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Republicans Cut off Food Assistance to Millions of Americans who own a Car
It can be rightly presumed that extremely severe and unusually cruel conduct that is mutinous to the rules of right or virtuous conduct is considered Draconian, or in 2012 terminology, Republican. It seems that every budget proposal or new legislation submitted by the GOP is another opportunity for them to show their lack of compassion for the American people and apparently there is no end to the depth of depravity they are willing to go to cause suffering in the populace to reward corporate America. This week, Republicans in the House maintained their reputation as Draconian stewards of America’s purse strings and crafted a “compromise” farm bill that cuts billions of dollars from the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP) or informally, food stamps, and increases farm subsidies to the corporate agriculture industry.
At a time when 46 million Americans (one half are children) depend on food stamps to avoid dire poverty and daily hunger, Republicans who created this sluggish economy decided that several million poor Americans should lose their eligibility to qualify for assistance because it is the fiscally responsible thing to do. The Republican plan eliminates “categorical eligibility” which means that a family living at or below the poverty line that owns a dependable car will be cut off of food assistance. According to Republicans, a dependable automobile will be figured in to the family’s income and when they are near the eligibility cut-off point, even a moderately-priced used car sends them over the limit. The plan also means that several hundred thousand low-income children will lose access to free or reduced-priced school meals based on the elimination of categorical eligibility. It is the perfect method for Republicans to punish poor Americans by not only cutting off food assistance at home, but completes the hunger cycle by keeping children hungry throughout the school day.
The GOP plan forces low-income families to choose between owning a dependable car to commute to their jobs and feeding their families and it may be a new low for Republicans, but as the past year-and-a-half has shown, they can always exceed their current Draconian spending habits, especially where the poor are concerned. In fact, since they took control of the House in 2011, Republicans have worked diligently to portray any social safety net spending as wasteful regardless that, at its peak, the SNAP program was only .52% of GDP and it kept 5 million Americans from sinking into abject poverty in 2011, and cut the number of children living in extreme poverty by 50%. However, Republicans are unfazed by a UNICEF report that ranked the United States in second place for the percentage of children living in poverty at 23.1% behind Latvia, and above 33 of the world’s richest countries of which America is the richest, so achieving number one status is within their reach.
Republicans have attempted to perpetuate the myth that African Americans and Latinos make up the lion’s share of SNAP recipients, but the truth is that out of 46-million Americans living in poverty, 31 million are white, ten million are African American, and the remainder were Hispanic and Asian. During the Republican presidential primary race, a common theme was that Republicans did not “want to make black people’s lives better by giving them other people’s money” and it plays on the racism rampant in American society. Presidential candidate Willard Romney said “I’m not concerned about the very poor” because there are safety nets, but he plans on throwing 13-million low-income Americans off of food stamps. It is a common theme for Republicans and informs a recent poll that found only 40% of Republicans agree that “it is the responsibility of the government to take care of people who can’t take care of themselves” and it demonstrates a growing lack of compassion for those struggling in the Republican-caused economic malaise. As a contrast, 75% of Democrats say the government should help those who cannot sustain themselves and their position is more in line with public sentiment.
This moral depravity on the part of Republicans is not a matter of fiscal responsibility, because every food dollar spent generates $1.80 in economic activity that creates jobs, increases tax revenue, and keeps millions of Americans and their children out of extreme poverty. Each food dollar spent also gives farmers $.21 besides their subsidies, and with high crop and land prices, and a record $136.3 billion in farm exports in 2011, it is egregious to cut food stamps while increasing subsidies. In fact, for the first time in 2011, farm income exceeded $100 billion and so far this year it is forecast to reach $91.7 billion, the second-highest on record. Still, it is not good enough for the agri-corp industry and Republicans who are duty-bound to give as much taxpayer dollars to corporations at the expense of working-poor, elderly, and children to create a population of peasants barely subsisting to bolster the wealthy’s profits.
