It sounds compassionate. It feels right.
But what if the real problem isn’t too little welfare — it’s too much of the wrong kind?
That’s the argument put forward in a short, sharp 5-minute video by PragerU titled “The Real Tragedy of the Welfare State.”
The Core Argument — And It’s Uncomfortable
The video makes one central claim:
The welfare system hasn’t failed because it hasn’t reduced poverty — it has failed because it has reduced incentives to work and grow.
According to the argument, the way poverty is measured doesn’t even fully count the vast array of government benefits people receive. When those are included, the picture changes dramatically — suggesting far fewer people are truly lacking basic needs.
But that’s not the real issue.
The real issue is what happens over time.
Dependency vs Opportunity
The video argues that decades of welfare expansion have created a system where, for many, not working makes as much financial sense as working.
And when that happens, something deeper is lost.
Not just income — but:
motivation
purpose
independence
the drive to improve one’s situation
As the video puts it, people may survive… but they don’t thrive.
The Real Tragedy
This isn’t about denying help to those in genuine need.
It’s about asking a harder question:
Are we helping people up — or holding them in place?
The claim is stark:
A system designed to fight poverty may, in fact, be quietly entrenching it — by removing the very incentives that lead people out of it.
That’s the “tragedy.”
Watch It — Then Decide
It’s only five minutes, but it challenges a lot of deeply held assumptions.
👉 Watch the full video here:
https://www.prageru.com/videos/the-real-tragedy-of-the-welfare-state
Agree or disagree, it’s worth hearing the argument in full.
Final Thought
Real compassion isn’t just about support.
It’s about outcomes.
And if a system keeps people dependent rather than helping them rise, then maybe it’s time we ask —
who is it really serving?



