The most striking proposals were for the elimination of medical debt for millions of Americans; the “first-ever” ban on price gouging for groceries and food; a cap on prescription drug costs; a $25,000 subsidy for first-time home buyers; and a child tax credit that would provide $6,000 per child to families for the first year of a baby’s life.

  • BlackLaZoR
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    -103 months ago

    A ton of kids in poverty were not born into poverty

    The topic is about 6k for newborns. I was giving you benefit of the doubt, but you seem to fail to process relevant information.

    parents lost jobs or had health emergencies or parents who died

    These are separate cases, that should be treated accordingly. The entire discussion is about subsidizing parents of newborns. My stance is simple: Parents who can’t afford child shouldn’t have a child, it’s basic 101 of parenthood planning. The lowering of cost of living could increase affordability of having child considerably.

    The only good argument you’ve made here, is about imperfect birth control - this exists, but it’s a rare case. There are many cases when this is a result of negligence, rather than actual failure of anti conception measures.

    they lost their job becsuse the business was also halted due to the disaster.

    Losing a job isn’t something uncommon. The proper solution is to find a new job. This is ugly, and some support during the hard transition may be justified, but again single 6k benefit changes absolutely nothing

    Blaming the parents casts a huge net and carches a lot of people who had shit come up in the 18 years between birth and adulthood.

    I don’t understand what you’ve said here

      • BlackLaZoR
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        -83 months ago

        No seriously, “carches” isn’t even a word, and I can’t decrypt any sense out of that sentence