it depends. As said, someone who is on welfare should be expected to be fairly frugal- but I would suggest that it depends on the situation. If you need help for a couple months while you find a new job, then selling the car sees a bit petty to FORCE it.
There's also the question of how petty you get- in 19th century england, there were two forms of assistance you could get. One, assistance in your home, where the "deserving poor" got help in their own homes- was $%&* difficult to get- they would check to see if there was any possible way you could support yourself, with one woman being denied for having two stools, begin told to sell one f them- the other being to go to the workhouse, where you would be given dangerous, harmful or just plain painful work and in exchange, get a small amount of gruel, and a bed for the night. If they were unsatisfied with how much work you did? you were slung out with nothing. Even in the workhouse, families were separated- to the extent that you'd probably never see them again.
in short, YES, if someone is on welfare long-term, they probably should sell stuff. But forcing someone to sell stuff smacks of wanting people on welfare to be as miserable as possible.
There's also the question of how petty you get- in 19th century england, there were two forms of assistance you could get. One, assistance in your home, where the "deserving poor" got help in their own homes- was $%&* difficult to get- they would check to see if there was any possible way you could support yourself, with one woman being denied for having two stools, begin told to sell one f them- the other being to go to the workhouse, where you would be given dangerous, harmful or just plain painful work and in exchange, get a small amount of gruel, and a bed for the night. If they were unsatisfied with how much work you did? you were slung out with nothing. Even in the workhouse, families were separated- to the extent that you'd probably never see them again.
in short, YES, if someone is on welfare long-term, they probably should sell stuff. But forcing someone to sell stuff smacks of wanting people on welfare to be as miserable as possible.
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