Welfare Rights

When you take benefits from the government, do you also give up some of your rights? The 9th Circuit federal appeals court has ruled you do. As candidates and congressmen offer “freeâ€? health care, “freeâ€? public education, and “freeâ€? assistance to the needy, the truth that nothing is free needs to be told.

In San Diego, an aggressive program of welfare fraud investigation conducted by the district attorney’s office involves unannounced, surprise home searches. Deputy district attorney Luis Aragon told The New York Times, “Doesn’t the government have the right to some level of verification? . . . Either you say yes to everybody or you have some verification.â€?

If the government is going to provide “freeâ€? benefits to someone, some criteria are needed for this entitlement. San Diego wants to enforce the rules. But the investigators have found not only evidence of welfare fraud, they have picked up evidence that is turned over to the police for drug crime enforcement. They have removed children from some homes when they suspected mistreatment or child abuse.

The federal appeals court found nothing in the San Diego enforcement program that violates personal rights because “people are free to opt out by giving up their welfare benefits.â€? The San Diego program of surprise home inspections is a logical extension of a U.S. Supreme Court decision, Wyman v. James, cited by the appeals court, that home visits scheduled by social workers are constitutional on the basis of “rehabilitation” for welfare recipients. Surprise home visits are now also okay in the 9th Circuit.

“Freeâ€? public education provides another example. Recently the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, in Morse v. Frederick, that a high school student outside of school on a public street did not have the free speech to advocate legalization of marijuana and that his principal had the right to expel him from school. The court was careful to say this decision was not about free speech in general but only about punishing the specific speech Chief Justice Roberts and the school principal disapprove of (changing the marijuana law).

The rights of a citizen to protection from government power are nullified if the government can buy them back by paying “freeâ€? benefits. These constitutional rights include the Fourth Amendment right against search and seizure, the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, and the right to vote. Yet you give up the right to privacy if you draw welfare, you give up your right against self-incrimination when you file an income tax return, and in California some cities make you give up the right to vote against property tax increases when you apply for a building permit.

But this is how “welfare rightsâ€? work. A welfare right is a specific license for someone to get a “freeâ€? benefit, but someone else has to provide that benefit. In rural areas of Canada, where medical care is a “right,â€? doctors are assigned like soldiers for tours of duty.

We now understand from the recent federal court cases that the beneficiaries of “freeâ€? benefits don’t have the right to refuse the government’s terms of service either. When all health benefits are “free,â€? will fatties and smokers be denied treatment for heart attacks and strokes because they have opted out of a healthy lifestyle? Will “rehabilitationâ€? be enforced to control diet and smoking? Will elderly people be told that an extra year of life is not worth its cost to the taxpayers?

Even Social Security pensions, surely one of the most benign government benefits, are the basis for national identification numbers and the growing problem of identity theft. When the immigration laws are amended, your privilege to keep a legal job will depend on having a number in the government’s computer system.

In the San Diego welfare rights case, one of the dissenting judges, Harry Pregerson, wrote: “The government does not search through the closets and medicine cabinets of farmers receiving subsidies. They do not dig through the laundry baskets and garbage pails of real estate developers or radio broadcasters.” Only the poor, he said, must “give up their rights of privacy in exchange for essential public assistance.â€?

The judge in his compassion has never heard about the 1930s case where the farmer was jailed for growing his own corn to feed his own cattle because it violated a federal farm acreage control program. Real estate developers and radio broadcasters may be next.

2 Responses to “Welfare Rights”

  1. visitor says:

    This essay has been cited in “The Art of Passing the Buck,” Vol.2, in a chapter citing how people give up their rights to obtain government benefits. For more information go to http://www.passingbucks.com

  2. [...] But before they can take away our freedom, they have to prove to us an “Enemy” exists, not just a mafia or criminal conspiracy. There is (and never has been) any “War” on terror or drugs or poverty. There has only been a gigantic growth in the police state and welfare bureacracy – including the loss of common rights to privacy. [...]

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