I'm pointing out that training someone for a job that doesn't exist or doesn't pay isn't going to be helpful.
I'm not sure if your premise is exactly true. Obviously, I believed in a different premise to suggest that educating a man is more beneficial to him.
We're just lacking actual statistics to back any of this but we both have the same intention to help the poor.
As a immigrant family who received welfare in the 80s, I will always support welfare with the main caveat that progress can be proven of its intended goal. We lived on food stamps. We lived on housing assistance. My parents had scholarships for their education even from just community colleges. Our success wouldn't be possible without welfare.
I continue to support and vote for welfare programs that I believe can track its intended goal. I actually rent out two of my units to families on section 8 housing. They carry the most risks out of my rental units but I support the program. Out of all the housing vouchers offered by our county, only 30 percent are actually accepted by private individual landlords.
Simply put, I do not believe that giving out $500 without accountability will help.
My other mantra is to root out the issues and fix it at the root. Anything else is a just a patch.
So if you can prove to me that $500 extra in their pockets will actually fix their situations, then you won't hear further arguments from me.