When I started college in 1991 my eyes were open to the reallity I already knew - at that time we were in third generation welfare families: Grandpa and Grandma had received welfare for the hand up it was intended; mom and dad expanded it to more usage and some made a career of it; and the grandchildren were now following in the "family business." That was 18 years ago, and we have now added a fourth generation.
I'm often called cruel and unfeeling, but it is time to break the cycle. Welfare is for a hand up, a way to get people back on their feet and on to the freedom available to them, and to allow for more than the community network (family, friends and churches) can afford. We need strict limits on how much is available to any individual or family, how long they can get it, and what they can do with it (can anyone say drug and alcohol testing to receive your benefits). Mentoring is another thing these people need. They need possitive roll models in their lives, and mentoring programs should also be maditory.
Until we put responsibility in the program we will see young people that either don't care about the ramifications of their actions, or see "breeding" as an upward carreer move.