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In The Great Depression, Americans Worked For Government Checks. Now People Get Checks For Doing Nothing
The Federalist ^ | May 20, 2021 | Bob Anderson

Posted on 05/20/2021 6:53:59 AM PDT by Kaslin

Despite a population that is now more prosperous and more educated by several orders of magnitude, we clearly have become more lazy.


To celebrate another $1,400 in stimulus checks, a quickly withdrawn video from Wisconsin Democrats showed people dancing to a catchy rap song with captions of “$$$ IN THE POCKET” and “THANK YOU POTU$.” As Joy Pullmann noted, its release on the same day abysmal job numbers came out was a testament to Democrats’ blindness to economic reality. It also attested to our culture’s devolving expectation of something for nothing.

America has definitely changed. Juxtapose that video with images from the sand-dusted, poverty-stricken Great Depression of the 1930s, and it begs the question: What would these hungry, hardscrabble folks say, the ones who got a check only by signing up to build parks, roads, bridges, dams and many other public works projects in exchange?

A generation ago, they made money the old-fashioned way: they earned it.

To address catastrophic unemployment that reached as high as 23 percent, the government constructed millions of jobs through programs such as the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). That’s not to say the New Deal was a socio-economic panacea (it wasn’t), but that in those days people were willing to work to survive. They were offered a hand up, not a hand-out—a concept Democrats still embraced at the time.

The work was arduous and sometimes dangerous, involving every extreme of weather and terrain. Between 1935 and 1943, eight million workers supported by the WPA built 620,000 miles of streets, 10,000 bridges, and 40,000 new buildings (also improving 85,000 others), as well as myriad other projects to benefit the public such as swimming pools, playgrounds, zoos, botanical gardens, and more. For their sweaty toil, they received compensation based on individual skill, averaging $52 a month, or roughly $1,000 in current inflation-adjusted dollars.

The National Youth Administration (NYA), which operated initially under the WPA, allowed those as young as 16 to work part-time on construction and repair projects for $10 to $25 a month, or approximately $200 to $500 in current dollars. At its peak in 1937, more than 400,000 youth were employed in occupational training under the NYA. Many of those who learned new skills later put them to use for our nation’s defense with the onset of World War II.

Through the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) three million men aged 18-28 worked manual labor jobs to improve the nation’s natural resources through projects such as tree planting, fire prevention and fighting, insect control, fish stocking, erosion control, and landscaping. It was dirty, hands-on work. But those who signed on were glad for the opportunity to earn money to live. One camp’s newsletter, titled “Happy Days,” wrote that “this is a training station; we’re going to leave morally and physically fit to lick ‘Old Man Depression.”

The camps were organized and governed in a military style, with members of the Army reserve commanding those who volunteered for the minimum six-month enrollments. Tents were used for early units and later wood barracks were constructed. Compensation was $30 per month, roughly $600 in current dollars, of which more than 70 percent was required to be sent to a family dependent. Participation was a privilege, not a right, and the threat of “dishonorable discharge” was sufficient to maintain peace and order.

Hard work wasn’t a partisan issue at the time. A Gallup poll from 1936 found that 92 percent of Democrats and 67 percent of Republicans supported the CCC. Sociologist Robert Leighninger Jr. noted that “millions of people needed subsistence incomes. Work relief was preferred over public assistance (the dole) because it maintained self-respect, reinforced the work ethic, and kept skills sharp.”

Before the government stepped in with these programs, families did anything they could to survive. As the Great Depression took hold in 1930, many hopeful laborers went to Las Vegas and camped in the desert for the chance to work on a new project that would harness the power of the Colorado River with a mammoth 60-story arch dam later known as Hoover Dam. The work involved continuous blasting and moving of rock debris, day after day. They labored in steep tunnels often contaminated with deadly gases and dust.

By the time it was finished, 96 workers had died during construction of the dam. Not included in this total were those whose deaths were recorded as due to pneumonia, which many claimed was a cover for carbon monoxide poisoning caused by vehicles used underground. Despite the danger, they continued.

There was no Occupational Safety and Health Administration or Centers for Disease Control at the time, and any work was preferable to starvation. Not to minimize the risk of COVID, especially for those particularly vulnerable, but the thought of germs on a door handle is now enough to keep young healthy folks huddling at home behind double masks.

For all that they endured, and all that they accomplished, it’s no surprise that the people of this era are now called the “Greatest Generation.”

Contrast that America with the one today. Annual personal income was $474 in 1935, or about $9,200 in current dollars, versus about $36,000 median income today. Only 11 percent of WPA workers had finished high school and less than 5 percent of the population held a college degree.

