On the flip side lets look at some of the examples we have in Canadian Society that are the proverbial "lowest rung" on the ladder.I know of a gal who got knocked up at 16 and then again at 19 and again and again....last time I was told she squeezed out 6 bastard kids and all during that she has sat her ass on welfare like a LEACH on society who has never contributed.Why the fuck should hard working Canadians have to pay for people like that?
SR
Because that may be ONE example that slips through while dozens/hundreds more are legit.
In my experience, people break down into 10/80/10. 10% are amazing - no matter what is thrown at them, they succeed. Lemon into lemonade, post office worker into CEO, you get the picture. 10% are POS. No matter what you give them/help them, they remain a waste and a drain on society. The other 80% broadly cover in-between - some are obviously better than others, but given the right circumstances/help/leadership/etc, they can succeed (at least lean closer to the top 10% than the bottom).
It sounds like your perspective is: because the lowest 10% takes advantage of a program, than the ENTIRE program needs to be scrapped. (Did I get that right?) So the remaining chunk of people that may not fall into the top 10% (who wouldn't need any help) get left out in the cold and risk failing and falling. When they fall, in my opinion and what I've observed, they ultimately hurt society MORE - drug addiction, homelessness, crime, vote for Trump, etc etc.
I prefer to accept that yes, SOME of my tax dollars will get wasted on someone who abuses the system. The system DOES need safeguards, checks, and good workers to minimize the abusers of a system. But I prefer to see a system that will protect and help more, even if I end up with a little less cash myself. And the amount of money these people suck out of the programs is going to be miniscule compared to other corruption/waste elsewhere in govt. Vigilance against waste, pork-barrel politics, politicized projects, corruption in govt contract, etc etc must improve and will save the taxpayer much more than cutting a program due to a relative few who take advantage of it.