Z
Variable Constant
There are food stamps, free food banks, and many charities here - the only one starving is someone who has chosen to do so. Look at the typical "poor" in the USA; they are the fattest poor people on Earth and there is no shortage of clothes, cars, housing, or bad taste there.
You are WOEFULLY ignorant of the charity situation, at least in the U.S.
Let me give you some info about Cincinnati, for example.
Food stamps: Yes, and they are readily available - IF you are working or actively looking for work (good policy, IMHO). The catch is, if you earn too much - say, if you work 40 hours a week at current minimum wage - they reduce your food stamps. The amount they reduce it is usually significantly more than the amount you can now afford to put toward food. We ran into this problem when we were using them - my wife's job gave her a raise equalling about a dollar a month, so they reduced the food stamp amount per month by about $50. It's a broken system.
And if you can't work, for whatever reason... no food stamps.
Soup kitchens and food closets get practically no budget, and largely rely on donations. Unfortunately, that means that soup kitchens are open about once a week, and food closets on average can offer a week's worth of food, about once a month, to about fifty people - and in Cinci, there's only three that I know of. They tell you that, from the time they open to distribute food, you have about six hours before it runs dry.
Other charities are spotty, and many require you to be Christian, or at least be willing to convert, before they'll help at all.
We've been through that merry-go-round. It doesn't work.
The same may not be true in other places - I can only speak from experience about Cincinnati, OH, Lawton, OK, and Fayetteville, NC.
If someone is unable (or unwilling) to manage their money, shoveling more money their way isn't going to solve their problems. And politically mandating that they pay their utility bill, pay off their car loan, buy car insurance, or buy health insurance won't work either. Even paying those bills for them doesn't work and I really don't know why anyone would think it would.
If someone isn't getting enough money to manage - which is a common situation - it would help tremendously.
More than 50% of all minimum wage workers, to the extent that there even are any of those any more, are unskilled, young people, brand new to the work force. Very few of them remain at the pay scale for more than a year or two because they get experience, learn a few skills (like showing up), or decide they don't want to wash dishes, or chase grocery carts around a parking lot in the rain, for the rest of their lives.
While I don't doubt that figure, I'd like to see your source. However, even if 10% of the minimum wage workers aren't that, it's worth the effort to make that 10%'s life more livable.
"Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?"
You come across as someone who has never been in hardship; someone who's had it pretty easy your whole life. I'm guessing you've never lived on a tight budget, with only, say, $150 budgetted for electricity, only to have the company suddenly jack up rates to $300 one month? It happens all the time, and is one of the most common source of problems, not counting personal irresponsibility. Or to be working in a town without public transportation, with a job 20 miles away, to suddenly have your car need $600 in repairs to be usable?
We're not even at minimum wage any more - both women in the house are managers with fairly good pay. And we still need public assistance sometimes to get by. No bling here - my wife is driving a used car given her by her parents. My roommate takes the bus to work and home - usually after midnight. We're buying our house - thanks to her father putting up the payments and us paying him back when we can. Our budget is TIGHT, and we're constantly having to forego or stall parts of it to make end meet.
But some of you live in a white tower, and think that the only poor people want to be poor. Yeah, right.