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osoab
2nd June 2011, 05:33 PM
This will get the proles squirming.

Congress Mulls Cuts to Food Stamps Program Amid Record Number of Recipients (http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2011/05/congress-mulls-cuts-to-food-stamps-program-amid-record-number-of-recipients.html)


ABC News' Huma Khan reports: Congress is under pressure to cut the rapidly rising costs of the federal government’s food stamps program at a time when a record number of Americans are relying on it.

The House Appropriations Committee today will review the fiscal year 2012 appropriations bill for the Department of Agriculture that includes $71 billion for the agency’s “Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.” That’s $2 billion less than what President Obama requested but a 9 percent increase from 2011, which, critics say, is too large given the sizeable budget deficit.

A record number of Americans -- about 14 percent -- now rely on the federal government’s food stamps program and its rapid expansion in recent years has become a politically explosive topic.

More than 44.5 million Americans received SNAP benefits in March, an 11 percent increase from one year ago and nearly 61 percent higher than the same time four years ago.

Nearly 21 million households are reliant on food stamps.

Opponents of the program argue that money from the food stamps budget -- with what they call its increasingly lax requirements -- needs to be shifted to other programs such as education and child nutrition. The program’s supporters argue that at a time of economic decline, such welfare programs are even more important to try to keep Americans from spiraling into poverty.

The cost of the food stamps program has increased rapidly since it was established by Congress in 1964.

It cost taxpayers more than $68 billion last year, double the amount in 2007.

Nutrition assistance now accounts for more than half -- or about 67 percent -- of the USDA’s budget, compared with 26 percent in 1980. That shift in focus, critics say, is ineffective because it hasn’t put a dent in poverty or hunger in the United States while taking away money from other programs, specifically agricultural programs that should be the main focus of the agency.

Even “at a time of prosperity, we have increased the amount of money we are spending for people to buy food,” said Harold Brown, an agriculture scientist and adjunct scholar at the Georgia Public Policy Foundation. “The appropriation of money by Congress has never solved poverty or the resulting problems of poverty. When President Johnson declared war on poverty a half century ago nearly, we thought we saw the end of it as far as food and nutrition goes. For the Department of Agriculture, we only saw the beginning.”

The Republicans’ 2012 budget plan proposes changing SNAP from an entitlement to a block-grant program that would be tailored for each individual state, much like their proposal for Medicaid. States would no longer receive open-ended subsidies and the aid would be contingent on work or job training. It would also limit funding for the program.

The president’s 2012 budget, however, goes in a completely opposite direction. It aims to make requirements less stringent by temporarily suspending for one year the time limit for certain age groups without dependents. The president also suggested restoring benefit cuts that were included in the Child Nutrition Reauthorization bill last year.


UPDATE: Democrats are aggressively pushing back at the cuts that they argue constitute an attack on the poor.

"It is absolutely necessary to take a long hard look at government spending to avoid wasting any taxpayers’ dollars, but time and time again, Republicans wrongfully make their cuts on the backs of poor and working class Americans," Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., a senior member of the House Education and the Workforce Committee, said in a statement this afternoon.

ABC News John Parkinson and Brian Hartman contributed to this report.

mick silver
2nd June 2011, 05:37 PM
before lone someone will have to stay home at all the time to guard what you have and to keep your place safe . time is about to run out leave the citys

Book
2nd June 2011, 05:53 PM
How Our Largest Corporations Made $170 Billion During Great Recession And Paid No Taxes

http://blogs.forbes.com/rickungar/2011/06/01/how-our-largest-corporations-made-170-billion-during-great-recession-and-paid-no-taxes/

osoab
2nd June 2011, 05:57 PM
How Our Largest Corporations Made $170 Billion During Great Recession And Paid No Taxes

http://blogs.forbes.com/rickungar/2011/06/01/how-our-largest-corporations-made-170-billion-during-great-recession-and-paid-no-taxes/


I see it didn't make the front page of Forbes. :oo-->

I did find this gem of a piece under the "Leadership" category.
How Infidelity Saved A Marriage (http://blogs.forbes.com/jennagoudreau/2011/06/02/infidelity-saved-marriage-cheating-affair-adultery/)

gunDriller
2nd June 2011, 07:19 PM
i like the idea of paying for food stamps in 4 ways -

* levy a tax on financial services firms such as Goldman Sachs.
* save $2 or $3 Billion a year by eliminating bribe payments to Israel.
* recognize the ADL & SPLC as political organizations and remove their tax exempt status.
* revoke the tax exempt status of all Jewish temples & synagogues that support Israel.

that should go a long way towards paying for the WIC program.

osoab
2nd June 2011, 07:24 PM
i like the idea of paying for food stamps in 4 ways -

* levy a tax on financial services firms such as Goldman Sachs.
* save $2 or $3 Billion a year by eliminating bribe payments to Israel.
* recognize the ADL & SPLC as political organizations and remove their tax exempt status.
* revoke the tax exempt status of all Jewish temples & synagogues that support Israel.

that should go a long way towards paying for the WIC program.


I think you are picking on izzy just for picking (not saying that all picking isn't good picking). All of those things listed could be expanded to a much broader spectrum of the economy/policy and have a much more dramatic effect.

Ponce
2nd June 2011, 07:33 PM
Gun? and don't forget the Oi Vey food tax stamps that comes out to be around 22 bills a year.....

ShortJohnSilver
2nd June 2011, 09:47 PM
OK I am not for govt assistance, in general. However, how is it that $1 Trillion+ in assistance can go to banks and Wall Street and that is OK, but $71 B is horrible and bad? How much will the illegal war in Libya cost us?

silver solution
2nd June 2011, 11:10 PM
Starve people feed banks. The American way is returning.

When do we get to start shooting people that are begging for food like the last depression?

mightymanx
3rd June 2011, 01:10 AM
We could tax the kosher food industry to pay for it.

jimswift
3rd June 2011, 01:20 PM
from that article Book posted:

...What I don’t know is whether or not the preponderance of American corporations are getting away with the same kind of tax avoidance that these twelve companies are managing to pull off...


Thought that was the goal, to try and NOT pay as much in taxes as you can? Isn't that what tax write-offs are about?

Also, wouldn't it be prudent to have a corporate fiction of your own to control, considering we live in a corporatocracy and all?

Ash_Williams
3rd June 2011, 01:47 PM
Food would be cheaper if the country grew more food.

But that's no good. Food has to become more expensive. Pay farmers not to grow stuff.