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Freedom
Does a program prepare clients for independence, or does it keep them dependent?
Charity workers a century ago did not press for governmental
programs but instead showed poor people how to move up while resisting
enslavement to governmental masters. Job freedom was the opportunity to
drive a wagon without paying bribes, to cut hair without having
to go to barbers' college, and to get a foot on the lowest rung of the
ladder, even if the wages there were low. Freedom was the opportunity
for a family to escape dire poverty by having a father work long hours
and a mother sew garments at home. Life was hard, but static, multigenerational
poverty of the kind we now have was rare; those who persevered could star
in a motion picture of upward mobility.
Today, in our desire to make the bottom rung of the ladder higher, we
have cut off the lowest rungs and left many on the ground. Those who are
pounding the pavements looking for work, and those who have fallen between
the cracks, are hindered by what is supposed to help them. Mother Teresa's
plan to open a homeless shelter in New York was stopped by a building
code that required an elevator; nuns in her order said that their code
forbade such mechanical helps and that they would carry upstairs anyone
who could not walk, but the city stuck to its guns and the shelter never
opened. In Texas and New Mexico, a Bible-based antidrug
program run by Victory Fellowship has a 60 percent success rate in beating
addiction, yet the Texas Drug and Alcohol Commission instructed the program
to stop calling itself one of "drug rehabilitation" because it did not
conform to the usual standards. Unfortunately, such examples of the lack
of freedom are all too commonplace.
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