Quote Originally Posted by pkskyali View Post
Here is more trouble. How do you get to be a state-approved non-profit or charity? And what about job training? Why are you training for a job, if you can't get a job? If you are training for a job, then a job must be out there that you are training for. What if you train for the job, apply for it and don't get the job? Many states have tried this and see it is an exercise in futility, and also it inflames the bureaucracy that provides public assistance. Some bureaucrat has to spend time going over this information to insure compliance. It cost money for no good reason.

It is inevitable that when employment depends on a labor market, that some people are excluded from benefiting from the market. That's why the market is supposed to benefit employers and employees alike. The best employees get the jobs and the employers get the best workers. Those who don't make the cut for whatever reason wind up with no means to support themselves.

This is what public assistance is for, to help provide the needs for those who cannot sustain themselves from the labor market.
You don't have to start a charity, you can volunteer for an existing one. They're all over the place, a dime a dozen, like churches. You can volunteer to help your church do stuff, too. They're 501 C 3's and most of them need all types of volunteers to do stuff.