Where have I asserted that? What I’ve been saying is that government is an indispensable agent, and private charities by themselves can’t substitute for it, because they don’t have the necessary resources. Only taxpayer-funded programs have the money to address the problems of homelessness on the required scale.
Like I said, if you need to clear a snowdrift, a teaspoon won’t do: you need a snow shovel. That remains true even if the snow shovel is old and cracked while the teaspoon’s in great shape.
Now, what may be confusing you about my position is that I also said that I personally believe, as a matter of principle, that we have an obligation to care for the needy as citizens of a democracy working through government, not just as private individuals supporting private charities. I believe, as I said, that the task of social welfare should not be left entirely behind the closed doors of charitable-institution boardrooms, but should also be undertaken with public funds, as part of the duties of the elected representatives of the public, under the public eye.
And that argument from principle is an argument for government involvement in social spending irrespective of pragmatic questions of the relative efficacy of public vs. private programs. So maybe that’s what confused you.
But, if you discard that argument from principle, the pragmatic arguments about relative size and resources still hold good. Even if you don’t agree with me that it’s the government’s essential duty to spend public money on addressing the problems of homelessness, it’s still true that the government is the only institution big enough to tackle the problem on the necessary scale.
I’m not sure if you really did misunderstand me on this point, or if you’re just pretending to do so in order to be annoying. I think anybody who was reading my posts for comprehension would have been able to figure out that I don’t think that the homeless services provided by private charities are worthless, nor do I think that we shouldn’t encourage them. In fact, as I noted in an earlier post, I contribute to them myself.
But that doesn’t change the fact that private charities just don’t have the means to provide the necessary services on the necessary scale. In fact, they couldn’t even do most of what they do now if they weren’t getting a sizable portion of their revenues from government allocations.
You may fuss and grumble about liberal propensities for looking to the government to solve problems, but realistically speaking, what’s the alternative in a case like this? If we defunded all public funding of programs to combat homelessness, what would take its place?
That’s realistically speaking, now: no vague and fuzzy libertarian speculations about how private charities would somehow expand tenfold to fill the gap, or the market would provide a solution somehow, or we’d somehow suddenly figure out how to address the problems of homelessness at a fraction of their current cost. Realistically speaking, how would we handle this issue without looking to the government?