Welfare Should Be Preserved By Jane Haddam

850 Words4 Pages

“Welfare”
By: Autumn Jeglum

The intent of welfare is to provide support to families or individuals that need it as they work towards a more stable financial life. Welfare systems provide accommodations to those in need which some people believe is beneficial and others have differing opinions on the concept. Individuals such as Clarissa Pinkola Estes feel that welfare systems are advantageous, and may have even used them in their lives before. On the other hand, people like Michael Tanner oppose the ideas of welfare and have beliefs that it is a waste of money. Jane Haddam is an example of someone that believes welfare should be available to everyone, regardless of their income. Each of these people have argued different viewpoints on welfare. …show more content…

Preserving the welfare would mean to keep it the way it is now with programs such as Children’s Health Insurance, Housing Assistance and Medicaid to name a few in the United States. Clarissa is an example of an individual who gained from welfare after her and her young child were left after her divorce. She was forced to reach out for help in order to have a decent future for her and her kid while she was also working and attending school. Estes states that welfare reforms that eliminate essential services are stopping other poor citizens from bettering themselves, like herself. The purpose of welfare is to provide citizens who are needing to reach out for help, basic economic security for them. The government is in charge and responsible for the welfare of their citizens and ensuring that they are able to cope with the financial stress in their …show more content…

Expanding welfare means to shift welfare systems from only servicing poor people to helping anyone who needs, regardless of their income. As opposed to the welfare system in place in America, the European welfare system provides financial support to anyone who seeks help. Jane Haddam and her husband shared a story concerning their visit with a pediatrician. They were compelled to lie to their pediatrician in order to pay for the visit of their two year old child. They are self-employed which means they do not receive as much health insurance but they are still considered middle class so they could not get welfare either. They had a deficient last eighteen months at work and were short money in the bank to pay the pediatrician at the end of the appointment, so they decided to lie and say they lost their checkbook in order to get enough money to pay for it. This is why Haddam believes welfare should be expanded to anyone who wants it, whether they are middle-class like themselves or