I hope you aren't arguing that the 'working poor' are deserving of charity assistance, but the unemployed aren't?
And I notice that you judge one's employment-status by their dress and behaviour. I know and even work with
people who, when not at work look and act just as you describe. But they aren't unemployed.
As for personal responsibility or the lack of... let me tell you a story.
Last time I became unemployed, it had absolutely nothing to do with personal responsibility or the lack of it on
my part, but everything to do with the company I worked for going broke. But I was abused and vilified for being
out of work, as if it had been 100% my fault. And of course, I was a 'bludger' despite working tirelessly for charity
as a volunteer.And yes, I starved, the dole is not nearly enough to pay for rent and essential services and expect
to eat too.
And I saw that other unemployed, no matter how or for how long they'd been out of work, were also being vilified
and abused, discriminated against, and generally being treated like some kind of different, barely-human sub-species
deserving of nothing but contempt. With no justification whatsoever.
Then there was the way they get used as political fodder and as targets ant budget/election times. I decided that
it was time something was done, and so started becoming active politically to try to get them a better deal and to
dispel once and for all the offensive and untrue Howardian 'dole-bludger' myth.
Support for this is growing by the day now, with all kinds of unlikely sources getting aboard.
We WILL win...