The FACTS on Food Stamps

Inspired by Pete's asinine rant on the poor, here is the no-spin facts on SNAP (food stamps). Maybe now you will stop listening to the bullshit propaganda that comes from the Republican party. I put what I consider to be the most important facts in bold, but I do encourage you to read all of it.

SNAP is targeted at the most vulnerable.

76% of SNAP households included a child, an elderly person, or a disabled person. These vulnerable households receive 83% of all SNAP benefits.

SNAP eligibility is limited to households with gross income of no more than 130% of the federal poverty guideline, but the majority of households have income well below the maximum: 83% of SNAP households have gross income at or below 100% of the poverty guideline ($19,530 for a family of 3 in 2013), and these households receive about 91% of all benefits. 61% of SNAP households have gross income at or below 75% of the poverty guideline ($14,648 for a family of 3 in 2013).[ii]

The average SNAP household has a gross monthly income of $744; net monthly income of $338 after the standard deduction and, for certain households, deductions for child care, medical expenses, and shelter costs; and countable resources of $331, such as a bank account.[iii]


SNAP is responsive to changes in need, providing needed food assistance as families fall into economic hardship and then transitioning away as their financial situation stabilizes.

SNAP participation historically follows unemployment with a slight lag. SNAP participation grew during the recession, responding quickly and effectively to increased need. As the number of unemployed people increased by 94% from 2007 to 2011, SNAP responded with a 70% increase in participation over the same period. [iv]

As the economy recovers and people go back to work, SNAP participation and program costs, too, can be expected to decline. Unemployment has begun to slowly fall, and SNAP participation growth has flattened out. The Congressional Budget Office projects SNAP participation to begin declining in 2015, with both unemployment and SNAP participation returning to near pre-recession levels by 2022.[v]

SNAP has a strong record of program integrity.

SNAP error rates declined by 57% since FY2000, from 8.91% in FY2000 to a record low of 3.80% in FY2011.[vi] The accuracy rate of 96.2% (FY2011) is an all-time program high and is considerably higher than other major benefit programs, for example Medicare fee-for-service (91.5%) or Medicare Advantage Part C (88.6%). [vii]

Two-thirds of all SNAP payment errors are a result of caseworker error. Nearly one-fifth are underpayments, which occur when eligible participants receive less in benefits than they are eligible to receive.[viii]

The national rate of food stamp trafficking declined from about 3.8 cents per dollar of benefits redeemed in 1993 to about 1.0 cent per dollar during the years 2006 to 2008.[ix] As you may have read in local news, USDA is aggressively fighting trafficking, but while there are individual cases of program abuse, for every one instance of fraud, there are hundreds of stories of heartbreaking need.

The need for food assistance is already greater than SNAP can fill.

SNAP benefits don’t last most participants the whole month. 90% of SNAP benefits are redeemed by the third week of the month, and 58% of food bank clients currently receiving SNAP benefits turn to food banks for assistance at least 6 months out of the year.[x]

The average monthly SNAP benefit per person is $133.85, or less than $1.50 per person, per meal. [xi]

Only 55% of food insecure individuals are income-eligible for SNAP, and 29% are not income-eligible for any federal food assistance.[xii]



Categorical Eligibility

Categorical eligibility allows many people to automatically enroll in SNAP who wouldn’t otherwise qualify for the program.

Categorical eligibility does not allow households to enroll automatically; they must still apply through the regular SNAP application process, which has rigorous procedures for documenting applicants’ income, citizenship, work status, and other circumstances.

Categorical eligibility allows states the option of aligning SNAP eligibility rules for gross income and asset limits with TANF to reduce administrative costs and simplify the eligibility determination process. While three-fourths of SNAP households were categorically eligible, almost all would also have been eligible for SNAP under standard rules.[xiii]

While a small number of households would not have met gross income and asset eligibility rules without categorical eligibility, SNAP families are still among the poorest households:

The average SNAP household has a gross monthly income of $744 and net monthly income of $338.[xiv]
SNAP rules limit eligibility to households with gross income under 130% of poverty and net income at or below 100% of poverty. While categorical eligibility allows states to set a higher gross income limit, only 1.5% of SNAP households in 2010 had monthly net income above 150% of the poverty line, so the policy has not made SNAP available to large numbers of households with incomes above the federal gross income limit of 130% of poverty.[xv]
SNAP rules limit eligibility to households with assets of no more than $2000 ($3250 for households with a senior or disabled member). The average SNAP household still has assets of only $331.[xvi] Additionally, the SNAP asset limit of $2,000 has not been adjusted for inflation in 25 years and has fallen by 48% in real terms since 1986.[xvii]

Categorical eligibility has dramatically increased program participation.

