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		<title>Welfare has managed to take &#x27;work&#x27; out of working class</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/6/welfare-has-managed-to-take-work-out-of-wor.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Welfare has managed to take &#x27;work&#x27; out of working class</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/6/welfare-has-managed-to-take-work-out-of-wor.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jun 2010 11:15:30 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>How welfare has managed to take &#x27;work&#x27; out of working class<br /><br />Sandra Parsons<br /><br />Daily Mail<br /><br />8:41 AM on 30th June 2010<br /><br />Generous benefits: Frank Field, poverty adviser to David Cameron, says many men are better off staying out of work.<br /><br />What has happened to a significant number of Britain&#x27;s working-class men? Well, as Frank Field, the Labour MP who has been made a poverty adviser by David Cameron, has pointed out, for too many of them, the adjective &#x27;working&#x27; no longer applies.<br /><br />Thanks to a generous welfare system, many of them have calculated that they are better off staying at home than they would be doing anything so proletarian as a hard day&#x27;s work.<br /><br />According to Field, many young men today feel that jobs paying less than $300 a week are not worth their while.<br /><br />I know it&#x27;s unfashionable to say it, but anyone can find work if they really want to. When we were first married, my husband, as a non-EU doctor, was not allowed to practise until he had passed exams proving both his English and his medical competency.<br /><br />I was working full-time, so he could have stayed at home. Instead, he found a job as a cook in a wine bar. He had no experience, but reasoned that anyone could grill a burger and throw together a salad. Soon, he was working double shifts and earning more than he subsequently did in his first year as a junior doctor.<br /><br />But instead of finding whatever work they can, too many of Britain&#x27;s poorest young men choose to stay at home, easily able to afford the satellite television and cans of strong beer that all too often fuel their day.<br /><br />Unsurprisingly, they feel useless and frustrated - emotions that too many are unable to analyse, but which explode into aggression, violence and crime, together with a terrifyingly feckless attitude to procreating with different women.<br /><br />I say procreating because their loveless actions have nothing to do with fathering. For any child, the lack of a strong, responsible father figure is a tragedy.<br /><br />Despite what our politicians think, most single mothers do not want to go out to work, at least until their children are older.<br /><br />What they, and their children, want is a man to fulfil a role that used to be taken for granted and which these days seems almost quaint: that of provider.<br /><br />If a young boy does not see his father getting up and going to work every day, why should he go to school - still less aspire to a job afterwards?<br /><br />And why should he treat women with respect if that role model doesn&#x27;t? Thus our disastrous welfare system creates a cycle of dependency.<br /><br />Yesterday the Government announced its new Work Programme, under which millions on benefits will be forced to make daily efforts to find a job - and those who refuse will have their benefits curtailed.<br /><br />The inspiration for this reform has come from the U.S., where it&#x27;s claimed similar welfare reforms introduced by Bill Clinton saw dole queues fall by as much as 80 per cent in some states.<br /><br />And what happens when a man goes out to work is this: he starts to believe in himself and find some self-respect. And then he finds those around him start to believe in him and respect him, too.<br /><br />&#x27;Why can&#x27;t a woman be more like a man?&#x27; asked Professor Higgins in My Fair Lady as he tried to transform recalcitrant snip ney Eliza Doolittle into a lady.<br /><br />The question Professor Higgins might ask these days of a boozed-up man with several children by different mothers is: &#x27;Why can&#x27;t a man be more like a man?&#x27;<br /><br />Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1290752/How-welfare-managed-work-working-class.html#ixzz0sKhwHdZl<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/6/welfare-has-managed-to-take-work-out-of-wor.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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