I can just hear the bitching and moaning when the housekeeper / nanny / low wage servant can't call to tell you he / she isn't able to come wipe your kids' asses all day.Smart ass remark aside that's just it...my housekeeper (& just about the entire low income/working poor class) has a phone. Her daughter has one with an unlimited text plan. I see homeless people in Woodruff Park with phones all the time. Bottomline: people prioritize connectedness! On a budget, meager as it may be? Go to WalMart or the local Stop & Rob and get a Tracphone! It isn't cost prohibitive. Why create another program that creates a sense of entitlement? Imagine the cost of adminsitering the program, sorting thru all those gov't programs Ansley listed to figure out who is eligible and who isn't and ensure the integrity of the program is maintained? What waste.
Elementary Clue #1 - Nickle and Dimed (Ehrenreich) Originally Posted by ..
As usual an interesting thread turns into a "my dick is bigger than your dick" contest with the same old people playing. *Yawn* Originally Posted by BlissOh Miss Bliss...don't be so modest. A personal one off example of good under a program that includes much, much more. Not exactly concensus building.
...my housekeeper (& just about the entire low income/working poor class) has a phone. Originally Posted by atlcomedyThat's the key point.
I don't think cell phones were common when Reagan was in office. If I remember correctly, what ones were around back then were the size of a shoebox and were hard wired into your car. Originally Posted by pjorourkeIn 1987 we got a Panasonic Portable phone. It was probably 12" x 9" x 3". Three watts of raw analog power. Bell Atlantic (now Verizon). We bought a second Panasonic in 1989. We were sort of early adopters. I seem to remember the charges being .75¢ a minute peak and .38¢ off-peak. We went to digital about ten years later and a lot smaller phones.
Then why did you even bring up Reagan or anything political?:wavetow el2:And it would be my guess that they get to write that carve out off on their taxes. First of all, regional phones are available for $25.00 per month with unlimited calling. And secondly, not everyone is entitled to the same things that their neighbors have. Bliss’ example is one of a charity function not an entitlement program function. (..), talking about who’s been to the hood and who has domestics and other such non-related topics isn’t going to change this simple fact! I want a Maserati but I can’t afford one.
....& it is gov't, it's just that no direct tax dollars are being used to finance it....this is a "carve out" that the telecoms agree to do on their own to show they are responsible corporate citizens and keep the FCC (gov't) off their backs... Originally Posted by atlcomedy