The saying goes: Luck is the residue of design. My version: The life one leads is — in the main, for most persons — the residue of choice.
There is a kind of person: one who drinks too much, who drives too fast, who spends money that he doesn’t have (or has little prospect of acquiring) on gadgets instead of useful things, who will not accept or hold onto a menial job because it is “beneath” him, who selects a mate for superficial reasons. Such a person is likely to lead a chaotic life — one filled with tension, frustration, and failure. Such a person is not deserving of charity because he is likely to squander it. And yet, the welfare state squanders tax-supported “charity” on such persons, thus encouraging their self-destructive behavior.
The road to hell is paved with bad choices.