Even with them around, proverty can be much reduced. It is always striving for a better tomorrow for all.
I'd like to bring everyone's attention to this article. It's about NZ. This a country where a mother and child who are out of work receive an average of $550 per week in benefits and more if you know how to work the system. There are subsidies and handouts for just about everything.
http://www.workandincome.govt.nz/individuals/a-z-benefits/index.html.
That's more than $2200 per month for doing nothing.
They live in homes rented from Housing NZ for less than $35 per week
Yet in this land of milk and honey, they're staging rallies about child poverty? Ask yourself how this can be.
The answer is simple. I have done debt counseling in the poor areas of Auckland. The money is squandered by individuals who make poor choices in life. It wouldn't make any difference if they were given $2500 per month or $5000 per month or even $8000 a month. These characters are humans who are made up of inferior genes and they are incapable of making sound choices.
If they have $300 in their pockets, they'll head to the local dairy to buy $200 worth of lottery tickets, then to the pub for $40 worth of beer and pop into the dairy on the way home again for $20 of ciggies. What's left behind is then used pay a portion of a bill that has been outstanding for 6 months. [I could start talking about the druggies but that's a another story for another day]
Nothing will change them short of death. I gave up counseling a long time ago. I tried to explain the power of compound interest. I told them to buy seedlings so they could grow their own veggies instead of buying shit from McDonalds but they simply can't be bothered to work the soil. It's too hard and too troublesome and they don't want to wait for the seeds to germinate. McDonalds is just across the road so they collect their benefits and head straight there for a big Mac.
When I was in my 20s, I thought like you guys.. poor people are unfortunate.. not given a break... treated unfairly etc. Now with the benefit of living a full life and witnessing and getting involved in the realities of life, I'm a lot more realistic. Some people simply are inferior. There's nothing the rest of the world can do about it.
Rally calls for end to NZ's child poverty
By
Kate Shuttleworth K8Shuttleworth Email Kate
5:12 PM Wednesday Oct 17, 2012
Anika Moa performs as part of the rally against child poverty. Photo / Kate Shuttleworth
Singer Anika Moa performed at Parliament grounds today at a rally calling for an end to child poverty as part of international eradication of poverty day.
The rally coincides with Green Party co-leader Metiria Turei's member's bill to transform the in-work tax credit into a child payment for all children from all low-income families.
Ms Moa said she went to school without lunch and grew up in a poor area.
"Obviously I eat now; I've got a fat arse," she said.
"I'm here to support the cause and I think it should have started yesterday, and we should all act now."
Up to 150 people from the Labour, Green and Mana parties, the NZEI, CTU and Service and Food Workers union gathered at Parliament.
Children from Kelburn Normal School's rock band and choir sang.
Ms Turei said it was unacceptable that 270,000 children in New Zealand were living in poverty.
"New Zealand should be a great place to grow up. But thousands of kids don't have the same opportunity that other children have to enjoy a good life and a fair future because their lives are hampered by poverty."
Labour's social welfare spokeswoman Jacinda Ardern said there is political will on ending child poverty.
"Unfortunately there is a complete absence of political will on the part of this Government and I use those words strongly, because you cannot deny the facts."
Child health researcher Dr Nikki Turner said as a GP she had seen a lot of sick children as a result of poverty.
"Our hospitals got busier, our children did worse in their schooling, and our children's emotional outcomes got worse because of poverty.
"Economics and income matters."
She said she supported the transformation of the in-work tax credit to a child payment for low-income families.
Manager of Every Child Counts, Deborah Morris-Travers, said child poverty was a problem for all New Zealanders.
"We see up and down the country the impacts of child poverty, and our research shows that at least $6 billion dollars is spent on picking up the pieces," she said.
By
Kate Shuttleworth K8Shuttleworth Email Kate
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APNZ