Republicans claim they are being fiscally responsible and doing the will of the American people, but a recent poll by the Food Research and Action Center (FRAC) disclosed that 74% of Americans say the SNAP program is very important and 71% say cutting SNAP is the wrong way for Congress to reduce spending. The GOP thinks otherwise and the Paul Ryan and Willard Romney budgets make more drastic cuts to SNAP and increase the deficit by $4 – $6.7 trillion with incredible tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. The FRAC poll also found support for SNAP and ending hunger is strong among all demographics and political groups with 91% of Democrats, 70% of Independents, and 56% of “strong” Republicans believing SNAP is a very important program. Obviously, Republicans in Congress and aspiring to the White House are out of touch with Americans who have a strong moral compass and not tied to enriching the wealthy at the expense of the poor whether they are white, Black, or Hispanic, and especially children.
There are many Republicans who claim there is widespread fraud among SNAP recipients, and the Republican financial guru Paul Ryan said, “you know we get all these reports about how the SNAP program is rife with fraud, how it’s not getting the assistance to the people who need it,” but the truth is the “errors” in administering SNAP payments are within the 1% range and they are not fraud, but mistakes within the program’s administration; the only fraud is from vendors who double-bill and cheat the government with unsubstantiated receipts. The eligibility requirements to receive SNAP are so stringent that it is all but impossible for program participants to qualify much less cheat.
The Republicans’ drastic cuts to SNAP are not for fiscal responsibility, to staunch fraudulent claims, or to teach low-income children the value of work. Their cuts are to make room for more subsidies for corporate agriculture and to create higher poverty numbers, and possibly to reach number one in industrial nations with the most children living in poverty. With their version of the farm bill, they will approach Romania’s 25% of children in poverty and create another 3 million Americans going to bed hungry every night, and eliminating categorical eligibility means a family head gets to choose between feeding their family or selling their used car and walking to work. It is possible that Republicans think SNAP recipients are proud to take government assistance, but the stigma attached to using food stamps creates psychological stress and embarrassment to people who would rather have a living wage job that Republicans will not help create.
Republicans are just cruel and unusually severe in their treatment of Americans whose only crime is living in an economy created by Republicans for the wealthy and their corporations, and are ill-inclined to pass President Obama’s jobs bills when they can fight for more tax cuts for the wealthy and subsidies for corporate agriculture. It has been nearly a year since the President proposed jobs bills the Republicans will not even bring up for discussion, much less a vote, and their big plans before the election are extending Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy, casting symbolic votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act, and now, cutting millions of low-income Americans’ eligibility for food stamps. There are few words to describe the Republicans in Congress, except that they are evil incarnate and the scourge of this country for sending millions of elderly, disabled, and children off the SNAP program to make room for more corporate entitlements in the form of subsidies to an industry that is awash in cash, making record profits, and getting free taxpayer money the American people would rather see go to feed the poor; something entirely alien to Republican monsters who are devoid of compassion, unusually severe, lacking a moral compass, and mutinous to the rules of right and virtuous conduct. In other words, they are the scum of the Earth.
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Reynardine
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 10:17 am
They are Hell-bent on destroying public transportation, and at the same time, they want to deprive the working poor of private transportation. When the latter lose their jobs and can’t look for others because they have no car, they’ll be struck from the rolls for noncompliance. This isn’t greed; it’s sadism. They’re doing it to “the little people” just to show they can.
GreenEyedLilo
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 5:08 pm
Exactly my thoughts, only phrased more articulately and with much less cursing. Thank you.
Merrily Snider
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 1:11 am
GreenEyedLilo
I know what you mean. I have a hard time not using all the 4-letter words that are running through my head and in turn, out my fingers as I type.
I agree with Reynardine too.
RcgTiger
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 11:32 pm
A little less cursing?
WTF?
He said “Hell” and nothing more………jeeeez, choose your battles! And BTW, welcome to the 21st century where maybe 7 out of 10 sentences uttered have a “curse”word…..and hell is mild!
Shiva (Moderator)
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 11:25 am
Pathetic.
