I would bet that Kaslin is referring to the welfare class, who definitely live on more than they make, and have for generations.
In fact they are living on what YOU make.
True enough.
But — I’m not sure I’d say they’re “overcoming financial difficulties”. Their finances are, by definition, a complete trainwreck. Sp, the welfare queen example wouldn’t really be responsive to the question “how do young people overcome financial difficulties?”.
SnakeDoc
BINGO!
These individuals come in all shapes and sizes, it ain’t just the stereotypical “welfare queens”.
This year I had to go back to school to get a job as a nursing assistant, a big cut in pay, but a steady check in a relatively healthy sector; I paid up front for my classes, which cost me nearly 2K, out of pocket, by the time I had paid for licensing, background checks and materials.
4 of the 16 people in my class washed out of the program in the first 2 weeks. All of them had their ticket paid for by the government.