Today, more than 90 percent have a high school diploma and 33 percent have earned a college degree. Despite a population that is now more prosperous and more educated by several orders of magnitude, we have seemingly become—and let’s not sugar-coat it—more lazy.

Unfortunately, the New Deal programs of old were the ideological catalyst for the ever-growing welfare state that we see today—one without the work requirement. President Lyndon Johnson’s proclamation of a “war on poverty” in 1964 has since cost more than $28 trillion with no discernable impact on poverty rate.

It has, however, yielded an implosion of the traditional family, particularly affecting the African American community in which only 39 percent of children now live with both parents. And the largesse is inexorably contributing to the destruction of the American work ethic – evidenced by jubilation over anything free, from “Obama phones” to “stimmy checks.”

Meanwhile, scores of businesses across America hang signs pleading for workers. Restaurants, hotels, landscaping companies, and many others cannot fill open jobs. Despite politicians’ stated intent to help with recovery from the pandemic, the truth is that some federal relief benefits are inducing the opposite effect.

The “Stimmy Shimmy” dancers and others celebrating the easy money flowing from D.C. aren’t stupid. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki may have missed it, but most people know “stimmy” checks and federal unemployment compensation dwarf current wage levels in some areas of the country. While the rationale isn’t illogical (“Shall I go to work today or earn more in my recliner?”), the attitude that arises from it will ultimately harm their personal growth.

Our politicians should be the adults in the room, but instead they choose to give out free candy, creating a generation of dependent children. Old values of hard work and self-sufficiency are succumbing to the thrill of free “$$$ IN THE POCKET” from “POTU$.” Tough times once produced the Greatest Generation, but we may now be witnessing the rise of the Gimme Generation—and that cannot bode well for our nation.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: administration; ccc; character; covidstimulus; culture; entitlement; greatdepression; inflation; lazy; newdeal; pandemic; progress; stimulus; unemployment; welfare; work; workethic; works

1 posted on 05/20/2021 6:53:59 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Whatever you subsidize you get more of............................


2 posted on 05/20/2021 6:55:42 AM PDT by Red Badger (Jesus said there is no marriage in Heaven. That's why they call it Heaven.....................)
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To: Kaslin

Abundant society = Freedom and liberty = Production and wealth creation
...then Production becomes Coercion
Coercion society = High taxes, growth of government = Wealth confiscation
...then Coercion becomes Theft
Theft society = Looting of private bank accounts, government seizure of industry = Wealth destruction
...Theft leads to Collapse
The EU has entered the stage of “coercion becoming theft.” The collapse is near.


3 posted on 05/20/2021 6:58:51 AM PDT by afchief
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To: Kaslin
Now People Get Checks For Doing Nothing

Wrong!

There is a method to that madness, and an agenda behind it.

The checks are part of the plan.

The plan is to get people to vote democrat, by making the people mostly dependent upon government, for most or all of their needs.

The agenda is to get the country to go completely socialist, and eventually, communist.

It's the political equivalent of the boiling of the frog slowly. The frog won't know what happened until it's too late.
4 posted on 05/20/2021 7:02:34 AM PDT by adorno
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To: Red Badger

“Whatever you subsidize you get more of.......”

Milton Friedman, who must be turning in his grave.


5 posted on 05/20/2021 7:08:19 AM PDT by Basket_of_Deplorables (Convention Of States is our only hope now! Desantis 2024!!!)
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To: Kaslin

We ain’t the country we used to be no more.


6 posted on 05/20/2021 7:15:31 AM PDT by Starboard
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To: Red Badger

60 +++ years

OVER $27 TRILLION taken from taxpayers & spent on ‘Welfare”

Al we got for our money & efforts is a feral army of barbarians who hate us...

NOT a very good investment.


7 posted on 05/20/2021 7:20:34 AM PDT by ridesthemiles ( )
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To: adorno

Biden’s handlers have gone into overdrive pushing benefits to single moms.
The 39% figure of kids raised by both parents will continue to go down.


8 posted on 05/20/2021 7:21:00 AM PDT by GnuThere
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To: Kaslin

Structures built by WPA and CCC stand and provide service today. No elaborate studies, engineered plans, technically advanced materials or equipment just know how.

What has to be done to reverse the destruction of the failed Great Society and War on Poverty programs?

I see lobbying for money for more early childhood development programs. Why haven’t the ones that have already spent so much money worked?


9 posted on 05/20/2021 8:00:59 AM PDT by Sequoyah101 (Politicians are only marginally good at one thing, being politicians. Otherwise they are fools.)
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To: Kaslin
I had a piece of property once with a wide, nicely sloping drainage ditch across it..

I was told that it was dug during the depression by men with shovels (only) working under the WPA.

10 posted on 05/20/2021 9:19:37 AM PDT by blam
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