Author Topic: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids  (Read 9990 times)

_aj_

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #50 on: May 28, 2016, 04:13:41 PM »
Don't give a flying fuck about her or her 900 kids. Their existence not only adds nothing of value to society, it burdens it hugely, in all ways.

As cruel as it might be, these types of individuals need to be removed from the reproduction pool.

She's a worthless organism that has no ability to control her primal instincts to take load after load into her vile twat.

Her children, in all probability, will only further burden society.

The discussion about the woman and what to do is the warblings of the weak and idiotic.

She needs to go. One quick injection and it's done.

I am starting to really like the cut of your jib. No homo, of course.

Pray_4_War

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #51 on: May 28, 2016, 04:14:55 PM »
It's not about her. It's about the kids. They didn't do anything wrong. We live in the wealthiest society in the history of mankind. We can afford to lend a hand.


FUCK............YOU..... ......!!!

El Diablo Blanco

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #52 on: May 28, 2016, 04:15:43 PM »
Pay for a one way boat ticket back to the Congo?

Kwon

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #53 on: May 28, 2016, 04:23:27 PM »
Don't give a flying fuck about her or her 900 kids. Their existence not only adds nothing of value to society, it burdens it hugely, in all ways.

As cruel as it might be, these types of individuals need to be removed from the reproduction pool.

She's a worthless organism that has no ability to control her primal instincts to take load after load into her vile twat.

Her children, in all probability, will only further burden society.

The discussion about the woman and what to do is the warblings of the weak and idiotic.

She needs to go. One quick injection and it's done.

AND her hellspawn as well!

You think they're going to grow up to become something like Parker? No, more like AD2100
Q

Pray_4_War

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #54 on: May 28, 2016, 04:26:07 PM »
All these kids are gonna be jobless drug abusing thieves out on the street crying to the press about how their lives matter.

_aj_

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #55 on: May 28, 2016, 04:29:26 PM »
All these kids are gonna be jobless drug abusing thieves out on the street crying to the press about how their lives matter.

Truth. They'll either be living on the dole, committing crime or in the joint (on the dole). Preventative euthanasia seems justified.

Pray_4_War

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #56 on: May 28, 2016, 04:35:53 PM »
When you don't have at least one parent that teaches you how to be responsible for you own life, you're gonna have a bad time.

james_hetfield

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #57 on: May 28, 2016, 05:24:51 PM »
Statistics wouldn't help him or anyone else ignorant enough to believe only blacks are on entitlement programs.

I'm also in favor of cutting corporate welfare and ending lobbying.

I am not seeing anyone saying only blacks are on welfare. Stats say 39% of welfare recepients are black as opposed to 38 white. Being that blacks are 12 percent of us population that makes it pretty dis proportional. You dont need to be a mathematician to figure it out. Youre right

Walter Sobchak

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #58 on: May 28, 2016, 05:30:54 PM »
I am not seeing anyone saying only blacks are on welfare. Stats say 39% of welfare recepients are black as opposed to 38 white. Being that blacks are 12 percent of us population that makes it pretty dis proportional. You dont need to be a mathematician to figure it out. Youre right


He knew that.

He's very selective in his arguments - we can cut him some slack because he seems like a decent guy

drkaje

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #59 on: May 28, 2016, 05:35:10 PM »
I am not seeing anyone saying only blacks are on welfare. Stats say 39% of welfare recepients are black as opposed to 38 white. Being that blacks are 12 percent of us population that makes it pretty dis proportional. You dont need to be a mathematician to figure it out. Youre right


Are you including things like food stamps and SNAP benefits?

The system is definitely breaking Americans but nothing will ever be done. Even if we had term limits, it would be political suicide.

dr.chimps

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #60 on: May 28, 2016, 05:35:57 PM »
He knew that.

He's very selective in his arguments - we can cut him some slack because he seems like a decent guy
I'm sure he appreciates your condescension.

Tapeworm

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #61 on: May 28, 2016, 05:37:49 PM »
Ain't nobody countable but they what brung shit to be where it's at now.  Somebody got to municate with her about the way it be.

