Making the poor prove they’re worthy

We don’t drug-test farmers who receive agriculture subsidies (lest they think plowing while high!). We don’t require Pell Grant recipients to prove that they’re pursuing a degree that will get them a real job one day (sorry, no poetry!). We don’t require wealthy families who cash in on the mortgage interest deduction to prove that they don’t use their homes as brothels (because surely someone out there does this). The strings that we attach to government aid are attached uniquely for the poor.

Many Americans who receive these other kinds of government benefits — farm subsidies, student loans, mortgage tax breaks — don’t recognize that, like the poor, they get something from government, too. That’s because government gives money directly to poor people, but it gives benefits to the rest of us in ways that allow us to tell ourselves that we get nothing from government at all.

laws which insist that government beneficiaries prove themselves worthy, that they spend government money how the government wants them to, that they waive their and personal freedom to get it — are  simply a reflection of a basic double-standard.

via The double-standard of making the poor prove they’re worthy of government benefits – The Washington Post.

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