No title
Note: The final appearance of your post may be different, depending upon your blog’s style sheets.
It’s the easiest way to post quoted text to your blog, no matter where you find it on the Web. Just select text to quote, add your comments, then publish it instantly to your blog. It’s that simple!
About a million years ago I was in the navy. Towards the end of my service time in the 1970s the Domestic Purposes Benefit was introduced. One result of that ill-advised legislation - Defence had to build a high-rise accommodation block for Auckland’s Devonport Naval Base. Just another cost to add to this millstone around the neck of society.
Before the legislation was enacted, there were usually about a dozen senior ratings living in the naval accommodation at HMNZS Philomel. Most Petty Officers and Chief Petty Officers were married and when serving ashore lived at home with their wives and families.
Those whose marriages were no longer in the first flush of burning passion didn’t have the option of shooting through because they couldn’t have afforded to pay maintenance to their abandoned wives and still live the high life.
Within a very short time - I think it was months rather than years – there was a flood of people needing accommodation – the long suffering taxpayer offered to subsidize the bludgers and they abandoned their wives and children in droves. The shore accommodation overflowed and a multi-story accommodation block was built.
Stupid legislation, and over 30 years later we’re paying for it bigtime. Anecdotally, we’ve all heard about young women getting pregnant just to get the DPB. You need to be wearing rose-tinted glasses to believe that it’s otherwise.
But like all other welfare payments it should be a safety net for those who have no alternative. Not an open slather giveaway.
And don’t give that politically correct nonsense about “better the kids are brought up with a single mother than in an unhappy two parent environment”.
Before this poisonous benefit was brought in I don’t recall abandoned mothers sleeping under bridges. I didn’t see neglected kids starving in the streets. People took responsibility for their actions and the actions of their families. People stuck to their commitments.
whanganui.orgNote: The final appearance of your post may be different, depending upon your blog’s style sheets.