Mt, I'm from the UK too and like you, feel let down. It feels unfair and I have felt the same despair you have. I have a good life, a lovely home, two amazing children now grown up and enough left over to go on a nice holiday every year if we're careful.
Sometimes it just feels like a grind that we get nothing for in return. My daughter is 22, living on minimum wage in an expensive area as that's where her job is that she has trained for three years to do (at a large cost to us). She qualifies for no state financial support so we are still having to keep her as her salary barely covers a room in a shared house.
BUT my kids both had free education until they were 18, we've all had free healthcare - including two births and extensive cancer and mental health treatment. Have you any idea how much this would cost in another country? My mother is now in her 80s and costs the NHS thousands of pounds a year. With an aging population these costs are only going to get higher. So what do we do?
I've worked in schools where the majority of families are living on some kind of benefits. I've seen some of the parents standing at the school gates with the latest phone, wearing designer joggers with a fag hanging out of their mouth. While their children are stealing food out of other children's lunch boxes because they are hungry. Who suffers most if we take those benefits away?
Life is fucking unfair on an awful lot of people. That's how it is. Things are incredibly shit the world over right now and every time we turn on the evening news there's another tragedy to haunt us. All we can do is vote (and let's be bloody thankful we can do that as many countries do not allow it) and hope that it makes a difference. If the people get pissed enough then maybe things will change.
Thanks for your awesome post, Sunspots. I hope mt sees it. I wanted to add another point, for the OP but also anyone else reading this thread.
I work myself--at the same company for 20+ years in 3 different positions, so I can always relate to how working people feel sometimes that the reward for hard work is more hard work, and it "feels" like we get nothing in return. At the same time I have good friends who are on benefits/disability and it is certainly not easy for most of them either.
My best friend lived in Brighton in the UK (I'm in Canada) and was on disability benefits until he died from a severe physical illness that was unfortunately not diagnosed until a month before his death(!) He did have mental illness as well. His life was gruelling because he couldn't get into social housing/"council flats" and was in a tiny studio flat on a rotating 6-week lease with the constant threat of losing his housing. So this idea of "free housing" for all those on benefits is false. It's an issue in Canada too -- huge wait lists for subsidized housing generally means only "lifers" in the system can get it. Or certain lucky exceptions. Many people, like my friend, are in regular rentals that often cost more than the housing allowance and cut into their living and food allowance.
My poor friend couldn't get any support even though he became physically unable to walk without great pain, and his social worker who was supposed to visit him almost never showed up. Luckily I was able to raise funds among our friends online so he could pay for things like his cab fares to the hospital. The reason I mention this is to counter the idea that those on benefits have everything handed to them.
I'm not sure how the UK compares to Canada, but in Canada we divide our benefits into several types. There is unemployment, welfare, and disability welfare. And there's also disability pension, which is administered by the Canada Pension Plan. Many disabled people receive a combination of welfare disability and pension disability depending on on how long they were able to work.
What I object to is referring to people who don't work, or on welfare or disability as some kind of homogenous group, that they are "lazy" or choose not to work. In Canada people are on welfare for an average of 2.5 years. This average includes those on it for life, so you can see some are on it for a very short time.
There is obviously a balance between making the social programs so easy to get that people can take advantage of them, and so hard to access that people in desperate need fall through the cracks. We are now seeing the pendulum swing to the latter. Unfortunately it's often the immediate, urgent cases that get turned away or are told they must wait weeks while their claim is evaluated.
Here's the thing: We've all seen cases where the system is probably being defrauded. The most common thing in Canada is the single mother on welfare who has a man living with her that social services knows nothing about, who is employed and bringing in a full-time income while she collects welfare. And believe me (because I used to work on a provincial fraud tips line) these cases get reported all the time. But who suffers if the mother's income is cut off? Quite often it's the child.
And even in the scenario Sunspots mention, what can we assume if a parent on benefits is standing there in designer joggers with a new-looking phone? The joggers may be knockoffs, the phone may be purchased stolen. The parent may be buying cigarettes above food for the child. But how on earth are we going to police that? In the end we just have to trust the government workers to do their job, and even if we know some won't, there are others (and I've known several) who are very dedicated.
I know it's tempting when we see the "lifers" people on social services for years and years (and often with subsidized housing etc) who look healthy, to make assumptions. But we simply should not. Whether they have a mental illness or other invisible disability or some may have damaged their bodies through drug use - they are not people to be envied.
And I think sometimes when we do envy these people, it's possibly an indication we need to look at our own physical and mental health and see if we need help and, if so, where we might get it. I pray for everyone here that you find what you need.