The dramatic increase in SNAP participation and costs is a result of the recession, not categorical eligibility. Our nation has seen the highest unemployment rates in nearly 30 years.

The dramatic increase in SNAP participation and costs is a result of the recession, not categorical eligibility. Our nation has seen the highest unemployment rates in nearly 30 years.
SNAP participation historically follows unemployment with a slight lag. SNAP participation grew during the recession, responding quickly and effectively to increased need. As the number of unemployed people increased by 94% from 2007 to 2011, SNAP responded with a 70% increase in participation over the same period. [xviii]

As the economy recovers and people go back to work, SNAP participation and program costs, too, can be expected to decline. Unemployment has begun to slowly fall, and SNAP participation growth has flattened out. The Congressional Budget Office projects SNAP participation to begin declining in 2015, with both unemployment and SNAP participation returning to near pre-recession levels by 2022.[xix]

Eliminating categorical eligibility would significantly reduce costs.

Eliminating categorical eligibility would achieve savings by causing about 2-3 million low-income people currently enrolled in SNAP to lose their benefits.[xx] Many more families newly applying for assistance would have their benefit issuance delayed because of the increased complexity of applying and additional processing time required. This human cost is too high a price to pay with so many families struggling to get by in this economy.

In addition to the loss of needed food assistance for struggling families, this savings would come at the expense of increased administrative costs. Eliminating the streamlined application process that categorical eligibility allows would require states to allocate staff time to duplicate enrollment procedures and incur the cost of modifying their computer systems, reprinting applications and manuals, and retraining staff.


Program Growth

Generous eligibility rules and program fraud and abuse have caused participation in SNAP to balloon, sharply driving up the cost of the program when the nation can least afford it.


The dramatic increase in SNAP participation and costs is a result of the recession, not categorical eligibility. Our nation has seen the highest unemployment rates in nearly 30 years.

SNAP participation historically follows unemployment with a slight lag. SNAP participation grew during the recession, responding quickly and effectively to increased need. As the number of unemployed people increased by 94% from 2007 to 2011, SNAP responded with a 70% increase in participation over the same period. [xxi]

As the economy recovers and people go back to work, SNAP participation and program costs, too, can be expected to decline. Unemployment has begun to slowly fall, and SNAP participation growth has flattened out. The Congressional Budget Office projects SNAP participation to begin declining in 2015, with both unemployment and SNAP participation returning to near pre-recession levels by 2022.[xxii]

SNAP (Food Stamps): Facts, Myths and Realities

(Their sources are straight from government data)

The only bullshit being spread is from people like you that think one person owes another person anything. You can post whatever percentages you want. Until you bleeding hearts reach into your own pockets and fund what you think should be funded with your own money, STFU about what someone else should fund. If anyone you know or know of needs anything, write a check.
Hmm what is your opinion about all those hypocritical tea baggers on Medicare?

In case you didn't know, those using Medicare were forced to contribute to it. I am forced to contribute to Social Security. When I reach the age where I get it, although I support the ability to opt out, I will take whatever comes my way. That doesn't make me a hypocrite because I was required to be a part of it. On top of that, I'll take it whether I need it or not even if it means someone else who needs it more gets less.

You leach!!
 
lol, OP. you are clueless. Why are there so many on foodstamps? More than ever? Obama.

Yea, Obama is responsible for the financial collapse that happened in 2008. Even though he wasn't inaugurated until 2009. Talk about clueless...
 
