You are proving my point burger, the people of the appalachia had to be told how poor they were. They were living within their means, growing their own food, raising their own livestock, etc but central planners looked at their situation and deemed they needed help whether they wanted it or not. I can only think this was in attempt to get people dependent (thus, obedient) on their government.
Just to check your understanding of basic economics, what do you think would happen to the poverty rate if min wage was raised to a million a year?
We have painted ourselves into a corner on the defense spending. One side wants to cut entitlements, the other side wants to cut defense. With defense cuts, real people lose jobs and will need entitlements, cutting entitlements means real people suffer. Would love to see overseas defense spending not just cut, but shredded. Cutting spending at home is necessary, but will be very painful and real people will lose good jobs. I really would hate to see defense contracts outsourced too.
I hope I've shown that being conservative doesn't mean I'm a cold hearted bastich that hates everyone so their suffering means nothing to me. I feel like you that we need to help our fellow man. What my career path and life experience has shown me however, is that the more you do for someone, the less he does for himself. To truly fix poverty and suffering, we need to have an honest look at our "war on poverty" and notice that it not only hasn't helped, it's been overall harmful and failure. I'm all for hand-ups, teaching people how to take care of themselves without assistance should be our goal, not hand outs where we teach people how to "get" care for themselves.