Kwon

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #62 on: May 28, 2016, 05:39:25 PM »
Ain't nobody countable but they what brung shit to be where it's at now.  Somebody got to municate with her about the way it be.

It do
Q

WalterWhite

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #63 on: May 28, 2016, 05:39:49 PM »
Who’s on Welfare? 9 Shocking Stats About Public Assistance

Welfare programs are controversial. Some people believe the government is responsible for providing a strong social safety to the most vulnerable. Others see welfare as a system that’s rife with abuse and which discourages people from making responsible decisions. Whatever your take on welfare, there’s no denying that these programs to help the poor cost a lot of money. A 2015 study by the University of California at Berkeley found that states and the federal government spent $152.8 billion a year on food stamps, health insurance, and cash assistance programs, more than half of it going to working families who were having trouble making ends meet.

The Berkeley report found that workers in many occupations were dependent on public assistance to supplement their income, including child care, home care, and fast food workers, as well as part-time college faculty.

We know that many people receiving welfare have jobs. But what other trends are there among people who get public assistance? To get a better idea of who was actually receiving public assistance in the United States, the U.S. Census Bureau recently took a closer look at participation in six major welfare programs from 2009 to 2012:

Medicaid
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), better known as food stamps
Housing assistance
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF), or cash benefits
General Assistance
The report doesn’t discuss other kinds of support that people might receive, such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, free school lunches, the WIC program, Head Start, energy assistance programs, and Pell Grants. While it doesn’t capture the full spectrum of welfare in the U.S., the results still provide a clearer picture of who is receiving public assistance.

Much of what’s included in the report isn’t exactly surprising – while many recipients have jobs, those who are unemployed and who don’t have much education tend to be more likely to rely on benefits for a longer period of time, for example. Nonetheless, some of the data may surprise you. Here are nine facts about who receives welfare benefits in the U.S.  
crowded street


Source: Thinkstock
1. More than 20% of the U.S. population receives public assistance
In 2012, roughly one-fifth of the U.S. population, or 52.2 million people, received some kind of means-tested public assistance every month. About 15% of the population was receiving Medicaid and 13% were on food stamps. Just 1% were getting cash benefits through TANF or General Assistance.

In addition, most people probably aren’t receiving most of their income from government programs. A separate report from the Department of Health and Human Services found that in 2011, just 5.2% of the total U.S. population was receiving more than half of their total income in cash benefits, food stamps, or SSI.

2. Participation in welfare programs grew from 2009 to 2012
In 2009, 18.6% of the population was participating in at least one means-tested benefit program. That number was up to 21.3% in 2012. But the increase in welfare participation seems to be leveling off; there was no statistically significant rise in participation from 2011 to 2012.

3. The average monthly benefit was about $400
People received an average of $404 a month in food stamps, SSI benefits, TANF, or general assistance. Those who qualified for SSI (which primarily supports people who are disabled and can’t work) received the most on average — $698 per month. As of 2015, about 8.3 million Americans were receiving SSI.

4. Children benefit the most from public assistance programs
About 39% of children received welfare benefits during an average month in 2012. Roughly 17% of adults between 18 and 64 received benefits and 12.6% of people over age 65 did as well. Those under 18 also received larger average monthly benefits than adults between 18 and 64 ($447/month vs. $393/month).
helping hand


Source: Thinkstock
5. Many people receive benefits for a year or longer
Forty-three percent of people had been receiving benefits for 37 to 48 months. Roughly 30% had been on welfare for a year or less.

Some programs had more long-term participants than others. Nearly half of people receiving housing benefits had been getting them for three years or longer. In contrast, cash assistance was a short-term form of help for most, with just 10% of people receiving benefits for three years or more.


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
6. Families led by single parents were more likely to receive benefits
Fifty-eight percent of families led by an unmarried mother and 37% headed by an unmarried father received benefits for at least one month during 2012. About 20% of families headed by a married couple received benefits for at least one during the same period.

7. Single mothers tend to receive less in benefits per month
Households headed by an unmarried woman received an average of $337 in monthly benefits, compared to $447 for households headed by single men and $420 a month for married couples.

