Nuclear Option? How Senate Republicans Plan to Clear Out Nominee Backlog
Dems Need This Much of the Popular Vote to Retake the House Next...
Why Are We Re-Investigating January 6?
Oh, Hi, Roy Cooper, Nice of You to Finally Weigh in on the...
One Tweet That Nails Why the Media Is So Annoyed We're Talking About...
5-Year-Old Floridian Kid's Wild Trip to Chick-fil-A
Trump's Purported Birthday Card to Jeffrey Epstein Has Been Released
No Lives Matter (Unless Democrats Can Exploit Them)
The Incredible Lightness of the Mainstream Media
Democrats Believe in Totalitarian Government
The Autopen Controversy
Poll's Finding About Americans' Support for Capitalism Is Alarming. What Can Explain It?
Congress Must End DEI in the Military Through the NDAA
Our Long History of Executive Order Abuse
NBC Poll Reveals Stark Values Divide Between Young Trump and Kamala Voters
Tipsheet

The Wealth Gap Is Really a Values Gap

Liberals insist that spending more on social programs and raising taxes on the wealthy will close painful gaps between rich and poor. How, then, do they explain why the poor have fallen further behind each year of Obama’s presidency, despite vast increases in welfare spending and, more recently, a sharp hike in taxes on the rich? The biggest distinction between poor and middle class has more to do with family structure than government policy. Children growing up in single parent households are more likely to live in poverty during their upbringing while kids of every race raised in stable, two parent-homes will likely avoid poverty altogether. Engaged, nurturing parents do more to provide positive outcomes for the next generation than any federal program; the values we get at home help more than any money we get from Washington.
Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement