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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Tue Dec 10, 2013, 09:51 AM Dec 2013

Rand Paul’s patronizing excuse for screwing the poor


Paul claims that public benefits are "encouraging unemployment." An expert tells Salon why that's insane

JOSH EIDELSON


With only days remaining for Congress to avert the year-end expiration of extended unemployment benefits, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., made news by telling Fox News Sunday that extending benefits would be “a disservice” to the more than a million Americans about to be cut off. The same morning, Paul’s colleague Dick Durbin, the Senate’s second-ranking Democrat, told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos his party so far wasn’t taking a “take it or leave it” approach to including unemployment extension in talks over a short-term budget deal. “I have to say, it sounds like the spirit of Nelson Mandela is taking hold,” Stephanopoulos concluded after asking Durbin and Senate Republican Rob Portman about those budget talks. “This is a very reasonable discussion this morning. Sounds like we’re going to reach a deal this week.”

For a different take on the impact and importance of unemployment benefits, Salon called up Rebecca Dixon, a policy analyst for the progressive National Employment Law Project. A condensed version of our conversation follows.

Rand Paul this weekend said he’s against further unemployment extension because it would be “a disservice to these workers,” in that “When you allow people to be on unemployment insurance for 99 weeks, you’re causing them to become part of this perpetual unemployed group in our economy.” What does your research suggest about that kind of claim?

Well, we do know that people have a harder time finding work the longer they’ve been unemployed, particularly when they’ve hit their six-month mark. Benefits aren’t 99 weeks anymore. But in this recession, when we had record job loss, and record long-term unemployment, and the numbers were up to six unemployed workers for every job opening … you’re not going to not look for work because you’re getting a check that averages $300 a week. I mean, nobody can really live on that, you know.

full article
http://www.salon.com/2013/12/10/rand_pauls_patronizing_excuse_for_screwing_the_poor/
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Rand Paul’s patronizing excuse for screwing the poor (Original Post) DonViejo Dec 2013 OP
Except that despite his idiocy, he is pointing at a real issue. Mass Dec 2013 #1

Mass

(27,315 posts)
1. Except that despite his idiocy, he is pointing at a real issue.
Tue Dec 10, 2013, 10:44 AM
Dec 2013

He is sadly wrong on not supporting unemployment benefits beyond 26 weeks and he may think what people say he said, but he has a point when he says long term employment is difficult to get out of.

Obviously, magical thinking will not help breaking the circle, but the insistence of some on the left to ignore the problem is just as sad as Rand Paul's idiocy. Yes, people need desperately these benefits, but they also need help FINDING jobs, and it is true you cannot pass the online employment filters for a minimum wage job in a supermarket. (I know what I am talking about. My husband is among these people at 58).

So, if the left could get off their high horses and offer solutions to the problems (something that does not involve a loan for thousands of dollars in order to retrain preferably), they are welcome to propose something.

Until there, I hope that the benefits are back, but I also hope Dems start caring about people beyond emergency benefits. I do not see that.

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