The only good to this is that Asians have no become the #1 immigrants to America. Most are Chinese and Japanese. It will be interesting to see how Asia reacts to find out how their citizens are being treated.
Even more pathetic is how people will vote for their own downfall as many of the poor in the southern states belong to the GOP. As in owned
buckeyewill
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 11:41 am
WOW….Rmuse is strong.
John Hall
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 11:58 am
“You’re failing to provide for yourselves in our eyes, so we’re not going to help you.” That’s the Republican message to the people. Never occurs to them that their policies and obstruction might have a lot to do with that “failure”. Corporations are people, too, in Republican opinion. But to them it seems some people are more equal than others so, “here you go, oil industry and food industry, have a few million. Oh, and don’t forget to give your “support”, I’m running for office again”. Scum.
A Walkaway
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 12:00 pm
This will break the backs of the rural poor. They depend on old cars, and usually the wife works at Wal Mart (or similar) while the husband does what he can and keeps the car running (I read a report about how keeping an old car going was becoming a source of pride for a lot of the rural poor, because the other sources -decent jobs- had been taken from them by the rich).
If they hear about it and learn to trust more trustworthy news sources than Faux news, this is likely to turn a lot of rural people hostile to the Republicans.
Publicity… that is what is needed!!!
Elizabeth
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 10:02 pm
Absolutely agree!!! Already the rural poor have lost “welfare” because they can’t get to a job because lack of dependable transportation. Now we’re going to kick those who have “dependable” transportation down. I am so angry!
Middle Molly
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 11:27 am
Unfortunately, many of the Southern and rural poor who are among the long-term unemployed blame Obama and the Dems for their situation. There are several pages and forums on which the long-term unemployed discuss their situations, and the negativity towards Obama and the Democrats is very strong among many of those people.
Merrily Snider
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 1:17 am
Middle Molly
That’s because they are brainwashed by Faux neus.
I was listening to a round table discussion of experts regarding the disenfranchisement of a lot of poor and people of color – especially in rural areas. They said it would be a good idea to go and see them in person and shake their hand – that it makes quite a bit of difference when they see people willing to take the time to shake their hands.
robyn ryan
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 12:38 pm
It almost looks like a game of ‘how far can we debase them?’
Kevin Shinn
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 6:22 pm
Oh, I don’t know–without a car it’s harder to leave the base.
Sally
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 9:34 pm
Good point. If they can’t pass the stringent voter ID laws, they can sure keep those poor folks away from the polls altogether come November. What a despicable group of human beings resides in the GOP. Greedy, heartless and cruel.
Leo Soderman
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 1:32 pm
I can vouch for the stringency of the SNAP rules. When I suffered a heart attack in late December and had to go on disability, I also applied for SNAP. I was denied. The reason? I make too much on disability. Can’t work, medical bills that are astronomical, but can’t get assistance for food.
So in a way, this doesn’t affect me, as I am already denied. But it just shows where the priorities are. They truly believe that folks below the poverty line are actually cheating the system, and that they could work if they wanted too. Then they decry the level of unemployment. Not sure what color the sky is in their world, but it ain’t the same sky I live under.
Kevin Shinn
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 6:27 pm
One visit to a temporary labor agency to see the crucial difference having a vehicle makes in securing assignments should disabuse the fools; but of course, it wouldn’t.
Middle Molly
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 11:32 am
Leo, a couple of years ago, things were very tight for us. My husband was working, but his pay had been cut back, we had medical bills, and I couldn’t find a job though I’d looked solidly for close to two years. We’d run through all of our savings. I applied for food stamps, and I was also turned down. My husband made too much money, even though the money he made was not enough to pay our bills and we could not pay our mortgage at the time.
A Walkaway
Jul. 10th, 2012 at 1:33 am
Your story and those of the others are typical, and people who research and try to help fight poverty and homelessness are quite familiar with them. The people here are relating the TRUE stories of poverty in this nation… of people who have their chances taken from them before they even start, of people whose health is wrecked by situations outside their control, and by people who have been harmed by the greed of the rich and powerful. We all have felt the sting of stigma and suffered because of what others have done. Yet you constantly hear the propaganda of “They brought it on themselves and want to live off of the labor of others”, which is a demonstrated lie.
