• thebrownhaze@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Been researching me. Dishonestly representing my opinions. Poor.

    I am totally in favour of free school lunches for those in need.

    Do you support buying rich peoples kids lunch with tax money?

    • LeadersAtWork@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I’ll assume I misread, it happens. However, kids are kids. Let them eat. How much their parents make doesn’t matter.

        • LeadersAtWork@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          The kids don’t have the money. Moreover, if anyone’s taxes go towards a service, they should be able to benefit from that service. Not benefit more, just benefit period.

          • thebrownhaze@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Couldn’t disagree more. I provide for my kids. Kids dot have cars, but I drive mine around in my car because they are my kids.

            Free Ubers for all children?

            I do not want to see poor people working to provide free services for rich people.

            I am astounded that is a controversial take.

            And I am speaking as a functionally rich person.

            • LeadersAtWork@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              Everything we use is due to taxes. Honestly, as a functionally rich person you should be aware of that. I’m actually of the opinion that anyone in need should be able to utilize services that my tax dollars help fund.

              This is how society works.

              The fundamental difference is who is taxed more. A poor family’s children should have access to food. A rich family’s children should have access to food. Your children should have access to food my taxes help pay for, it’s super easy, I’m surprised this is a controversial take.

              But nah, you right. If your kiddos ever need an ambulance, fuck em. Swipe that credit card, I don’t want to be paying to help as a “functionally poor person”. /s But hey, you said it first.

              • thebrownhaze@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                Ok, so we disagree on the point of taking money from poor people and giving it to rich people, which I find odd. It’s based on need. Using state resources to proved services for which there is no need is wasteful

                My children don’t need your resources when it comes to their daily needs. Yes, I am in favour of socialized healthcare (and schools, police, etc), why even bring that up?

                If you are in favour of free healthcare, let’s give everyone free cars?

                • LeadersAtWork@lemmy.world
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                  4 months ago

                  I disagree with keeping anything basic and essential from children. Hungry is hungry. Moreover, having money certainly doesn’t mean any individual has basic humanity and their children may suffer from that. If we assume the needs, or lack thereof, of individuals based on a perception, we will miss those who legitimately have a need. This is incredibly simple. Or do you believe that a child who is hungry and yet has rich parents who can pay for all their needs is at fault?

                  I am also in favor of free healthcare. All of this can be paid for by taxes levied at individuals who have more than enough to spare. After all, if you’re not in favor of the poor paying for the wealthy, let’s flip that script. Bernie outlined it years ago, and despite common perception, the U.S. has rather low tax rates compared to many other countries. We could easily supply a solution to the needs of the many through a taxation of the wealthy. Functional ;) or not.

                  • thebrownhaze@lemmy.world
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                    4 months ago

                    I’m in the UK. We have the NHS. I am a supporter of it (used it twice last week).

                    I think focusing on the lowest common denominator always is not the best.

                    Tell you what, here is my system. Free lunches for all, but I you have to apply, that’s it. I will but apply because it’s not needed.

                    I think presuming the state should step in and overrule parents on the assumption that they will be bad actors is awful and not a what the state is for.

    • randomwords@midwest.social
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      4 months ago

      Yes, I support providing free school lunches to both rich and poor students. It removes the stigma of receiving free or reduced cost lunches.

    • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Do you support buying rich peoples kids lunch with tax money?

      Why not? Their parents are payin’ for it, and it saves a whole mess of useless bureaucrats between hungry kids and food.

    • webadict@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Surprisingly, children are children, regardless of being rich and poor, and they all get hungry.

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      It works like uniforms. If everyone gets the same lunch, kids can’t manufacture conflict out of it. Stealing lunch money has always been a thing.

          • thebrownhaze@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            This is where you and I will disagree. I don’t want poor people paying for shit I can get myself without issue. That seems very unfair.

            Save that money for a useful social program that helps poorer people

            • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              It costs money to operate registers, take payments, etc as well.

              Means testing is terrible and why waste time and money rather than cooking the kids some food and having them focus on learning?

              Not every aspect of society should be about running some type of business. The whole thing is a distraction from what school ought to be about.

              The same goes for medicine, btw. The means testing and insurance gating there is even worse. Take the cash registers and insurance middlemen out of it and suddenly doctors can worry about the patient care instead of payments.

              • thebrownhaze@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                Perhaps. But what if it worked out vastly cheaper to target free lunches. Let’s say a billion was freed up for some important social program to help poor people. Would you agree with me if that were the case?

                • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                  4 months ago

                  Means testing also makes it easier for the rich to target programs for removal because not everyone qualifies for them.

                  We all need food, water, and sometimes medical care in order to survive. We all deserve even more, such as vision care, dental, and mental health support, and educational and training programs. Housing should even be a right. We have means tested versions of programs for some of these things, and people of meager means often slip through the cracks because they didn’t fill out the right paperwork or weren’t considered quite poor enough. It’s a shitty system and it starts with people coming from your viewpoint.

                  If a rich kid actually wants to go to for instance a free city college, who cares? Most people that have the means to go elsewhere would, and ultimately the goal of these institutions is the good societal impact that you want. If rich people are going to free colleges or eating free meals or taking public transit, it means the quality is there, which is great for everyone.

                  • thebrownhaze@lemmy.world
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                    4 months ago

                    That was quite a far ranging number of issues. So,

                    Education, food, housing and healthcare are all different issues.

                    None of which can ever be a “right” imo. I don’t think an exhaustible resource can ever be a right, what happens when it runs out (i could tell you about how my father in law died during COVID. Healthcare definitely ran out then).

                    housing is definitely not the business of the state in most cases, other than opting to be a moral landlord (as is the case with UK council houses). We should definitely have safety nets, and the housing market should be policed to be fair, but it’s not the states job to pay for my house, I’ve got that covered.

                    I believe healthcare free at the point of need is the gold standard. But if I had to pay for GP appointments, that would be fine. Those who can’t afford it should get it fee. Our prescriptions never cost more than £7.50, which is actually amazing. We could run that number on a curve, if I had to pay 15, that would be fine. Whatever the system is, it has to work and the NHS is really struggling at the moment.

                    free sub degree education for all is a no brainer for the whole country. If you want to do a degree is some obscure philosophy that won’t benefit society, feel free, but pay yourself. Getting a degree that provides skills the country needs, a system of grants is a good idea imo.

                    And, as you know, food for those in need, sure. I don’t want to see people destitute and hungry, but giving that food to millionaires is crazy in principle. Even if it worked out cost effective to do so (which I would be open to examining) I have a fundamental objection to that in principle.

    • ellabee@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      yeah, I do.

      I was a kid on free and reduced lunch. there’s stigma around being poor enough to need it, and I was bullied for it. my home life was sufficiently dysfunctional that it could be the only food I ate that day, and there were still times I’d rather be hungry than bullied.

      so in the interest of removing something kids can be bullied over, sure. tax the rich more, and let a relatively tiny bit of our taxes buy every child at least one meal a day.

      -childless taxpayer

      • thebrownhaze@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Let’s better use taxes to provide the service you clearly needed rather than just lunch. I can afford to buy my kids lunch. I don’t need poorer people’s taxes wasted buying my kids food.

        I was also bullied at school. The removal of only one factor would have made no difference. I was bullied because they wanted to bully me.