https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mark...h9s?li=BBnb7Kz
                                                            
 
                                      The city of Oakland, California adopted a guaranteed-income scheme  that is racist, flawed and amounts to just a repackaged version of  reparations. The plan should be scrapped, not celebrated and promoted.  This is not what genuine progress looks like.
     

    © Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty Images  Downtown Oakland in 2015   Under the privately-funded, city-backed Oakland Resilient Families  program, some low-income families will get $500 per month to spend with  no strings attached. In order to qualify, the family must earn under  $30,000 a year and have at least one minor child.
             
 The purported goal of guaranteed income (or "universal basic income,"  as it's more commonly called) is for recipients to focus on getting a  job or a better education without the competing stress of financial  struggle. The extra funding, proponents argue, allows recipients to  exclusively focus on getting to a place of economic self-sufficiency.
Shockingly, however, this program is designed to help people on the basis of 
race.  Low-income white families do not qualify by mere dint of their skin  color. Their whiteness evidently renders them unworthy of assistance.
Often,  whites are presumed to have some kind of privilege that protects them  against institutionalized racism. After all, it was powerful white  people who designed and implemented the systems that proponents claim  oppressed minority communities. I wonder, though, why the 7.3 percent of  low-income whites living in poverty don't use their white privilege to  escape to a more comfortable lifestyle?
The city of Oakland argues  its rule is meant to specifically help black and indigenous residents  because they suffer disproportionate economic disparities, per the  Oakland Equity Index. Why? The city doesn't directly say. But the  program's website claims that "wealth inequities [are] rooted in ongoing  systemic racism." How utterly nebulous.
"The poverty we all  witness today is not a personal failure—it is a systems failure," said  Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf in a statement. "Guaranteed income is one of  the most promising tools for systems change, racial equity and economic  mobility we've seen in decades."
Unnamed "systems" designed and  enforced by the Left in Oakland somehow unfairly target people of color?  If that were true, no guaranteed-income scheme would, by definition,  help: Any money going to minorities would still be subject to the same  systems that failed them previously.
What's more: 
All of the poverty is the result of a systems failure? Really? Perhaps this explains 
Democrats'  resistance to conservatives who argue for more personal responsibility.  To Democrats like Mayor Schaaf, no one is responsible for his/her own  financial situation. Everyone is a victim. And victims deserve  recompense.
But to claim guaranteed income is a "promising" tool  is only true if one ignores the mountains of data from Finland. A  similar program there by and large failed to get people on the right  economic path.
A randomly selected group of 2,000 unemployed Finns  between 25 and 58 received 560 euros ($600) per month from the country  over a two-year period (2017 and 2018). While people were generally  happier (who wouldn't be when getting free money?), they didn't fare  much better finding work as compared with a control group. Free money  recipients did just 2 percent better than those who weren't getting a  handout, rendering untenable the highly expensive idea of universal  basic income.
The results from Finland should be seen as  instructive. Instead, they're ignored for purportedly more promising  data from a much smaller sample in Stockton, California.
The city  of Stockton also gave its poorest residents $500 per month on prepaid  debit cards. Although it wasn't predicated upon race, the program only  looked at 125 recipients. As in Finland, the program saw most of its  success from people reporting less stress. But the unemployment rate for  the recipients only dropped 4 percent.
Still, left-wing outlets like 
NPR and 
The Atlantic  celebrated the program, framing it as a massive success. But like the  programs' proponents, the authors seem less interested in analyzing data  than they do in implementing an abstract socialist idea.
Though  Oakland proponents cite the data from Stockton, they are less interested  in considering the full picture. In Stockton, for example, some 40  percent of the money was transferred from the prepaid debit cards to  either personal bank accounts or to cash—neither of which was tracked  for the survey. And proponents are already working with such a small  study group, making the implications of this lack-of-tracking phenomenon  even more significant.
In Oakland, proponents seem just as  disinterested in the data. Free money recipients "have the option of  participating in periodic surveys and interviews, but are not required  to," according to the city.
How do policymakers purport to study a  pilot if they do not take the results seriously? It's not about the  results: Democrats are running with this idea, no matter the data. And  soon, it may come to a city near you.
Mayors for a Guaranteed  Income is the group behind the programs in Oakland and Stockton. Soon,  the program will be tested in Tacoma, Washington and Madison, Wisconsin,  with dozens of other large and midsize cities likely following not too  far behind.
The push is almost exclusively centered around  minority communities. It is, in effect, a repackaged form of  reparations, sans the 
baggage  attached to the concept. And, of course, it's predicated upon a  Democratic talking point of "systemic racism" being to blame, suddenly,  for all of society's problems.
Who knew the answer to systemic  racism, where whites are supposedly offered exclusive assistance,  is...more systemic racism where minority communities are offered  exclusive assistance and whites are not. Perhaps we can go full circle  and see all white people "systemically" disadvantaged. Isn't that a  Democrat's version of progress?
Jason Rantz is a frequent guest on Fox News and is the host of the Jason Rantz Show 
on KTTH Seattle, heard weekday afternoons. You can subscribe to his podcast here and follow him on Twitter: @jasonrantz.
The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.
DPST marxists are pandering to the People's they keep in their shithole cities on their plantation - to placate and pull out to Vote at elections - and otherwise ignore the situations they cause for what they regard as their own property!
Lots of 'p' - deliberately