I’ve heard many stories such as these (and know the pain intimately – we’re poor too). Homeless shelters are full of those stories… at least until the brainwashing and programming kicks in and the people start blaming themselves (read Vincent Lyon-Callo about that). The reality is that the rich and powerful WANT people to be poor and powerless… so they can keep wages depressed and people fearful for their future. They WANT people to blame themselves, rather than see that it is the elites who are responsible.
The people who follow the “right” (Republicans/Tea Party) don’t realize how they’re being manipulated and lied to. They’ve been hearing this bullshit for so long that they believe it totally, and it takes personal loss or suffering for them to begin to see through the fog of lies and deception that comes from the “right”. I just hope that there are enough people in this country to keep these people from gaining any more power, otherwise we can kiss freedom goodbye.
crystalwolf
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 2:49 pm
I would love to See Boner and the rest of the R’s in congress…eat on $3.00 a day which is what poor families receive on “Food Stamps”! Heck that wouldn’t even cover ONE drink for Boner her would never survive…
Kevin
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 2:59 pm
Can you please provide a reference in the actual House draft bill that discusses the income eligibility changes that you described related to the “categorical eligibility” you say will force people to have to choose between their car and receiving benefits under SNAP?
Rmuse
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 8:09 pm
Here you go Kevin. www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cf...
Middle Molly
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 11:57 am
The wording in the cbpp release is:
“A working family with a modest vehicle that has a market value of $5,000 to $10,000 (regardless of how little equity the household may have in the vehicle) could lose all of its SNAP benefits under the Lucas-Peterson bill. Such families would need to choose between owning a car they may need to get to work and receiving help feeding their children.”
Now we don’t qualify for food stamps.. now. Still too many assets. But if our income does not go up within the next year (If we can’t find jobs; if mini-businesses do not expand), our income would be low enough to qualify for food stamps.. except that we have two cars, old beaters, one of which does not now work. But the market value of these old cars together is about $5,000 bucks.
Just looking at Kelly’s Blue Book: A ten year old car in fair condition will probably exceed this $5,000 market value test. You’d need to have a 12 year old car. That’s about when you get below $5,000.
Doris
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 6:08 pm
We must vote these scumbags out because when it comes to their riches & their friends riches they have a different view,for the rich to get richer & the poor to get poorer…Obama~Biden,SAVE OUR COUNTRY!
Middle Molly
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 12:01 pm
We can only vote the scumbags out if we live in a district or a state that has voted FOR one of these scumbags. These scumbags were voted IN by people of their districts and states.
How do we reach the people who support these scumbags? How do we make them NOT fear the poor? How do we make them NOT be jealous of the poor because they are “stealing money out of my pocket”?
I really don’t know the answer to those questions.
Goddessoflubbock
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 8:09 pm
I actually hope this is just fear mongering.
I hate the GOP and all they stand for but frankly people who live in rural areas have to drive their kds to school! All programs like band and sports that happen outside bus times would be dismantled.
It’s ridiculous.
Elizabeth
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 10:04 pm
Well, we’ve got to write our senators and make sure this doesn’t fly in the Senate.
Middle Molly
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 12:02 pm
Definitely, Elizabeth.
Reynardine
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 11:00 pm
I lived in Lubbock for 3 1/2 years, and you cannot get around the city itself, let alone anywhere in the High Plains or the Panhandle, without a car. Never mind food stamps- you wouldn’t even be able to get to a grocery store, let alone a hospital or clinic if you were hurt, or anyplace to escape the ferocious heat or bitter cold or the choking air of the dust season. It wouldn’t be a stretch to say that for people in that environment, forcing them to choose between food and transportation is genocidal.
