Using tax dollars to support society's disenfranchised is not inherently a bad thing, and some people do need help to get back on their feet. Whether it's from a private charity or government matters little. Soup kitchens do works of good everyday, even if they're always "giving" to others.
You seem to be responding to one of my examples. Let's look at each of your arguments individually.
Using tax dollars to support society's disenfranchised is not inherently a bad thing
Okay, this is your thesis statement, let's look at your reasons for believing this. But first let's analyze just what it means to "use tax dollar to support" someone.
It means to take resources from one person, by threat of force, and give them to another. We must recall that tax money is not an infinite pool of free-floating wealth that belongs to no one. It is instead taken from people who will be imprisoned by men with guns if they do not give, and the amount that is taken is decided based on expenditures like giving it to other people. Every dollar given to one person is a dollar which is taken from another.
Now, perhaps it is sometimes moral to do precisely this. But in order to argue that such an action is moral, we must show two things: first, that it is moral to give resources to the one party (or else we deny their
agency), and second, that it is moral to take them from the other (or else we deny their
humanity).
some people do need help to get back on their feet
Indeed. This explains why it might be moral to give resources. The
agency of the recipient must be considered in the light of their power to effect their situation. A person with no power to effect their situation does not have their
agency reduced by an offer of assistance, if their situation is also not a consequence of their own poor choices.
But it does not explain why it is moral to take them by force. It gives no justification for denying the
humanity of the people whose resources we are taking.
Soup kitchens do works of good everyday, even if they're always "giving" to others.
Okay.
But this is not a supporting statement. It's just another assertion.
So the only justifying argument you have made is that "some people need it". Perhaps you could explain to me why a need in one entity creates an obligation in another?