https://www.nytimes.com/elections/results/california-president-clinton-trump
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I would like to live in a society where people who need help can get it. Where people who can't work could get assistance. Where people who can work could get training and help finding a job if they needed it.
The problem of poverty is complicated and is a mixture of local and federal policy and human nature. For example, people did not vote for Trump because they wanted more public restrooms. That is a local issue. The federal government is best suited to manage macroeconomic policy such as the money supply and international trade. Those are issues Trump can help with. Other factors are better dealt with at the local level such as mental health care, and pubic restrooms, housing health and safety standards, welfare, job placement and training.
Much of poverty is due to cultural factors. People tend to manage money the way their parents did. Sometimes when you try to educate poor people on how to stop being poor they complain that you are insensitive to their culture. They don't want to be friendly and respectful to customers and supervisors, or dress and groom themselves neatly, or show up for work on time. They don't want to speak standard English. They want to get paid more than their labor is worth to their employers.
They don't want to do the things that people who have jobs do. If they don't want to change their culture (and they should have the right not to) what are the productive people supposed to do? I don't think it is right to force productive people to pay for people who could be productive but don't want to be. Some of them think the government is their nanny who should treat them like an infant.
Some people who are sane, prefer to be poor rather than work. Should they have that right? As long as they don't create problems for other people I think it's okay. But I also think the government should provide appropriate assistance to people who can't work and to people who can work but want help learning job skills and finding work. The people who can work but don't want to do what everyone who holds a job does, do not have the right to demand that everyone else support them.