Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeOpinion'Generational Centrelinkers' - when the safety net becomes a spider web

‘Generational Centrelinkers’ – when the safety net becomes a spider web

We said it last time – truth be told – and it needs to be said again: the problem isn’t immigration.

It’s entitlement without accountability.

In our previous article, we coined the term “generational Centrelinkers” – not to insult, but to confront a painful truth.

There is a growing segment in Australia where families have been on government support for two, three, sometimes four generations.

It has become normalised. Expected. Even strategised.

Let’s be real: the system is broken when working full-time, pays barely more than Centrelink – and working hard comes with less support than doing nothing.

Where’s the incentive to contribute?

We have nurtured countless young single mothers, through our community service.

One common example, with four children all under 10, all from different fathers.

Most of these women are kind, intelligent, and could thrive with the right support and guidance.

But when you ask about their life, it is a reflection of what they saw growing up:

“Mum was a single parent too. We all lived in housing. It’s just what who we are.”

With four kids, a single parent can earn up to $2,000 per fortnight, receive subsidised housing, discounted utilities, free or heavily subsidised childcare, school support, and a range of local council grants.

In contrast, someone earning $100,000 a year only takes home about $2,400 per fortnight after tax.

Then pays full price for everything.

Rent or mortgage. $70+ per child per day in childcare. Health insurance. Rego. Petrol. Bills. And no handouts.

So the question is: why bother working?

We’re not here to judge every Centrelink recipient.

Support should exist for those in genuine need – single parents, elderly, displaced, injured.

But when generations are born into learned helplessness, it’s a national crisis.

We are now rewarding disengagement and raising children without a model of contribution, resilience, or responsibility.

When role modelling is missing, children mirror what they see.

If they see Centrelink as the norm, they will aspire to Centrelink.

Monkey see, monkey do. But who’s holding the mirror?

Meanwhile… we blame immigrants?

We turn around and blame immigrants for housing prices, health delays, job shortages – yet they are the ones:

• Working the jobs no one else wants (hospitality, aged care, farming).

• Paying $10,000+ in visa fees, often no access to Medicare or Centrelink.

• Buying homes with hard-earned savings, not handouts.

• Role modelling values of family, education, and perseverance.

We call them “queue jumpers” while they’re picking our fruit, cleaning our hospitals, serving our meals, and paying taxes without accessing public safety nets. Most can’t. Their visas don’t allow it.

So how are they the problem?

Let’s be blunt – Australia is becoming a land of double standards.

We talk about fairness. But how fair is it that an immigrant working three jobs can’t afford childcare, while someone on benefits for five years pays nothing and gets bonus payments?

We talk about values. But what values are we teaching when choosing not to work comes with more perks than pulling your weight?

We talk about equality. But what does that mean when immigrants face stricter rules, more scrutiny, and fewer benefits – while contributing more?

Truth be told, here’s what needs to change:

1. Audit and reform Centrelink dependency

Identify and intervene where generational dependency exists. Support must be a bridge – not a bed. Time limits. Work, study or volunteer requirements. Accountability.

2. Mandatory community contribution

If you’re receiving full benefits and physically capable, you should be giving back: local clean-ups, aged care assistance, tutoring, training, something. Not to punish – to rewire purpose. We can talk about National Service, but that’s a whole other topic!

3. Values-based education and role modelling

Schools should embed civic pride, financial literacy, resilience, and contribution into every year level. Let’s teach kids what it means to be a responsible citizens, and not just Centrelink numbers.

4. Stop penalising working Australians

Raise thresholds, adjust tax scales. It shouldn’t feel like you are being penalised for trying to do the right thing.

5. Don’t let fear silence the truth

Stop pandering to headlines and unions. Australia needs leaders with backbone – not those chasing votes through handouts. A strong nation is built on shared values, not shared victimhood.

We are Australians – let’s act like it.

We’re not from England, Malaysia, India or China. This is our home. Our only home. And we’re tired of watching it slide into mediocrity propped up by slogans and spin.

We want Australia to be a land of:

• Equal opportunity, not equal handouts.

• Mateship, not manipulation.

• Pride, not pity.

It starts with stopping the rise of ‘generational Centrelinkers.’

We’re not here to judge – we are here to push a redesigning of a system that supports contribution, not one that gets exploited.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Officer kiln development proposed, feedback open

A modern development of the Officer Kiln is now being considered by Cardinia Shire Council, with residents asked to provide their thoughts on the...

NextGen levels up

More News

Community raises thousands for Narre Warren fire brigade CFA

Despite being a scorcher of a day on Saturday, many from the community came together to raise more than $4000 for Narre Warren Fire...

Vigil honors fatally shot teen

The Sudanese community came together over the weekend in a heart-wrenching candlelight vigil to mourn the tragic death of 16-year-old Ater Good, who was...

11 kids rescued from locked cars on scorching Saturday: Ambulance Victoria

Ambulance Victoria (AV) paramedics responded to 11 cases of children locked in cars during a scorching Saturday across Victoria. After a day in which...

Suspended driver blows 0.177% in Cardinia

On the 25th of January, at approximately 3.15pm, Cardinia Highway Patrol intercepted a 47-year-old woman on in Cardinia. The woman was driving with a suspended...

Increasing plastic waste, a burden councils and ratepayers ‘can’t afford to bear’

Even though the state government is boosting plastic recycling capacity in areas such as Pakenham, a new report has found that plastic waste is...

Police ‘stonewalling’ delays CFMEU threats case

Lawyers for a CFMEU organiser accused of making threats have said Victoria Police is refusing to help it reach former chief commissioner Shane Patton. The...

Citizens embraced on Australia Day

Dozens of Casey’s newest citizens were welcomed in a citizenship ceremony at Bunjil Place on 26 January. There were 200 recipients beaming with pride and...

Councils call for Growing Suburbs Fund to be restored

An ongoing push for the State Government to restore the Growing Suburbs Fund which supported tens of millions of dollars in infrastructure projects in...

Traders launch petition demanding Government compensation

Roadworks that disrupted businesses last year have rolled into 2026 with little change. Angry business owners say the State Government has abandoned them, offering...

Third attack on Heritage Church

Lang Lang’s heritage-listed church is reeling as police investigate a third attack on the site. It is understood unknown offenders damaged the window of St...