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don't know anyone on food stamps that pays taxes or even has a good job.
Drem wrote:Tuggan wrote:where did i say welfare is for the taxpayers?
are you kiddingTuggan wrote:Uh, the ones collecting unemployment are the taxpayers. You pay into that safety net the entire time you're employed, so in the event you lose your job you have something to fall back onto.
Arlos wrote:Also, what about all the false positives that could screw up someone's life? You really can get flagged for opiates if you have a poppy seed muffin in the morning. How about prescription medications that can cause flags as well? Vicodin is basically tylenol and codeine, and codeine is an opiate and will flag as such. Yet I don't think vicodin prescriptions are exactly uncommon. While vicodin may be an obvious source of false positives, it's hardly the only one, and you can't expect every average guy out there to know every single possibility for drug interaction and what different drug tests might flag their prescriptions as.
Also, do you honestly think the utterly massive bureaucracy that this would require is going to check all those factors? You honestly think that there will be ANY easy process to get a false positive cleared off your record? Somehow, I don't think so.
Furthermore, are you going to test for tobacco or alcohol? How is blowing money on a fifth of Absolut or a carton of Marlboro's any better than blowing the same amount on weed? You don't want YOUR tax money being used to buy weed by someone who's out of work. Guess what: who cares. Can a Jewish person object to someone using the money to buy bacon? Hell, I didn't like my tax dollars going to Iraq. Guess how far I'd get demanding they not be used for that.
In any case, the expense of setting all this up, including the test taking legions, the bureaucracy to track it all, and the medical technicians to process it all would cost vastly more than you'd save. Hell, a friend of mine worked as medical lab tech in the Air Force once upon a time. Due to budget, time and manpower constraints, they never processed even all of the serviceman drug tests that got sent to them. They'd put all the samples on a table, sweep 80% of them into the trash and just mark them all as clean, before actually testing the remainder. You honestly think a testing program for tens of millions would be more efficient? Hah.
No, ultimately it is a bad idea. It's unnecessary government intrusion into people's private lives, which there's too much of already.
-Arlos
Gypsiyee wrote:don't know anyone on food stamps that pays taxes or even has a good job.
I do. My sister. She's college educated and has worked 2 jobs for 5 years. She works with mentally handicapped people, an important job that few people do and that happens to pay pretty badly because it's service work. She also just lost her house and is getting ready to file chapter 7, a huge stress factor because she has a 2 year old. But I guess because she spends 25 bucks on pot once in a while in her 70 hour work weeks she doesn't deserve those food stamps to make sure her child is cared for.
Drem wrote:Gypsiyee wrote:don't know anyone on food stamps that pays taxes or even has a good job.
I do. My sister. She's college educated and has worked 2 jobs for 5 years. She works with mentally handicapped people, an important job that few people do and that happens to pay pretty badly because it's service work. She also just lost her house and is getting ready to file chapter 7, a huge stress factor because she has a 2 year old. But I guess because she spends 25 bucks on pot once in a while in her 70 hour work weeks she doesn't deserve those food stamps to make sure her child is cared for.
i'm not talkin about people like her. i don't really ever meet or hear about people like that on welfare. i'm pretty sure the program is there to help people like her. in my opinion it is, anyway
and i dunno, if you want free food you could probably just stop smokin pot for a little while. is it really that big of a deal ? because it's kind of a stupid defense. "hey i need free money for food to sustain my child because i just spent mine on drugs" sounds kinda bullshit to me /shrug
I do. My sister. She's college educated and has worked 2 jobs for 5 years. She works with mentally handicapped people, an important job that few people do and that happens to pay pretty badly because it's service work. She also just lost her house and is getting ready to file chapter 7, a huge stress factor because she has a 2 year old. But I guess because she spends 25 bucks on pot once in a while in her 70 hour work weeks she doesn't deserve those food stamps to make sure her child is cared for.
Harrison wrote:And honestly, I don't care if it's legal or not. If you're getting high instead of putting your efforts towards looking for work, feeding your kids better, etc.
You fail.
I probably couldn't count how many times I could have had a better meal if my father wasn't a raging alcoholic while I grew up.
ClakarEQ wrote:The drug tests will end up costing more than the potential savings you're expecting to see so the result would dictate an increase in taxes for those that work in order to sustain our police state mentality. We will all lose in the end, not gain by this.
ClakarEQ wrote:There is also an assumption that if this were to be enacted that folks wouldn't trick the system, like bring their kids urine.
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