Operative words "People need to take care of their own lives . . ." in other words - be responsible and pay with your own pocketbook.
This is a somewhat philosophical response to your statement, but in thinking about this situation, I think you hit at the heart of so much of what is going on in our society and the culture we live in. We live in a world where the government is bailing out businesses that have failed due to poor practices and poor decision-making. We live in a world where it has been suggested that the government step in and assist people in making their mortgage payments (or refinancing their mortgages). In other words, we live in a world where personal responsibility (bad decision making) is seemingly being rewarded by the government.
For me, it is no surprise that this woman honestly believed she could have a number of children and not suffer many consequences. I am a strong advocate for many social programs (consider myself very liberal in my politics), but we as a society have really crossed the line between helping those with a genuine need into helping those who have just really made some horrible decisions. I don't know where the two (genuine need vs. horrible decisions) stopped being seen as different, but it seems they have.
This is an incredibly difficult situation because those 14 children should not be made to pay for their mother's irresponsibility (provided she can't take care of them and perhaps she will be able to). But what I find most alarming about this situation is that on the surface (again, she may be able to provide for them so this is an assumption) she did this with the appearance of thinking 'all will be well' without actually showing any initiative on her part of making all things well (by having a job or something like that).
But, quite honestly, I can't fault her any more for that kind of mentality (if that was her mentality, of course) than I can the CEOs who have cost our country billions (!) because of poor leadership and decision-making. And I don't fault her more than the millions who I believe have extended themselves too far financially by having a sense of entitlement ('I deserve the biggest house in the neighborhood, and I don't care if I can afford it or not!') and then looking to the government to help them out.
I think there is quite a bit of frustration in our country with the current government response to the economic crisis in terms of bailouts and such. And I think this woman (and the assumption that she can't take care of these children) is just the embodiment of what alot of citizens are upset about right now--seeing irresponsibility rewarded with dollars from people who work hard and are responsible. I don't think the anger has to do with race or religion. I just think she personifies the type of irresponsibility that has resulted in our current economic crisis, and she happens to be an easy one on which to focus some of the anger and frustration. That there are innocent children involved just makes it more of an emotional debate.
Just my opinion and all that.....