GreenEyedLilo
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 5:14 pm
They don’t want poor kids to go to band practice or play football. They want poor kids to learn their versions of history and science with rote facts and lots of tests. They want poor kids to know their place, and get, to quote Mitt Romney, “as much education as they can afford.” They want to funnel kids and state education money into their damned charter schools to turn a profit. Nurturing a talent or learning something extra may lead to scholarships or upward mobility, and the Republicans can’t have that. It might cut into their pool of cheap, desperate labor.
Diane
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 8:49 pm
I just applied for SNAP and got my EBT card. I have a functional car, so I’m kind of pissed off that I got teased with a little hope…only to have those boneheads on the right side of the aisle snatch it away.
America, you better RAGE on November 5th.
Geek Hillbilly (@GeekHillbilly)
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 9:33 pm
Do you any more reasons to vote out every Republican/Teanderthal that is in any office?
The GOP have proven that they are clearly insane
Echelon
Jul. 7th, 2012 at 10:31 pm
The really sad thing about this is that the millions of republicans who receive food stamps to feed their children, probably will support and vote for the very republicans who will literally take that food out of the children’s mouths.
Richie
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 12:14 am
I do not understand how taking money away from those that need it (in the form of food stamps for food) and giving it to those who DO NOT CREATE JOBS benefits anyone apart from the few who are seeing a tax rate (after deductions) approaching 10% on their millions.
Romney is so full of shit I pity the fool that votes for him.
Our President, the 44th President, is another Truman.
Ann
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 8:04 am
The republicans are victims of their own lies. The ones that told these guys the lies are long since deceased, retired, or mute. Now this generation of republicans firmly believe the lies about poverty and demographics. These guys have assumed that they are hurting and helping Black Americans off the government teat. Unfortunate for the white republicans that believe the same they are being hurt by the very beliefs they hold.
There is evil at the bottom of all of this and that is sad, but until poor and working class republicans understand that their bigotry and spite towards “others” is causing them pain.
Eugene Conway
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 10:36 am
Ridiculous! Why, if it weren’t for a car, many would have nowhere to sleep!
Shirley
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 4:34 pm
I know a disabled person who only gets 15, yes fifteen, dollars a month in food stamps. How in the world can someone eat on 50 cents a day? The closest grocery store is 7 miles away and there is no public transportation. Nice going Republicans…soon you will have starved the poor and disabled! DISGUSTING!!
GreenEyedLilo
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 5:16 pm
Yes, but at least they won’t need Obamacare!
RabidMom
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 5:51 pm
Most Republicans and modern-day conservatives have an unrealistic view of the world. Publicly they invent new rhetoric to pretend they’re trying to create jobs or save the government money; behind the scenes they have conversations referring to those who earn less money than themselves as ‘cockroaches’, they treat the women and children of their families as property, they openly bash gays. Trying to take away the ability of the poor to eat is more than just playing politics; this is attempted murder. They want to starve to death all those they view as ‘cockroaches’ because of how far from a basic grasp of reality they (the GOP & 1% in general) have been removed. They want to commit a form of genocide and write it off as ‘deficit reduction’. It’s past time for an uprising, folks.
Reynardine
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 8:56 pm
Do you have a cockroach quote? We could sure stand to have it get around (I don’t doubt you, but we need a source)
Joyce
Jul. 8th, 2012 at 6:19 pm
Unbelievably sad.
RoughAcres
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 12:53 am
This is Dickensian. How DARE that orphan ask for more gruel???
RabidMom
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 1:07 am
The first link shows the direct quote; the other 2 contain some background information on what the Bilderberg Group is. truthquake.com/2012/06/04... secure.gn.apc.org/members... ukipcornwallnews.blogspot...
Reynardine
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 3:15 pm
Although I appreciate your link, and don’t doubt we “little people” get compared to some highly unflattering life forms, anything with Illuminati in it ranks right next to lizard Merovingians for credibility. As my great-grandmother came from greater Limburgh, I surely have Frankish, maybe even Merovingian, ancestry, and I assure you I’m not a lizard (Pass the candied flies, please.)