Inspired by Pete's asinine rant on the poor, here is the no-spin facts on SNAP (food stamps). Maybe now you will stop listening to the bullshit propaganda that comes from the Republican party. I put what I consider to be the most important facts in bold, but I do encourage you to read all of it.

SNAP is targeted at the most vulnerable.

76% of SNAP households included a child, an elderly person, or a disabled person. These vulnerable households receive 83% of all SNAP benefits.

SNAP eligibility is limited to households with gross income of no more than 130% of the federal poverty guideline, but the majority of households have income well below the maximum: 83% of SNAP households have gross income at or below 100% of the poverty guideline ($19,530 for a family of 3 in 2013), and these households receive about 91% of all benefits. 61% of SNAP households have gross income at or below 75% of the poverty guideline ($14,648 for a family of 3 in 2013).[ii]

The average SNAP household has a gross monthly income of $744; net monthly income of $338 after the standard deduction and, for certain households, deductions for child care, medical expenses, and shelter costs; and countable resources of $331, such as a bank account.[iii]


SNAP is responsive to changes in need, providing needed food assistance as families fall into economic hardship and then transitioning away as their financial situation stabilizes.

SNAP participation historically follows unemployment with a slight lag. SNAP participation grew during the recession, responding quickly and effectively to increased need. As the number of unemployed people increased by 94% from 2007 to 2011, SNAP responded with a 70% increase in participation over the same period. [iv]

As the economy recovers and people go back to work, SNAP participation and program costs, too, can be expected to decline. Unemployment has begun to slowly fall, and SNAP participation growth has flattened out. The Congressional Budget Office projects SNAP participation to begin declining in 2015, with both unemployment and SNAP participation returning to near pre-recession levels by 2022.[v]

SNAP has a strong record of program integrity.

SNAP error rates declined by 57% since FY2000, from 8.91% in FY2000 to a record low of 3.80% in FY2011.[vi] The accuracy rate of 96.2% (FY2011) is an all-time program high and is considerably higher than other major benefit programs, for example Medicare fee-for-service (91.5%) or Medicare Advantage Part C (88.6%). [vii]

Two-thirds of all SNAP payment errors are a result of caseworker error. Nearly one-fifth are underpayments, which occur when eligible participants receive less in benefits than they are eligible to receive.[viii]

The national rate of food stamp trafficking declined from about 3.8 cents per dollar of benefits redeemed in 1993 to about 1.0 cent per dollar during the years 2006 to 2008.[ix] As you may have read in local news, USDA is aggressively fighting trafficking, but while there are individual cases of program abuse, for every one instance of fraud, there are hundreds of stories of heartbreaking need.

The need for food assistance is already greater than SNAP can fill.

SNAP benefits don’t last most participants the whole month. 90% of SNAP benefits are redeemed by the third week of the month, and 58% of food bank clients currently receiving SNAP benefits turn to food banks for assistance at least 6 months out of the year.[x]

The average monthly SNAP benefit per person is $133.85, or less than $1.50 per person, per meal. [xi]

Only 55% of food insecure individuals are income-eligible for SNAP, and 29% are not income-eligible for any federal food assistance.[xii]



Categorical Eligibility

Categorical eligibility allows many people to automatically enroll in SNAP who wouldn’t otherwise qualify for the program.

Categorical eligibility does not allow households to enroll automatically; they must still apply through the regular SNAP application process, which has rigorous procedures for documenting applicants’ income, citizenship, work status, and other circumstances.

Categorical eligibility allows states the option of aligning SNAP eligibility rules for gross income and asset limits with TANF to reduce administrative costs and simplify the eligibility determination process. While three-fourths of SNAP households were categorically eligible, almost all would also have been eligible for SNAP under standard rules.[xiii]

While a small number of households would not have met gross income and asset eligibility rules without categorical eligibility, SNAP families are still among the poorest households:

The average SNAP household has a gross monthly income of $744 and net monthly income of $338.[xiv]
SNAP rules limit eligibility to households with gross income under 130% of poverty and net income at or below 100% of poverty. While categorical eligibility allows states to set a higher gross income limit, only 1.5% of SNAP households in 2010 had monthly net income above 150% of the poverty line, so the policy has not made SNAP available to large numbers of households with incomes above the federal gross income limit of 130% of poverty.[xv]
SNAP rules limit eligibility to households with assets of no more than $2000 ($3250 for households with a senior or disabled member). The average SNAP household still has assets of only $331.[xvi] Additionally, the SNAP asset limit of $2,000 has not been adjusted for inflation in 25 years and has fallen by 48% in real terms since 1986.[xvii]

Categorical eligibility has dramatically increased program participation.

