bradleyfan20
New member
I disagree - and I think the sentiment of that very blogger I just linked to proves my point........
-just like EVERY government program - it is deemed "successful" mostly by those who have gained the benefits, and those who have suffered unfair disadvantages as a result of the programs definitely DO NOT deem the programs successful but the press rarely carries their point of view..
The government's massive taxpayer giveaway to help poverty has done little to achieve the desired intent - to eradicate poverty - and some believe the efforts simply reward the very behavior that locks people into poverty...
..same with affirmative action, food stamps, "free universal healthcare", and almost every other government imposed or sponsored program & giveaway.
I simply do NOT see where it has been successful except to a few in the short term - and I believe that anywhere you identify "success" that it likely would have and could have happened on its own without Title IX.
It all boils down to that old saying - that there are two types of people who react differently when someone knocks on your door saying ...
"I am from the government and I am here to help"
...One type of person would say "sure, then why should I do anything on my own - I'll just let you do it for me and pay the costs"...
...The other type would say "no, thanks, get out of my way as I can do it on my own and I do not need you"
..unfortunately we have far too many of the former type and far too few of the latter type whose hard work generates the government's resources to pay for the former's handouts
What are the "unfair disadvantages"? Unfair to whom? Title IX, which is what we are discussing, not the role of government policy in health care or poverty, has made it more fair for women to compete. If you say that is at the expense of men's sports, then I say men's sports are at the expense of women's opportunity. Providing a balance of opportunities, which is the intent of title ix, has occurred. We know that a balance was not happening in 1972. To say we "may have" gotten here anyway, who knows. But for 70 years we didn't get there. A law was passed, and things changed. Sounds like the idea has worked.