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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>Bush</strong> emphasized that more children are born into non-white poor families than to white<br />

ones. Blacks must recognize, he said, "that they cannot hope to acquire a larger share of<br />

American prosperity without cutting down on births...."<br />

Forcing mothers on welfare to work was believed to be an effective means of reducing<br />

the number of black children born, and <strong>Bush</strong> sponsored a number of measures to do just<br />

that. In 1970, he helped lead the fight on the Hill for President Nixon's notorious welfare<br />

bill, the Family Assistance Program, known as FAP. Billed as a boon to the poor because<br />

it provided an income floor, the measure called on every able-bodied welfare recipient,<br />

except mothers with children under six, to take a job . This soon became known as<br />

Nixon's "workfare" slave-labor bill. Monetarist theoreticians of economic austerity were<br />

quick to see that forced labor by welfare recipients could be used to break the unions<br />

where they existed, while lowering wages and worsening working conditions for the<br />

entire labor force. Welfare recipients could even be hired as scabs to replace workers<br />

being paid according to normal pay scales. Those workers, after they had been fired,<br />

would themselves end up destitute and on welfare, and could then be forced to take<br />

workfare for even lower wages than those who had been on welfare at the outset of the<br />

process. This was known as "recycling."<br />

Critics of the Nixon workfare bill pointed out that it contained no minimum standards<br />

regarding the kinds of jobs or the level of wages which would be forced upon welfare<br />

recipients, and that it contradicted the original purpose of welfare, which was to allow<br />

mothers to stay home with their children. Further, it would set up a pool of virtual slave-<br />

labor, which could be used to replace workers earning higher wages.<br />

But <strong>Bush</strong> thought these tough measures were exactly what the explosion of the welfare<br />

rolls demanded. During House debate on the measure April 15, 1970, <strong>Bush</strong> said he<br />

favored FAP because it would force the lazy to work: "<strong>The</strong> family assistance plan ... is<br />

oriented toward work," he said. "<strong>The</strong> present federal-state welfare system encourages<br />

idleness by making it more profitable to be on welfare than to work, and provides no<br />

method by which the State may limit the number of individuals added to the rolls."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> had only "one major worry, and that is that the work incentive provisions will not<br />

be enforced.... it is essential that the program be administered as visualized by the Ways<br />

and Means Committee; namely, if an individual does not work, he will not receive<br />

funds." <strong>The</strong> Manchester School's Iron Law of Wages as expounded by <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>, self<br />

-styled expert in the dismal science..<br />

In 1967, <strong>Bush</strong> joined with Rep. James Scheuer (D-N.Y.), to successfully sponsor<br />

legislation that removed prohibitions against mailing and importing contraceptive<br />

devices. More than opening the door to French-made condoms, <strong>Bush</strong>'s goal here was a<br />

kind of ideological succes de scandale. <strong>The</strong> zero- growth lobby deemed this a major<br />

breakthrough in making the paraphenalia for domestic population control accessible.

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