![]() |
Haha! Thats pretty smart! Posted via RS Mobile |
we need this in vancouver. |
Awesome. Welfare is abused like a mofo in the US. |
Does anyone really think a "junkie" goes thru less than 500$ a week in drugs? This wont do F all to limit drug users. Hell to be a junkie i'd figure you'd be spending at least 3k+ a month on drugs if not your just a recreational user. |
LOL @ unconstitutional. How about some logic, hippies? Taxpayer money goes to welfare cases who spend it on drugs = your taxpayer money is playing for some assholes heroin...not hungry children or whatever. So they're basically saying that it is a human right for poor people to spend tax money on fucking drugs. How does this make sense? I'm not against people buying drugs. I could care less. Yes, you can buy all the goddamn drugs you want...just not with other people's money. This is a great idea. People spending their welfare money on drugs are either forced to clean themselves up or eventually die or something. |
Quote:
I believe in not throwing good money after bad, so the economics of it make perfect sense. Deal with the hardest cases to get the most cost reductions... yet I have a hard time with the moral dilemma. I don't want my tax dollars paying for someone to have a drug filled free ride. Its the same issue with the safe injection site, it saves our health care system money down the road by preventing serious disease from spreading, ... yet I don't want to condone letting people do hard drugs without going to jail. So there's no good answer, thus why the moral argument usually wins. |
Quote:
I would not be surprised in the least if the private prison industry had a hand in this move towards drug testing. Knowing these people are likely to turn to crime in order to fuel their addictions, crime will go up and that's good for business. The taxpayer goes from supporting these addicts with monthly welfare cheques to supporting them by paying the prisons to house them - a much costlier effort. ^This is just speculation from myself of course but the US prison industry is known to lobby for laws which translate to more people being housed in the their prisons. They have no concern for reducing crime or remedying the problems of society because that works against their business model. Don't get me wrong, I don't like funding drug habits with my taxes but I have a bigger issue with my taxes being used to fund costlier for-profit prisons. |
Quote:
Yet when taxpayers are FEEDING addicts disease, I find that wrong. I like this new law, and agree with it. They say it's breaking privacy policy, yet you KNOW your a drug addict, you KNOW that they will KNOW your a drug addict then.. it's a choice you make. Try to cheat the system and see if they catch you, or DON'T apply for it. That simple. :thumbsup: for this law. |
I know this all sounds really great and all. But it's an effort to appease undereducated conservatives. As Gladwell points out, statistically, low cost intervention strategies are the most cost effective way of dealing with the poor. Welfare and food stamps being the most cost effective. This approach costs more in crime, crime prevention, prison care (60-200K a year per inmate) and medical costs by FAR then welfare and food stamps (all of 18K a year) ever will. |
Quote:
I'm from small town Canada with similar values, yet also a education, and I can say I don't support giving drug addicts a free ride regardless if it is cheaper and more effective. Why? Come to small town Canada and see if you can find a homeless drug addict. You won't, cause if you don't work hard for a living you don't live - and there's absolutely nothing wrong with valuing that. Homelessness and drug addiction are byproducts of "educated" city life where people ignore each other and hope the system takes care of them. Small town life depends on everyone helping each other out, they cannot wait for the system to take care of them. So if we're drawing parallels, maybe without a system to abuse, there wouldn't be drug addicts abusing the system. :) (yes I know that's not true, yet trying to give you perspective from some of those "uneducated conservatives" you criticize :p). |
I say we should just give them one years welfare in one day. That should be enough money to figure out what to do with their lives, rent a place to live, buy some new clothes to look for a job and food. Giving them just enough to scratch by obviously doens't work so this way they can hopefully get themselves out of the hole they're in. Or they will have enough money to buy enough drugs to OD and be over with it. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I too grew up in small town Canada. I understand that there's a hard days work to be had. But 1. I also know that people don't choose to be drug addicts, it's not 1. get hooked on meth, 2. mad profit or anything like that. I also like economic efficiency. Harm reduction is a cost saving measure. It also leads to a greater degree of rehabilitation which leads to people contributing to rather then draining on the system. I don't think most people understand how little we provide in welfare now, and it's also strictly limited. Most of you couldn't live off of what a person, even a family on social services makes. This is not the lap of luxury by any stretch. |
I think there are two major points to this bill. Only one of them is being realized and discussed in this thread, that being that if you are on drugs you don't get welfare. I think the bigger point is, that regular people who are having hard times are now having to have their personal privacy invaded in order to seek social assistance. Not everyone who needs welfare is a junkie, however everyone who wants it will require a drug test. Its not random, or based on indicators of drug use. This would be the equivalent of requiring EVERYONE here to allow the government to know their status (even recreational usage) around drug use to get something like medicare... I don't know about you but the government sure as hell has no right to what I do on the weekends. Medicare is just another form of social assistance provided by the government, just in Canada everyone has it (and most need it / couldn't afford it otherwise). "If you got money for pot, you got money to pay for healthcare" would be the same thing... who here would support that? As much as it pains me to know a junkie is shooting up their welfare cash every Wednesday, laws like this are really hard to support for a social system available to everyone. |
Quote:
Putting them in apartments with free rent may be the most economic efficient thing to do, yet it still doesn't get them the help they need. I like economic efficiency combined with social programs that work. Instead of giving the chronic homeless and drug addicted places with free rent, open up the mental institutions closed by liberal hippies the 60s and 70s and force them to get the help they need. They can have free rent there, get the help they need, and remove the moral problem people like myself have with the idea... yet the liberal hippies think its bad to essentially lock up a mentally ill person incapable of making good decisions, and instead give them money hoping they'll make good decisions despite proving time and time again they do not. |
