Capitalistic models are largely anachronistic levers of motivation. Upwards mobility is dead for most people.
This whole idea that you can get rich, and richer, simply by working hard, is no longer a thing. Regardless of what politicians (most of who live both in a bubble and in a different century) parrot about 'we need to get people back to work' and other echoes from the Reagan-Thatcher era, this is no longer resonating with many people. Many Americans already work more than one job, while the money they are being payed in is being devalued in proportion to the goods they need (they have less purchasing power). Meanwhile, in an economy that devalues currency, and encourages spending, the wealthy get wealthier, not because they have more cash but because their wealth lies in assets (such as stock, real estate, etc) which increase in value when currency increases in supply relative to the supply of goods (ie, currency loses its value).
I agree that it is more honest to work than depend on benefits if one is able to do so, but I also think this is kind of a minor issue compared to the economic issues you Yanks are facing, such as inflation, lack of access to healthcare, and minimum wages that are not indexed to the cost of living.
America has become a third-world country, mainly because many of its citizens get hardons for billionaires who look at them as nothing more than labor capital to exploit and thusly vote for politicians who's campaigns are backed by such billionaires.
Also, when you make posts like these, it looks kind of lame to me. Okay, OP, I have read many of your posts and I get you don't like people living off benefits. Like, I hear you already. And yeah, some people do try to game the system. But that isn't the case with everyone who depends on benefits. I also wonder why you are so fixated on such people when there are others who are clearly fucking you over worse. I say while assuming you are not a billionaire (lol).