However, families led by single moms tended to receive benefits for a longer period of time. Fifty-eight percent received benefits for three years or more, compared to 35.2% of single dad households and 34.8% of married couple households.
college graduation


Source: Thinkstock
8. People who attend college are less likely to receive benefits
A little over 13% of people who had attended college for at least one year received welfare benefits at any point in 2012. In contrast, 45% of people who didn’t graduate from high school received benefits during the year. People who didn’t complete high school were also more likely to be long-term benefit recipients.

9. African Americans were more likely to receive public assistance than other groups
In 2012, an average of 41.6% of African Americans received means-tested benefits each month. About 18% of Asians or Pacific Islanders and 13% of whites received benefits each month. Thirty-six percent of Hispanics of any race received government assistance.

dr.chimps

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #64 on: May 28, 2016, 05:43:14 PM »
Thinkstock. Good one.

Tapeworm

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #65 on: May 28, 2016, 05:49:54 PM »
Intellectual history is the study of shit that got thunk.

drkaje

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #66 on: May 28, 2016, 05:56:46 PM »
Thinkstock?

Walter Sobchak

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #67 on: May 28, 2016, 08:17:23 PM »
I'm sure he appreciates your condescension.

Random homeless men appreciate resting their nutsacks on your forehead.

drkaje

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #68 on: May 29, 2016, 03:52:44 AM »
I'm sure he appreciates your condescension.

I read the original article and nowhere does it link to thinkstock for any explanation to how its numbers were arrived at or if they were inferred.

Twain or Disraeli made the comment about the three kinds of lies.

If the first bullet point is legit and 20% or 52.2 million people. That's more black people than the US Census Bureau came up with in 2015, LOL!

People like throwing out numbers because they know most of us are conditioned to accept them without thinking.

Thong Maniac

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #69 on: May 29, 2016, 04:45:06 AM »
gotta love the conservative jesus boys in here talking euthanasia, castration, sterilizing, etc. YET continually voting for jesus boy republicans at each election, who salivate at making abortion illegal in this country. its the ultimate hypocrisy.

the ultimate conservative load of shit:
love the crackhead rape baby fetus; hate the welfare baby when it comes out.

"we need to outlaw abortions!" ...oh brother



The Wizard of Truth

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #70 on: May 29, 2016, 04:49:40 AM »
 Could they not just limit the amount of children blacks are allowed have to one, like they do in china

_aj_

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #71 on: May 29, 2016, 04:56:16 AM »
Could they not just limit the amount of children blacks are allowed have to one, like they do in china

Since we are a socialist state (I have to pay for everybody else's kids), I vote for licensing. If you are on the dole: sorry.

Now, if we would like to consider returning to an era of INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY where people pay their own way, and government is trimmed by 99% to just the things that they are supposed to do, I am open to letting the Dindus have 15 kids. In a house where she actually has to bring home the income to support 15 kids on her own, the children would learn about austerity, budgeting and maybe -- just maybe -- fucking birth control.

Disqus

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #72 on: May 29, 2016, 05:20:45 AM »
Government entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security, along with the military industrial complex, are where the real money is when it comes to government spending. This kind of social welfare is just a relatively insignificant drop in the bucket but it makes a great talking points t for the wanna-be tough guys.

HonestBob

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #73 on: May 29, 2016, 05:22:54 AM »
All 15 of her kids will turn into Dindu baby factories. She'll have 300 grandchildren. All on the dole. No thanks! She gets money when her and her kids are sterilized.

You'd get my vote.

Mr Anabolic

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Re: Somebody Needs To Pay For All My 15 Kids
« Reply #74 on: May 29, 2016, 05:31:49 AM »
Who’s on Welfare? 9 Shocking Stats About Public Assistance

Welfare programs are controversial. Some people believe the government is responsible for providing a strong social safety to the most vulnerable. Others see welfare as a system that’s rife with abuse and which discourages people from making responsible decisions. Whatever your take on welfare, there’s no denying that these programs to help the poor cost a lot of money. A 2015 study by the University of California at Berkeley found that states and the federal government spent $152.8 billion a year on food stamps, health insurance, and cash assistance programs, more than half of it going to working families who were having trouble making ends meet.

