wrong to think of the NHS as some kind of charitable act for which
people should be grateful. Taxpayers get plenty of return from their
investment in education and health.

>
> 'Choice' from a number of restricted options is no more choice than
> freedom is being allowed out of your cell occasionally.

I cannot envisage any situation in which I could have an unrestricted
set of choices for health care (or in fact for anything else but then
I am a closet finitist).

--
Francis Davey

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