Not sure I understand. I stated that most of the people on CERB were desperately in need of it, and you agreed by stating that a great number of them were fraudulent.
While I agree that there should be assistance for small business, you would have that at the expense of support for individuals? Isn't the foundation of capitalism the understanding of the risk vs reward dynamic? You risk your capital and reap the rewards? If the government protects business from all the possible downsides but allows them to keep the rewards earned for upside events, then how is this capitalism with a competitive marketplace? Some businesses either bought interruption insurance or self insured by holding back some of the profits earned during periods of profitability in order to weather such events, but competitors that took no such measures are rewarded for their lack of acumen with a bailout?
Employees are not capital risk takers. They don't participate in the profits of the business unless they accept that as part of their compensation, and then they bear both upside and downside event risk. But, typically, employees are not owners, not risking capital, and don't automatically share in upside potential. This is why governments generally build some sort of catastrophe insurance into their social programming, as "bailouts" for individuals serve two purposes. First, to protect people from severe consequences like homelessness, starvation, and so on, and secondly to protect business by keeping money flowing in the economy. Employment Insurance type of programs are also a great stabilizing force on the economy as a whole, and a valuable tool to smooth the boom/bust cycle.
The reckoning of the public service? I take it you resent public sector wages, benefits, pensions, or whatever? If these were so much better than the private sector, then why isn't there greater competition for those jobs, meaning a larger pool of applicants, which would mean pressure to pay closer to private sector wages? Well, that's exactly true, as even in Alberta, private and public sector wages are very close to each other. Many positions in the public sector, primarily in education and health care, have high barriers to entry with stringent qualifications that typically involve at least one degree and a list of other qualifications. Teachers, nurses, doctors, physiotherapists, and on and on all must have pretty expensive education and training, and their skills play an important role in society, so under the notion of value added, shouldn't they earn a fairly decent wage?
Instead of racing to the bottom by cutting wages and programs, why not try the opposite? Let's be proud of living in a place with high wages and a great deal of prosperity and an excellent level of public services. Instead of being jealous or hateful of your neighbour the nurse that worked through high school to get an over 90% average and took summer classes to take extra sciences and sacrificed their social lives and then worked their asses off in a difficult university program, beat your chest that Alberta has amazing and dedicated nurses and demand we pay them well and give them even more respect for the valuable work they do.
I get that the pandemic has been stressful, but it's time to stop listening to politicians that do nothing but seek to divide us. I worked half my career in the private sector and half in the public sector and I'm fucking proud of the work I did in both environments and the amazing people I worked with in both sectors. Instead of kicking your neighbour, try helping them if you can, or at least getting to know them instead of just generalizing them.