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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Joe Btfsplk who wrote (62443)2/16/2013 11:39:16 AM
From: greatplains_guy  Respond to of 71588
 
I watched part of the segment with Dr Carson. That is a comment I missed. As he pointed out in his speech at the national prayer breakfast that launched him into the spotlight, his mother knew that accepting government assistance was as devastating as a drug addiction. Very few people who accept government assistance go on to a fulfilling life of self sufficiency.

A suggestion that government should give cash to the poor seems to be at odds with his earlier statements.

almost all king crab was paid for with food stamps.

So I think that good Dr. and hopefully future President presented one point wrongly.


As much as my wife loves crab, I don't recall her buying any to serve at home since we had kids. Of course there are probably lots of people dependent on government assistance that have higher lifestyles than me. Certainly many drive nicer cars than I do. But then appearances are not important to me.



To: Joe Btfsplk who wrote (62443)2/16/2013 12:03:51 PM
From: greatplains_guy  Respond to of 71588
 
The Illusions of Supplemental Security Income, from Someone Who Knows
By Deborah C. Tyler
February 16, 2013

I've looked at SSI Disability from both sides now, from in and out, and still somehow it's the scammers, the duped, and the resentful I recall.

I have been involved in hundreds of SSI Disability cases. I have worked in the system providing mental status exams, called consultative examinations, in two states. I have done dozens of private psychological evaluations for people trying to get on Disability rolls. I have sent reams of case notes and reports to the Disability bureaucracy on behalf of therapy clients.

There have been memorable examinations. One was of a sassy prostitute. She said she worked for an "escort service," but it seemed important to her that I know the full range of her proficiencies. Her claim for SSI was based on major depression, but she seemed in high spirits to me -- or, as we say, "affect contraindicated mood disorder at this time." I think she was just getting a little long in the tooth for "claimant's customary employment."

I have interviewed foul-mouthed teenagers whose mommas thought they could shake a few dollars out of the system on the basis of "oppositional-defiant disorder." One 17-year-old was memorable because she came with a baby on her hip. Without the sophistication or coaching to understand what kind of money she was trying to get, she told me with more than a hint of hostility how smart, empowered, and free she was to do "whatever the f-" she wanted. I asked her, "Do you know what the word 'disability' means?"

Another fellow came in rather irritated. He resented being examined in his current state of residence, South Carolina, because doctors in the state where his back injury occurred 15 years ago "know my case." He was unusually fit for his age. He worked on a golf course and wanted to know how much he could work and still keep his Disability payments. I asked him, "Are you sure it's best for your recovery that your medical care for your injury is in West Virginia?"

I did SSI Disability evaluations on men recently released from state prison. Who is not damaged by eight years of hard time? In fact, it was the "feedback" of one such applicant that convinced me to get out of the business of those evaluations.

As a psychologist, I evaluate only mental condition. I learned a long time ago to watch how clients behave in the waiting room or parking lot when unaware they are being observed. People who were sitting upright, reading a book or magazine suddenly must lie completely prone in my office. People who were joking with the receptionist a few minutes earlier can't take a breath for the sobbing. I used to say to such applicants, "I understand you feel depressed, you didn't plan to be in this situation, but there will be some time today when you're not crying. Let it be this half hour so we can do a good evaluation." So 20 of the 30 minutes she's sobbing. Then I watch from a side window as she bounds outside and into the Escalade for the "How did it go?" conversation with her boyfriend.

A poignant case was of an exploited young man whose politically connected mother got him on Disability for "bipolar disorder" when he was 17. He earnestly pursued his assigned career as a mentally ill person for 10 years, turning his checks over to his mother. It took six months of therapy to help him understand that he had gone through a rough patch in adolescence but that he did not have bipolar disorder. As we brought his brain out from under a rockslide of medication, he began to think about what he could do with his life. It took several years, but he eventually broke free of his illusion of incapacity and became a successful medical technician. SSI Disability is meant to be a path back to employment. His was the only case I saw in which the Vocational Rehab program was actually used for self-rehabilitation.

