The Government’s Wars on Poverty and Drugs Had Good Intentions—but Bad Results
Government makes most things worse.
President Lyndon B. Johnson launched a war on poverty; President Richard Nixon a war on drugs.
Both had good intentions, but their “wars” do more harm than good.
I believed the war on poverty would lift people out of poverty.
At the time I was a naive Princeton student who believed my professors when they said, “It’s wrong that in this rich country, people are poor, so government should fix that. Targeted programs will lift people out of poverty.”
Have they?
We’ve spent more than $30 trillion so far. Some people were helped.
When welfare began, the poverty rate dropped. Dropped for seven years.
But then progress stopped. Since the 1970s, the number of Americans living in poverty rose and fell, but the initial success hasn’t repeated.
That’s because the handouts encourage people to become dependent. Welfare even discouraged marriage because a single parent gets a bigger check.
As a result, welfare created something never seen before in America: a permanent “underclass”—generations raised without fathers, generations who stay poor and passive.
It’s happened because people “are basically told, ‘you can’t take care of yourself.’…It doesn’t encourage them to be ambitious,” says Yaron Brook, head of the Ayn Rand Institute, in my new video.
“Once you start paying people not to work…they don’t expect to take responsibility for their own lives.”
The war on drugs also ha
Article from Reason.com
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