The Berkeley report found that workers in many occupations were dependent on public assistance to supplement their income, including child care, home care, and fast food workers, as well as part-time college faculty.

We know that many people receiving welfare have jobs. But what other trends are there among people who get public assistance? To get a better idea of who was actually receiving public assistance in the United States, the U.S. Census Bureau recently took a closer look at participation in six major welfare programs from 2009 to 2012:

Medicaid
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), better known as food stamps
Housing assistance
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF), or cash benefits
General Assistance
The report doesn’t discuss other kinds of support that people might receive, such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, free school lunches, the WIC program, Head Start, energy assistance programs, and Pell Grants. While it doesn’t capture the full spectrum of welfare in the U.S., the results still provide a clearer picture of who is receiving public assistance.

Much of what’s included in the report isn’t exactly surprising – while many recipients have jobs, those who are unemployed and who don’t have much education tend to be more likely to rely on benefits for a longer period of time, for example. Nonetheless, some of the data may surprise you. Here are nine facts about who receives welfare benefits in the U.S.  
crowded street


Source: Thinkstock
1. More than 20% of the U.S. population receives public assistance
In 2012, roughly one-fifth of the U.S. population, or 52.2 million people, received some kind of means-tested public assistance every month. About 15% of the population was receiving Medicaid and 13% were on food stamps. Just 1% were getting cash benefits through TANF or General Assistance.

In addition, most people probably aren’t receiving most of their income from government programs. A separate report from the Department of Health and Human Services found that in 2011, just 5.2% of the total U.S. population was receiving more than half of their total income in cash benefits, food stamps, or SSI.

2. Participation in welfare programs grew from 2009 to 2012
In 2009, 18.6% of the population was participating in at least one means-tested benefit program. That number was up to 21.3% in 2012. But the increase in welfare participation seems to be leveling off; there was no statistically significant rise in participation from 2011 to 2012.

3. The average monthly benefit was about $400
People received an average of $404 a month in food stamps, SSI benefits, TANF, or general assistance. Those who qualified for SSI (which primarily supports people who are disabled and can’t work) received the most on average — $698 per month. As of 2015, about 8.3 million Americans were receiving SSI.

4. Children benefit the most from public assistance programs
About 39% of children received welfare benefits during an average month in 2012. Roughly 17% of adults between 18 and 64 received benefits and 12.6% of people over age 65 did as well. Those under 18 also received larger average monthly benefits than adults between 18 and 64 ($447/month vs. $393/month).
helping hand


Source: Thinkstock
5. Many people receive benefits for a year or longer
Forty-three percent of people had been receiving benefits for 37 to 48 months. Roughly 30% had been on welfare for a year or less.

Some programs had more long-term participants than others. Nearly half of people receiving housing benefits had been getting them for three years or longer. In contrast, cash assistance was a short-term form of help for most, with just 10% of people receiving benefits for three years or more.


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
6. Families led by single parents were more likely to receive benefits
Fifty-eight percent of families led by an unmarried mother and 37% headed by an unmarried father received benefits for at least one month during 2012. About 20% of families headed by a married couple received benefits for at least one during the same period.

7. Single mothers tend to receive less in benefits per month
Households headed by an unmarried woman received an average of $337 in monthly benefits, compared to $447 for households headed by single men and $420 a month for married couples.

However, families led by single moms tended to receive benefits for a longer period of time. Fifty-eight percent received benefits for three years or more, compared to 35.2% of single dad households and 34.8% of married couple households.
college graduation


Source: Thinkstock
8. People who attend college are less likely to receive benefits
A little over 13% of people who had attended college for at least one year received welfare benefits at any point in 2012. In contrast, 45% of people who didn’t graduate from high school received benefits during the year. People who didn’t complete high school were also more likely to be long-term benefit recipients.

9. African Americans were more likely to receive public assistance than other groups
In 2012, an average of 41.6% of African Americans received means-tested benefits each month. About 18% of Asians or Pacific Islanders and 13% of whites received benefits each month. Thirty-six percent of Hispanics of any race received government assistance.


Stops at 2012.  Those number are MUCH higher now.  Totally unsustainable. 

Got ammo?