Bob, I appreciate your thoughts and comments, and those of others, that's exactly the kind of discussions I was hoping to see.
Perhaps I should have added a few clarifications to the original quote. First, welfare is still alive in Canada albeit very much revised and there are fewer 'welfare generation families' than there used to be.
The random urine testing that was in my mind was similar to that the military has to go through - commonly known as the whiz quiz. They are tested for EVERY substance, and if they have a prescription for something it is a non issue - it's the substances they don't have prescriptions for that become an issue.
Secondly, I know from first hand experience that there is a certain amount of leniency built into the whiz quiz system (at least in terms of the military) that allows you to explain yourself. There was a case of an athlete I believe, who tested positive for marijuana - he'd never smoked it himself, but was at a party where others were smoking it and he tested positive based on residual.
I myself had to turn to the welfare system in Canada for a 3 month time frame after my first marriage fell apart and I needed assistance - it's demoralizing and degrading and humiliating to go to the bank and have to present a welfare check for deposit when you've worked all your life, so adding in a whiz quiz would be salt in the wound for sure. I honestly don't know if I'm for or against this kind of thing, it opens a pandora's box for sure.
Part of my interest in a discussion on the issue is the talk of the civil defense force (or whatever the hell it's being called these days) and what something like this could mean to that type of scenario.
There are many employees who must submit to a whiz quiz as a prerequisite to their employment. I don't see how something like this could be implemented without the participants knowledge and consent before accepting assistance.
I've known too many people who take their welfare assistance and abuse the system in ways I simply couldn't even think up - when I was living in subsidized housing as a single mom going to school full time, one of my neighbors took full advantage. You see, the way it used to work, you turned in your utility bills and you were allotted a certain amount of money for your utilities based on what the amounts were. There was a month in there that the gas rates were increased by a little more than double because of a billing glitch. She turned in the high bill and received that as her utility income every month - additionally, the system used to pay out a clothing allowance and that amount was based on your monthly bills. She had 3 kids, all of them were filthy and allowed to run around where when and with whom they pleased, don't get me wrong, they were fed, but they were poorly taken care of IMO - especially when she used a majority of her welfare income to party in the bars a minimum of 3 nights a week.
I begrudge no one assistance when they fall on hard times, that's what we all pay those damn taxes and unemployment insurance and workers comp payments for. What I wonder about, is if people who receive subsidized income or housing etc. were told up front that they were fully able to receive the benefits they had paid into, but had to be willing to submit to a whiz quiz to ensure a) they weren't abusing the purpose of the assistance and b) (and probably most importantly) that they weren't falling into a situation that could potentially destroy their lives.
It's real easy when you are down on your luck and life is giving you hell at every turn to fall into a pattern of behavior that is destructive. Of course, the conundrum becomes, who is it that should be monitoring that kind of possibility? The government whom hands out the financial assistance? The state who is supposed to be monitoring child welfare? The employed populace who are providing said income through their tax payments?
Obviously there is no clear or easy answer, but there are circumstances and jobs where something like a whiz quiz is mandatory for very good reasons. I personally don't want an active duty soldier who is an expert shot with a 9mm and M16 shooting meth, or a police officer who is high on cocaine responding to a drug raid etc.
I am merely looking for discussion and thoughtful insight on the pros and cons of how such a condition might affect society - good bad or ugly.
As far as invasion of privacy, quite frankly, my opinion of that is that it's already gone - I've had too many personal experiences where personal privacy means about as much as a 100% wage increase to a person earning $0 an hour. Maybe one day I'll send you an example of what I mean - which btw, you cannot find on the internet, it was erased

Cat
as an aside I'd like for this to remain a good clean debate, with all the usual passion and conviction that we are used to but without any personal attacks (and that is not to say that has already happened in this thread, it's just my thoughts and wishes for the debate)