Not at all. But people make choices in their lives.wco81 wrote:That sounds like the typical anecdote told by Republican politicians to rail against social programs.pk500 wrote: Why should a guy who went to med school for seven years, slaved ridiculous hours as an intern before becoming a successful doctor and has the vital job of saving human lives be forced to fork over some of his money to some guy who works at the local video store for 40 hours a week after dropping out of high school and smokes dope and plays World of Warcraft all night?
That's f*cking insane!
You know, outright made up or exaggerated.
But what, only successful people have "slaved ridiculous hours?"
And everyone making a lousy income is working some cush job waiting for a handout to finance a lazy lifestyle?
I started my career in journalism. I KNEW there wouldn't be any money in it; that was no mystery to me. The lack of dough and horrible hours forced me into PR, which gets few rich but still has more money than journalism.
But there's a simple fact that the socialist wing of the Democratic Party doesn't get: Life is a hell of a lot more of a meritocracy than a democracy.
No healthy person in America is predestined to any career. You make choices. If you decide to go to med school, chances are you're going to make more dough than a guy who paints stripes in parking lots. If you decide to work hard at Wal-Mart, you're simply not going to make as much as someone who works hard designing computer software, which is a more lucrative field.
Chances are, the person working at Wal-Mart does not have the same level of education as someone designing computer software. The person working at Wal-Mart probably doesn't work the obscene amount of hours and under the deadline pressures of someone designing software.
That's the way it is: Life is a meritocracy.
Everyone in America has the chance at higher education, especially the poor. There are countless grants and scholarships for the poor, especially poor minorities. But what percentage of the poor pursue those goals?
Again, another family example. My wife is the only member of her family to graduate from a four-year college. Her father was a small dairy farmer, and she got through college with a bunch of grants and loans. She worked her ass off and became successful in the mortgage field after college before leaving the workplace to be a full-time mother.
My wife's younger sister got even better grades than my wife in high school. Yet she dropped out of high school ONE SEMESTER short of graduation and has bounced from one low-paying job to another the last 20 years, getting pregnant when she was 19 and 21 and unmarried, etc., etc. Everyone tried to urge her to get her GED and go to community college, which she could have done pretty much for free due to low-income grants, etc.
But she refused. Now she has no money and blames the entire world for her problems, which all were spawned when she decided to quit school at 17.
People make choices. Then they must live with them.
Take care,
PK
