TheHeretic
Posts: 19100
Joined: 3/25/2007 From: California, USA Status: offline
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Now that the election is over, and there is hope of more philosophical discussion, I'm curious about people's reactions to, and thoughts on the TSE program. It hasn't had much media attention, if any. Perhaps, as House oversight goes looking at where the money has been going the last couple years, it will get some attention. To put it in a nutshell, TSE is Transitional Subsidized Employment (sometimes called STEP). The program puts welfare recipients into private jobs, with the government picking up the tab. A brief description can be found here, from a promoting agency. The "employees," make $10 an hour, with the beneficiary organization paying a maximum of 20%, or maybe nothing at all. The employment liabilities are assumed by a government agency. As is so often the case for me when it comes to liberal policies, I can both appreciate the good intentions of this, and think the methodology is completely wrong. First off, we have the gov't, offering a pool of free labor to "qualifying" business. There are several "ism's" where you might find such a state of affairs, but capitalism ain't one of them. For companies and employers who don't get such a handout, but must compete with the ones that do, it can only be a "WTF?" moment. How stimulated are they, by such a stimulus program? For those in the job market who aren't all signed up for welfare, and enrolled in the nanny system, how dare the gov't be passing out $10 an hour jobs, while they struggle to get something at minimum wage? Even for the direct effect, and stated goals, the welfare cases being placed into jobs, where they can get experience and build their skills, what are they learning? That you are ultimately accountable to someone other than your boss? That work is something you are given, instead of something you go get? Doesn't this move them deeper into psychological dependence on gov't assistance, instead of away from it?
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If you lose one sense, your other senses are enhanced. That's why people with no sense of humor have such an inflated sense of self-importance.
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