The Mayor of Alexandria Anticipated my Column

by James C. Sherlock

We scribblers at Bacon’s Rebellion pride ourselves on being leaders in the progressive thought process. In acknowledgment of the wisdom in my column that called out the observable inefficiency of government, I give you:

The city of Alexandria, Virginia, is joining a growing number of cities across the U.S. that are sending money to poor residents, no strings attached.

Bolstered by nearly $60 million in federal pandemic relief money, the independent jurisdiction in Northern Virginia plans to begin sending $500 debit cards to 150 families each month for two years, starting sometime this fall. The initiative was inspired partly by feedback city leaders solicited from residents about how the cash infusion should be used, says Alexandria Mayor Justin Wilson.

The national conversation about cash assistance has been changing, Wilson says. Last year, former Stockton mayor Michael D. Tubbs launched a national network of city leaders called Mayors for a Guaranteed Income. The coalition has grown to include mayors from almost 60 cities, from Los Angeles to Jackson, Mississippi. Mayors in the coalition are part of a generation of leaders who are thinking more about how to get immediate assistance to people in need, rather than forcing them into complex government programs that ration public assistance through layers of bureaucracy, Wilson says.

I don’t agree with their solution, but I agree with their premise.  Or rather they agree with mine. Whatever. Same outcome.

You haven’t seen pushback until the bureaucracies hear about government assistance that doesn’t go through them and their regulations. Hell hath no fury.

They will shake the very firmament.


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Comments

11 responses to “The Mayor of Alexandria Anticipated my Column”

  1. James Kiser Avatar
    James Kiser

    Gonna be interesting to see what happens when the majority of people refuse to work and demand their “free stuff”.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      What do you mean “when,” Kemosabe?

      1. Baconator with extra cheese Avatar
        Baconator with extra cheese

        I agree. I am around lots of teenage friends of my daughter. They all agree that guaranteed income/ housing/ school/ food security is a human right. Very few of them see the purpose of succeeding in school or employment as this would only demonstrate their white privilege. Plus they feel the government’s job is to provide for them and will provide for them.
        It is amazing how the left has absolutely won the war on youth by convincing them these “values” are both virtuous and a form of reparations for Black enslavement. And that “bootstraps/ hard work” is a racist construct.
        Unfortunately this only changes with some real societal suffering, if it changes at all in our life time.
        I am lucky that my daughter has not drank this Koolaid.

        1. Stephen Haner Avatar
          Stephen Haner

          It changes when we all are working for the Chinese…

          1. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            What do you mean “when,” Kemosabe?

  2. Matt Adams Avatar
    Matt Adams

    “You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make them drink”

    People need assistance for sure, but freebies without skin in the game isn’t going to make them any more responsible with what you gave them.

  3. Adopting a “guaranteed minimum income” accomplishes nothing apart from making the “guaranteed minimum income” the new “zero income”, which then effectively lowers the income of everyone else.

  4. I thought localities were not allowed to use the federal helicopter dollars to cut taxes. If Alexandria’s idea passes legal muster, why can’t other localities issue “debit cards” to every household in the jurisdiction?

    1. Sara Elizabeth Carter Avatar
      Sara Elizabeth Carter

      The ARPA language is very focused on assistance to disadvantaged households impacted by the pandemic. If a population fits into that category, or the spending does, then the locality has considerable flexibility to spend the money doing all kinds of things that look very different from infrastructure or response to the pandemic.

  5. energyNOW_Fan Avatar
    energyNOW_Fan

    If money talks…Democrats will have a landslide win next election. And I would say, money does indeed buy votes.

  6. Mayors in the coalition are part of a generation of leaders who are thinking more about how to get immediate assistance to people in need, rather than forcing them into complex government programs that ration public assistance through layers of bureaucracy, Wilson says.

    Generation of leaders? Generation of morons is more like it.

    These stupid ba$tards ARE the “layers of bureaucracy”. They should be thinking about finding ways to fix the “complex government programs” which THEY are responsible for instead of finding yet another way to pi$$ away the taxpayers’ money.

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