An Indiana Republican candidate for the 10th District is backtracking on statements he made about the poor in an online discussion.
John Johnston, taking part in a discussion on a Mad Mac page which covers local politics had this to say:
“I was not trying to hurt anybody’s feelings,” Johnston said. “I saw the opportunity to say something. I think a lot of the poor have no way out, and there’s no motivation to improve your position. It’s like training a child, either you enable them or force them out at some point.”
“For almost three generations people, in some cases, have been given handouts,” Johnston said during the discussion. “They have been ‘enabled’ so much that their paradigm in life is simply being given the stuff of life, however meager.”
“What you see is a setting for a life of misery is life to them never-the-less,” he continued. “No one has the guts to just let them wither and die. No one who wants votes is willing to call a spade a spade. As long as the Dems can get their votes the enabling will continue. The Republicans need their votes and dare not cut the fiscal tether. It is really a political Catch-22.”
“The voters are the ones in charge,” Johnston said. “(H)owever when only 10-11 percent show up to vote, not much will change. People simply are not hurting enough, or simply happy enough that they will do nothing. consequently the dole continues.”
Describing his comments to The Post Tribune as "hyperbole," Johnston has since backtracked saying he has no intention of ending welfare or food stamp programs.
That happened, of course, after his comments came to light.
(via Raw Story)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.