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I was contemplating welfare and its disastrous effects in contrast with private charity.
Rome had issues with the public grain dole from its inception as a subsidized and price-fixed grain purchase and storage program in the republican era, which even though it was financed by tax increases, saw a precipitous increases in demand as all price-ceiling schemes do. Once it was implemented corruption set in and was frequently a topic of reform but not abolishment by politicians.

Unfortunately, it seems that once welfare is made a public institution, if Rome is typical, it is only ever to be overturned by dictatorial power or by a situation in which the government is unable to provide the service in 476 AD, and there are insufficient records to conclude that it was perpetuated.

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@DoubleD Authority and responsibility are two sides of the same coin.
When the government claims (full) authority over charity and welfare to the poor, it also becomes their (sole) responsibility to do so.

This story is a great insight why everyone should always resist this centralization of power, as it also takes away the personal responsibility from the lower levels so everyone always stop caring at all. The focus of survival completely changes.

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Merovingian Club

A club for red-pilled exiles.