
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Nick Buckley MBE explores the relationship between "givers" and "takers, " and the damaging symbiotic relationship between them. He examines the motivation of disheveled individuals sitting on street corners holding out paper cups, as well as the intergenerational problem of poverty and welfare dependency. Different types of beggars are highlighted, such as politicians begging for votes, charities begging for donations, and even the woke begging for validation and attention. Buckley shows that begging is a complicated topic, part nature and part nurture, and that many engage in such behavior unknowingly. Unlike most authors on this topic, Buckley explores his own history of begging from being raised in a workless household on benefits, to claiming unemployment benefits as an adult, and the journey that eventually led him to found an award-winning charity. Buckley offers us an antidote to such unbecoming behavior: personal responsibility.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- I. Introduction
- II. The Conversation
- Chapter 1. The Beggar’s Narrative
- Chapter 2. A recovering beggar
- Chapter 3. The Begging Trinity
- Chapter 4. A Lack Of Shame
- Chapter 5. A Political Beggar
- Chapter 6. The Damage
- Chapter 7. Personal Responsibility
- Chapter 8. The Antidote
- III. Final Words