This is not surprising really. When it comes to drug enforcement, Florida is pretty hard core with the mandatory minimum sentences and such. |
Quote:
Its a disease wa wa wa. Drug addicts choose to be drug addicts , its the easy choice but if nobody forces them to make the harder choice then why would they. |
Quote:
Again I don't think you have any idea of how diffecult it is to get on welfare here in this province and in the country in general. You also seem to be confusing Welfare and disability which are two completely different things. And it's not the liberal hippies who let the mentally ill people on the street. I worked at Riverview. We fought hard to keep people in. It's the "Liberal" (who are really conservatives) government that closed most of the hospital and turned those people out onto the street because that was a "cost saving measure" and they wanted to free up the land for condos. There they have the facilities to keep all the mentally ill people off the streets and in a place where they can be supervised and medicated and rehabilitated but the government refuses to support it. They would rather these people were on welfare. |
I think a really good number of people disagree with the closing of Riverview, but one of the things that people absolutely hate is unaccountable costs. If it costs $60,000 to house and clothe and feed someone in a mental health institution, it's hard to show or prove that we are saving x dollars in policing, or insurance or other costs. We can quote statistics until we're blue in the face, but when people see "My money is being wasted on something that there's no real proof is saving me money", people tend to get frustrated. For the record, also, it was actually the Social Credit party that was in charge during the decline of Riverview; the NDP was the official opposition. At the time of the decline, I was in my infancy so I can't speak specifically to what happened then unfortunately. |
Ah well I was working there in the late 90s and the Liberals were cutting their budget yearly. But, anyone that says it was "liberal hippies" who wanted the mentally ill on the street is a friggen idiot. I'm one of those Liberal Hippies that lobbied very long and very hard for money to keep it opened because I know what happens when these sorts of people are left to their own devices. So you have your choice. You can pay for people on welfare, or you can pay for people in mental health institutes and prison. But no matter what you're going to pay. |
Quote:
You're an idiot if you worked in this field and didn't know this, I don't work in this field and know the history - please educate yourself before you criticize. |
I am educated. In the 60s and 70s we had lithium and anti depressents suddenly available on the market, with these developments populations in the metal hospitals (Riverview at it's height had a population of over 20K) reduced dramatically. Not because liberal hippies wanted them to be free, but because with self medication they were able to be functional members of society. Up until this point we also imprisoned people in mental hospitals for being rebellious, promiscous or even gay (homosexuality was classified as a mental illness in the DSM III). In the 70s these practices petered off. Which also contributed to a reduction in populations. In this period there was also a movement towards home care for children born with pervasive disabilities such as Down's Syndrome and Autism, both because parents moved to more holistic and less medicalized care and because horrible abuses ran rampent in a lot of these "schools" and those cases were uncovered. None of these had anything to do with liberal hippies nor did they remove people from care that SHOULD be in care. At the same time the government decided to move to smaller, regional programs. Unfortunately THIS is not cost effective as it contributes to duplication of cost all over the place. But this is what they decided to do. At the same time they broke off colony farms from Riverview, separating the criminally ill from the general population. The reason right now, today that the people who should be in care are not is because the government won't pay for it. That is it. Period. End of story. There are thousands of families struggling to provide care far beyond their means for elders with dementia, for children with mental illness, for spouses with mental illness and they can't get support. And the people who don't have families to support them and fight for them. They end up on the street. We still have laws on the books that allow us to confine people who are critical and processes that allow us to keep them there. But they're rarely used now with the exception of suicidal patients because there's no where to put them. I worked in two different locked wards. They still existed as late as 2003 (both of the ones I worked on are now closed). The problem is we need more of them. But instead of building more, they're closing them. THAT is the reality of the situation today. |
I don't think it's so much as a matter of cost-saving, than a matter of principle. I would gladly pay more in taxes if it meant more mental institutions and support programs. Mental instability can also stem from drug use -- there is no "sane" daily user of meth. The problem with InSite is that it passively encourages drug users to seek help and doesn't force it upon them... it's extremely hard to persuade a smoker to quit, much less a drug user. I'm talking about the hopelessly addicted, not those that are already seeking help and looking for a safe place to inject for the time being. Right now, it is very hard to support a mentally impaired person in Vancouver. It's ridiculously expensive to live here, rent+food alone already runs to $1200+ for a SINGLE person. My parents worked insanely hard to keep food on the table for two perfectly healthy kids. Families who have children with mental disabilities NEED help, otherwise many end up giving up because of the near impossiblity of supporting themselves and a dependent in the household. The problem in our society is that everyone bitches about having higher taxes. And after that, they bitch about not having enough services. "You can't explain that." |
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:05 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
SEO by vBSEO ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.
Revscene.net cannot be held accountable for the actions of its members nor does the opinions of the members represent that of Revscene.net