I have seen SSI Disability from both sides now. I worked with an Iraq War veteran who was as completely disabled as anyone I had ever seen. He had an obvious traumatic brain injury, was in a wheelchair, had undergone numerous orthopedic surgeries, and had a nonworking spinal stimulator in his back. His neighbors ratted him out to the government when they saw him on his boat. He wasn't angry. He said, "Dr. Tyler, it takes two people pushing on my butt to get me on that boat."

Many of the Disability cases I've worked, on either as gatekeeper or as therapist, involved people in their 40s and 50s who had the typical health issues which accrue as a part of life. They came to the Disability program after being thrown away by employers. With no possibility of regaining their previous income, they turned to SSI Disability. I worked with one woman who had been molested as a child and had significant emotional problems. Nevertheless, she held a master's degree and had a successful 20-year career until she was replaced by a younger worker. Corporations cannot openly discard older workers on the basis of age, so in the new economy, a gold watch often comes in the form of a blast of disparagement on a performance appraisal. This client wanted to continue working and looked for another job for a year. When she found out her son was going to be a father, she agreed to take care of the baby and focus on getting SSI Disability.

Advances in workplace and medical technology have reduced the number of people who are unable to work. For that reason, SSI Disability rolls should be shrinking rather than exploding. The illusions of disability are tearing down middle-class morals and values. They are undermining individual and family responsibility and building in a payoff for temporary, treatable health problems to become permanent conditions. Millions of middle-class people are forfeiting the moral code that honors work, and they are being deprived of the self-respect that comes from doing their best. They are succumbing to the "government handout" mentality. The forces destroying the free-market economy are also served by the illusion that Americans are too sick to work.

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To: Joe Btfsplk who wrote (62443)2/17/2013 10:24:54 AM
From: greatplains_guy  Respond to of 71588
 
Oops, your racism is showing
Thomas Lifson
February 17, 2013


The New York Times and Washington Post have been called out for what grievance industry types like to call racism - treating a person of minority ethnicity more harshly than members of the dominant ethnicity. And the target, unsurprisingly, is Ted Cruz, the brilliant and tenacious new senator from Texas. Make no mistake: Ted Cruz is a serious threat to the liberal establishment because he is so damn smart and has the intestinal fortitude to stand up and call out their misbehavior.

John Nolte of Breitbart spotted the racism in what he calls "racially coded" attacks (I love it when we turn the left's rhetoric against them):


Apparently, the "Washington Post" and "New York Times" don't like the idea of a non-white U.S. Senator acting all uppity. It's fine for the lily-white Elizabeth Warren to immediately come out guns blazing, but over the past couple of days both news outlets ripped into in Texas Senator Ted Cruz for not knowing his place.

As we all know, the base of the Democratic Party is made up of union workers, who see Hispanics as a threat to their jobs, and rich, white, coastal liberals whose only contact with the Latino community is on grass-mowing day. And so, in what can only be interpreted as a racially-coded dog-whistle attack designed to appeal to the worst instincts of the Democratic base, the "Post" and "Times" have come together hoping to put an Hispanic back "in his place."

New York Times:

In just two months, Mr. Cruz, 42, has made his presence felt in an institution where new arrivals are usually not heard from for months, if not years.


The WaPo (which just sent off scores of layoff notices on Valentine's Day) also adopts the same theme:

The traditional stance for a freshman senator is to hold back a bit. Being reticent and deferential are not qualities that come naturally to those who manage to win Senate seats, but most new senators choose, as much as it clashes with their instincts, to tamp down.

Not Cruz.


Nolte rhetorically asks if anyone remembers similar criticisms being hurled at Chuck Schumer or Hillary Clinton, in addition to Elizabeth Warren. Of course not.

Busted!

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