My name is David Robins: Christian, lead developer (resume), writer, photographer, runner, libertarian (voluntaryist), and student.
This is also my son David Geoffrey Robins' site.
The welfare rolls lose the mother (since she can now work, or at least go to school and become productive later on: and if she has the intelligence to give up a child for which she cannot care, she probably has the motivation to do so). Government programs hate to lose clientele, because it could reduce their budget and influence. Statists like people to be dependent, because they will vote for more theft to feed their addiction to Other People's Money. If someone joins the civil society as a productive member, they will not look kindly upon redistributionist theft of what they worked to earn.
Other welfare departments lose the child, or child benefits, from their rolls. Their influence, power, and budget also takes a hit.
The child will go into foster care or likely a state-run orphanage; if the child from there is adopted into a family that can care for him, the foster care system will also lose power and prestige: if they stay in the system, the department and the state will be able to justify taking more from the people.
Since having a single parent is the largest predictor of juvenile delinquency, crime, and other failures in life (including ending up on welfare), adoption to a stable home breaks the cycle of dependency. (And given this fact, it is not heroic for a single mother to keep the child: it is in fact cruel.)
"I thought this was CLAMS, did I accidentally join the geek alias?"In response, JD replied:
"You work at Microsoft. Every alias is the geek alias!"It's true. Some days I see more code, pseudo-XML, algorithms, and technical arguments (and bad puns) in the non-technical aliases than the technical ones. But that's one of the reasons I'm here. It's good to be among fellow hackers, people that get it, that think in code and breathe mathematics and algorithms. Books finished: A Brief History of Time, The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress.
For the sake of argument, let's assume for a minute that there were legitimate and desirable functions performed by this department. The ones I spotted are shoplifting/trespass/vandalism, so focus on those.Well said, sir, well said. Just another tactic big government uses to perpetuate and propagate itself, even in times where private enterprise, not being able to steal from the taxpayer but dependent upon voluntary contracts and satisfying customer demand, has to make tough and deep cuts.
This kind of [stuff] will make your blood boil if you think about it for too long. Basically, any time a government department has to allocate resources during a period of "cuts" (or more realistically these days, "no increases" or "increases less than expected") the resources will always be denied to the areas that most crucially need them so as to create the perception of a legitimate deficiency. These childish antics are precisely why no amount of money can seem to fix the public education system. When increases are less than expected, the department will throw a tantrum; pay raises for teachers and administrators within the bureaucracy will simply be fed first (allocated a greater share of the pool) and money for books, buildings, etc. will be last. Why? Because mom and dad can see the effects of crumbling buildings and 1980's textbooks but couldn't give a rat's ass about the teacher's new car. Same thing with infrastructure and transportation. If you're in charge of the highway department and facing a cut, the last thing y ou want to do is start fixing pot holes. You want to allocate resources as inefficiently as possible so as to guarantee the perception of deficiency.
So see if you spot the irony: a 35 year veteran prosecutor (want to take a stab at his salary?) is complaining about budget cuts that, by his account, will force his office to become redundant. Read that again until you get it. In the private sector this would be the equivalent of occupational suicide. It's a catch 22: either you fire some staff and take some other sane efficiency measures, or you can throw a toddler's temper tantrum and effectively cut off your nose to spite your face. The latter is only a viable tactic in the good old boy zero accountability land of the government.