
Confused Hadrian
If you have been at all active in politics on social media, you have seen the cycle of blame and rumination. How did we get here? And, whose fault is it!? I’m sure that was cathartic. But, the election is over. The votes have been counted. This is going to be our government for at least two years. Maybe more. Maybe a great deal more. Yet, the time from recrimination and blamestorming is past. No more blaming Hillary or Bernie Sanders or millennials. No, this isn’t one of those “grow up and move on” posts. This is “move forward.” We will all have work to do in the coming years to make this country better and to help each other. But, what can I actually do?
Tell Your Story
In the United States, it is not socially acceptable to receive any kind of hand out. Collectively, we look down on beggars, panhandlers, and people who need help. When we receive help from programs that we and our families have paid into as taxpayers – whether that is Medicaid, food stamps, welfare, disability, or Obamacare – we don’t like to talk about it and often we actively try to conceal it. The inevitable result of this silence is that the people we see using benefits are only the most brazenly socially oblivious. We’ve all seen it: the couple high on something trying to buy $19 sushi with food stamps, the ‘disabled’ uncle playing tackle football at the family reunion, the Wu-Tang Clan’s Ol’ Dirty Bastard picking up his government check in a limousine on national television.
None of these examples are typical cases, but they seem that way because we don’t see the thousands of counter examples. The fraud rate is actually very low. The working single mother hides her foodstamp card behind her debit card. The unemployed salesman doesn’t mention how he keeps his apartment. The couple with a new baby don’t mention their search for a pediatrician who takes Medicaid on their Facebook birth announcement. There is shame in receiving help from the government, so oftentimes the only people we see using it are the utterly shameless.
I Didn’t Get Here Alone
In my own life, I have worked very hard. I went to college and held part time jobs. I studied. I overloaded my course schedule to make sure I could graduate in four years. As an adult, I’ve taken lousy jobs, worked overtime, and saved as much money as possible. But I didn’t get to that position without help. I have received just about every kind of government aid at one point or another:
- Medicaid
- Food stamps
- Student aid
- Unemployment
Without them, I wouldn’t have a good job with a decent salary that allows me the time to write political rants like this one on the internet. In fact, without some of that medical aid, I may not even be alive. These programs help real people. People like me. I didn’t learn laziness and dependency. No, I was given resources that allowed me to pay my taxes and contribute to society – a society that can help other people who are in my prior position.
If you have been helped by these programs or any other, everyone who still needs the help also needs you to talk about it – to your friends, your family, your church group, your Facebook and Twitter followers, anyone who will listen. I guarantee you’re not alone. After that, tell your representatives in Congress and encourage others to do likewise. It’s safe to discontinue programs who are used by largely imaginary undeserving frauds. It’s not as easy for elected officials to turn their backs on real Americans. The new Congress backed off an initiative to weaken the Ethics Office because of constituent phone calls. The voice of the public can and does make a difference.