There's voluntary and then there is arm-twisting... You know, things like food stamps are voluntary, too, but when you have no other means to eat suddenly you don't seem to have a choice after all.NEW YORK — Republican candidate for governor Carl Paladino said he would transform some New York prisons into dormitories for welfare recipients, where they could work in state-sponsored jobs, get employment training and take lessons in "personal hygiene."
Paladino, a wealthy Buffalo real estate developer popular with many tea party activists, isn't saying the state should jail poor people: The program would be voluntary.
Funny, though - he has NO specific plans on how to do this. If you're curious, here is his official campaign website which is long on sound bites and almost empty of any substantive plan. Well, he mentions things like cutting money for schools, universities, and hospital charity care. I suppose that is, technically, a plan of sorts... but I digress from the main topic here, which is his plan for welfare recipients.But the suggestion that poor families would be better off in remote institutions, rather than among friends and family in their own neighborhoods, struck some anti-poverty activists as insulting.
Paladino is competing for the Republican nomination with former U.S. Rep. Rick Lazio. The primary is Sept. 14.
Paladino first described the idea in June at a meeting of The Journal News of White Plains and spoke about it again this week with The Associated Press.
Throughout his campaign, Paladino has criticized New York's rich menu of social service benefits, which he says encourages illegal immigrants and needy people to live in the state. He has promised a 20 percent reduction in the state budget and a 10 percent income tax cut if elected.
All of which presupposes those on welfare are young and healthy and able-bodied.Asked at the meeting how he would achieve those savings, Paladino laid out several plans that included converting underused state prisons into centers that would house welfare recipients. There, they would do work for the state – "military service, in some cases park service, in other cases public works service," he said – while prison guards would be retrained to work as counselors.
I've heard of people referring to the "unwashed masses" but this takes the cake. Those dirty, filthy poor people! If only they would take a shower they'd enjoy the benefits of a free market and capitalism and get rich, just like Carl Paladino!"Instead of handing out the welfare checks, we'll teach people how to earn their check. We'll teach them personal hygiene ... the personal things they don't get when they come from dysfunctional homes," Paladino said.
Hey, Carl - here's an idea: instead of throwing poor people in prison and then finding make-work for them, WHY DON'T YOU WORK ON JOB CREATION IN THE FIRST PLACE? Seems to me it would save a few steps and time/money - which is what you claim to be about, right? Right? Or do you just want those damn dirty apes welfare cases as far away from you as possible? So you don't have to look at them.New York, like other states, receives a federal block grant to provide cash and other forms of welfare to very low-income residents. Federal law already requires welfare recipients to do some form of work to receive benefits.
Gee - isn't that happening EVERYWHERE? Also in the news: when it rains, the ground gets wet.New York's welfare rolls have grown slightly during the recession, while food stamp eligibility has almost doubled, according to the state.
Why the 'far from home" part? Or is the real agenda here to get the poor people out of the cities and out of the way of the employed and/or wealthy?Paladino told The Associated Press the dormitory living would be voluntary, not mandatory, and would give welfare recipients an opportunity to take public, state-sponsored jobs far from home.
WTF? Does he think poor people in America don't have toilets? Maybe he thinks they shit in old coffee cans and piss against the trees or something (I've been to Buffalo in winter - no way are people pissing against trees in January. Maybe they're just really good at holding it until spring?)"These are beautiful properties with basketball courts, bathroom facilities, toilet facilities. Many young people would love to get the hell out of cities," Paladino he said.
This guy made his fortune in real estate. If there is a lack of toilets in Buffalo (which, by the way, I've never noticed when visiting but my relatives there are upper middle class) maybe he should look in the mirror. I mean, WTF - if he thinks poor people don't have toilets shouldn't he be doing something about that in his own fucking industry?
Right - because all poor people are 17 year old army recruits. And they smell funny. Or something.He also defended his hygiene remarks, saying he had trained inner-city troops in the Army and knows their needs.
"You have to teach them basic things – taking care of themselves, physical fitness. In their dysfunctional environment, they never learned these things," he said.
Really, I'm getting an ugly sub-text here, but I don't have proof of what I think he REALLY wants to say here, but doesn't dare because those attitudes are just unacceptable to the general American public these days. Just a hunch, you know?
Yeah, honey, that's exactly what he's saying.Ketny Jean-Francois, a former welfare recipient and a New York City advocate for low-income people, said Paladino's idea shocked her.
"Being poor is not a crime," she said. "People are on welfare for many reasons ... Is he saying people are poor because they don't have any hygiene or any skills?"
Holy shit - what a gross distortion of the historical facts. Paladino's plans bear a closer resemblance to the US internment camps for Japanese citizens during WWII than they do to the CCC. For starters, CCC workers weren't housed in fucking prisons (though some of the camps set up to house workers were later converted to Japanese internment camps and German POW facilities. But they didn't start out as prisons).A Lazio spokesman didn't immediately return a message.
Paladino said he based his ideas on the Civilian Conservation Corps, a federal program that paid young unemployed men during the Great Depression to plant trees, build roads and develop parks.
Note the distinctions between "long term recipients" (you know, those unhygienic smelly poor people) and "people who had lost their jobs" (meaning "people sort of like Mr. Paladino who know how to use soap and water but somehow fucked up and became poor")Paladino said he would open the program both to long-term welfare recipients and to people who had lost their jobs during the recession.
Because criminals aren't crowded enough in the prison system... and the "didn't know how he would pay for it" is right in line with the details of the rest of his fiscal planning. And hey, didn't he say earlier that this whole shebang was supposed to be part of saving money? Yes, yes he did: "Asked at the meeting how he would achieve those savings, Paladino laid out several plans that included converting underused state prisons into centers that would house welfare recipients." OH, but now he doesn't know how he'll pay for those "savings", which aren't savings at all. So yes, the real agenda here is NOT saving money but getting those damn filthy ages people away from "proper" people. You know, the ones who have toilets and know how to shower.He said that he didn't know how he would pay for it but that prisons could be consolidated to make room.
Really, this presupposes that the poor are young, healthy, able-bodied, and free to go elsewhere (as well as having an ignorance of soap and water, apparently). There is NO provision here for the old, the disabled, those with young children or disabled dependents.