Thursday, September 02, 2010

Rant

Yes, I live in the ghetto. I've complained about it often-- mostly in jest, but certainly loudly. I live in the equivalent of a housing project where the town council dumps all the non-contributors to society where they don't have any other place to put them. These are the dredges-- the people who are working the system-- claiming benefits by having more and more children but can't afford to actually take care of them. Because when you live in a socialist country where they just throw money at you, why would you bother working? These aren't people who the system should be working for-- the elderly, disabled, people who aren't physically or mentally capable of taking care of themselves. These are young, able-bodied people. I know this because they hang out on the street in front of their (and my) house drinking and smoking (even the pregnant ones), playing really loud music while screaming and playing soccer and running around like idiots. This is what my tax dollars are paying for?

Don't get me wrong-- I believe in a system that helps people that need it. What I don't support is a system that turns a blind eye because it's harder to do the work and makes it easy to take advantage of it. Sure, these people, who are clearly able-bodied and can work, are working it because they can-- they obviously have no self-respect or pride. But why should the government reward them for that? Why are they not held accountable for what they take? There's a tv show here called "Benefits Busters" where a woman with a child was claiming benefits and not working because she couldn't afford to pay for childcare. So instead, the taxpayers were paying for her lifestyle-- which included a large, two story, three bedroom house, new car, 52 in flat screen tv... all without having to lift a finger. Ummm-- her lifestyle is better than mine, a two income household where we work our tails off saving money, paying our bills-- and apparently for this woman's life as well. This might sound crazy, but why wouldn't the government, I don't know-- subsidize childcare through someone actually working for it? But no-- in the UK it's free money all the time.

Yesterday was the breaking point for me. I was upstairs working in my home office and turned toward the window when I heard a noise. There, a 20-something man standing in his backyard, proceeded to unzip his pants, whip out his penis and pee. IN HIS BACKYARD that is overlooked by a half a dozen houses. I thought-- what kind of lazy does it take for someone to walk into the backyard to pee rather than using the bathroom. This is where I live?!? And really?? Do I really need to see some stranger's body parts before my second cup of tea in the morning?

Yes, I am a sometimes Pollyanna-- I try to look for the good even when it's buried deep in s(*$t. Sure I had ridiculous fantasies of us cleaning up the area-- literally and figuratively. Setting a good example-- picking up trash, working with the local council, community police, inspiring good action through good action. And I tried for a better part of a year. But the only thing that this experience has taught me is that pay it forward is just a movie. Working the system is the only thing that actually pays you back. It makes me sad though-- for the babies and the children of these people. You see the cycle just repeating itself. They weren't taught anything by their parents-- self respect, setting goals and working for them, accountability... and now their children-- these innocent little things that are so dependent on them, are in the same boat. Really, really sad.

1 comments:

Aohoku said...

ok, so the UK is no better than the USA welfare system which pretty much operates the same way (enable the able-bodied, disable those that really need it). perhaps the question is, "does the almighty 'vote' truly have muscle power?" am trying not to get all political on you but it is an election year here in the USA & the politicians are talking it up a storm. but where's the action once that foot is inside that government door? i live in waianae (famous for being the welfare capital of oahu) and i see outside my window the same sights that you see. i get disgruntled cause i too gotta go work M-F, and my hard earned dollars do support those able bodied people that are my neighbors (except mines don't pee in their yard -- lol). vicious cycle? or a way of life no matter what part of the world one lives in? i look forward to ur other follower's comments & their take in their part of the world!

hugs!