Nobody's able to take care of themselves for their entire life; Nor even in most cases for the majority of it. The ability to support yourself without any assistance from others is assuredly NOT a basic aspect of being alive, and I find it horrific that you have such a warped worldview as to accept such an absurd claim without question.
Fuck off with your petty insults. A person who is temporarily unable to support himself financially isn't a "leech" if he accepts assistance from others. You need to be FAR more critical in your reading of Ayn Rand - She's a fucking idiot; Don't emulate her if you don't want to be thought an idiot too.It's only a problem if you subscribe to the philosophy of the unfathomable protestants, with their inscrutable 'work ethic'.
It's a problem for anyone who doesn't feel like supporting leeches.
Goalposts! "Temporarily"--but you were saying some people weren't suitable for work. That's a permanent state.
I do not have a problem with supporting those with disabilities that keep them from working. I have a big problem with people who simply want to not work.
Yes. It should. You seem to have a VERY narrow view of what benefits society.Since the industrial revolution, society has needed fewer and fewer of its members to work in order to feed, clothe and house everyone. Why are you so keen to force work onto people who don't want it; to push employers to hire people that aren't desirable employees; and to punish those who cannot or don't want to work?
That effort should be used for the betterment of society.
Letting people leech off society doesn't better society.
Traditionally, most people don't support themselves (except those living in poverty).
Middle class households typically had one 'breadwinner', whose work supported a spouse; children (including any unmarried adult children, particularly if they were female); Elderly relatives (particularly widows); and often various other wards, such as cousins, nephews and nieces.
The spouse worked, just not in an income-producing fashion. The others basically fall into one of those two exceptions I named--the young and the disabled. (From a practical standpoint an awful lot of the elderly are disabled.)
Society can and should support its members. All of them. A society that allows people to starve as a result of misfortune is a badly broken society.
Goalposts! I'm not saying people should starve due to misfortune. If there's work available and you simply don't want to do it I don't think society owes you support.