Bill Jennings
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 8:48 am
It has always been the rule since Reagan that a car was considered income when applying for Food Stamps and now they just want to exclude you altogether. I believe that ANYONE who supports the GOP/TEA by voting for them, whatever the justification, will not fair well on judgement day. But from the looks of the way they vote and things they support they do not believe in GOD anyway!
Larry Cravetz
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 9:27 am
It IS difficult to not start foaming with obscenities when the Wealthiest 1% continue their onslaught on those who do not have the power or the resources to fight back. Perhaps what is the most odious of all is heir sanctimonious attitudes! If these supposed Christians, believe what their Bible says, they would be helping the poor and disenfranchised in any way they could, not punish them for being unable to find work (giving them a hand up, not a hand out!), and trying to conceal their identities through political subterfuge! If the Republicans really wanted to help get America back to work, they would concentrate at least some of their efforts on doing so, not criminalizing abortion, and marijuana use, and free-speech!
And, while I am on my soap-box, It would be nice if the Congress could pass some immigration reform. There are few in this great country who can trace their ancestry back more than 300 years or so to this land! At some point, the OVERWHELMING MAJORITY of us came in from someplace else! So if we want to continue being the land of opportunity and growth we need to allow for some mechanism for LEGAL immigration, not make major impediments to the process!
mike halligan
Jul. 9th, 2012 at 6:17 pm
This bill is disgusting and shameful and i have to agree with all those who respond to this atrocity. I fear that writing about our disgust is insufficient, but, for the life of me, don’t know how to turn it around. i seriously doubt we hear of this on national news and i don’t know how to stop it. When i’ve written my senator or state representative about my opinion, i’m told it didn’t matter what i thought, the representative was supporting how he felt about the issue, not me. I think this country is fucked. i see no way out.
radiomankc
Jul. 10th, 2012 at 8:27 am
Very badly written link…I’m surprised. Took forever to get to the point. But in my boredom, and of people I know whose kids eat reduced priced lunches, they need to figure out a way to leave the cars alone and go after smoking parents, whose $5-8 a day habit would pay for their children’s lunches.
We’ve made a big mistake, overtaxing cigarettes. It hits the poor…and they lack the judgment and discipline to stop smoking. If anything, taxes gained on cigarettes should be used to reduce anti-smoking medications to help people quit. Make the patch and other methods way cheaper than smoking!
Cars? Well that’s another dumb rule put on the poor by the Republicans. What asses they are! In most of America, we need cars to get to work…even to low paying jobs. It’s hard enough to get the clothes, the car, the gas and the insurance to drive to a fast food joint or other minwage job to work for food, energy and rent at $8 an hour. For them, it takes working a half hour for a gallon of MILK!
How heartless of them to support jacking with the poor while shilling to give millionaires tax breaks! And feel-good CHRISTIANS support this? What would JESUS say?
A Walkaway
Jul. 10th, 2012 at 10:02 am
Lacks judgement or discipline??? That’s as bigoted as anything I’ve ever read.
It’s about as bad as blaming drug or alcohol addiction for homelessness. Yet there are as many rich people as poor who use drugs or drink, and they’re not homeless. Drug addiction or alcoholism is really pretty low in the “numbers” as far as causing people to be homeless – the #1 cause is job loss or reduction of income (cut in pay/cut in hours/cut in benefits). It’s the same thing. Poor people are just as capable as anyone else – maybe more so because try surviving with the rabid hate and hostility that is directed at them/us and the sort of rules and limitations that they/we experience (my wife and I are poor too and are quite familiar with both attitudes and attempts to micromanage our lives – to our harm).
Now, admittedly addiction is a factor – unless you’ve experienced it, you just cannot comprehend the power addiction can have over a person’s life. It takes exceptional will power to resist taking the drug you’re addicted to, and most people don’t have that level of strength. That’s why when people smoke and their situation gets tough… they still buy cigarettes (you’ll almost never hear of someone addicted to a pipe or cigars – another little known reality). You know the saying about walking a mile in someone else’s moccasins? Unless you’ve been there, you shouldn’t rush to judgment. It’s nowhere as easy as people think.