The dramatic increase in SNAP participation and costs is a result of the recession, not categorical eligibility. Our nation has seen the highest unemployment rates in nearly 30 years.

The dramatic increase in SNAP participation and costs is a result of the recession, not categorical eligibility. Our nation has seen the highest unemployment rates in nearly 30 years.
SNAP participation historically follows unemployment with a slight lag. SNAP participation grew during the recession, responding quickly and effectively to increased need. As the number of unemployed people increased by 94% from 2007 to 2011, SNAP responded with a 70% increase in participation over the same period. [xviii]

As the economy recovers and people go back to work, SNAP participation and program costs, too, can be expected to decline. Unemployment has begun to slowly fall, and SNAP participation growth has flattened out. The Congressional Budget Office projects SNAP participation to begin declining in 2015, with both unemployment and SNAP participation returning to near pre-recession levels by 2022.[xix]

Eliminating categorical eligibility would significantly reduce costs.

Eliminating categorical eligibility would achieve savings by causing about 2-3 million low-income people currently enrolled in SNAP to lose their benefits.[xx] Many more families newly applying for assistance would have their benefit issuance delayed because of the increased complexity of applying and additional processing time required. This human cost is too high a price to pay with so many families struggling to get by in this economy.

In addition to the loss of needed food assistance for struggling families, this savings would come at the expense of increased administrative costs. Eliminating the streamlined application process that categorical eligibility allows would require states to allocate staff time to duplicate enrollment procedures and incur the cost of modifying their computer systems, reprinting applications and manuals, and retraining staff.


Program Growth

Generous eligibility rules and program fraud and abuse have caused participation in SNAP to balloon, sharply driving up the cost of the program when the nation can least afford it.


The dramatic increase in SNAP participation and costs is a result of the recession, not categorical eligibility. Our nation has seen the highest unemployment rates in nearly 30 years.

SNAP participation historically follows unemployment with a slight lag. SNAP participation grew during the recession, responding quickly and effectively to increased need. As the number of unemployed people increased by 94% from 2007 to 2011, SNAP responded with a 70% increase in participation over the same period. [xxi]

As the economy recovers and people go back to work, SNAP participation and program costs, too, can be expected to decline. Unemployment has begun to slowly fall, and SNAP participation growth has flattened out. The Congressional Budget Office projects SNAP participation to begin declining in 2015, with both unemployment and SNAP participation returning to near pre-recession levels by 2022.[xxii]

SNAP (Food Stamps): Facts, Myths and Realities

(Their sources are straight from government data)

The only bullshit being spread is from people like you that think one person owes another person anything. You can post whatever percentages you want. Until you bleeding hearts reach into your own pockets and fund what you think should be funded with your own money, STFU about what someone else should fund. If anyone you know or know of needs anything, write a check.
Hmm what is your opinion about all those hypocritical tea baggers on Medicare?

In case you didn't know, those using Medicare were forced to contribute to it. I am forced to contribute to Social Security. When I reach the age where I get it, although I support the ability to opt out, I will take whatever comes my way. That doesn't make me a hypocrite because I was required to be a part of it. On top of that, I'll take it whether I need it or not even if it means someone else who needs it more gets less.

You leach!!

Receiving something that I was forced to pay into keeps me from being a leech.
 
Weird, lowest SUSTAINED tax burden in 80+ years, almost half the effective rates 1950's and 1960's on the top 1/10th of 1% when there WERE jobs, jobs, job?

PLEASE explain what the lowest EFFECTIVE tax rate in generations stops the 'job creators'?

You fail to take into account all the regulations on business and requirements that costs them outside of taxes. It adds up but I suspect you can't add that high.



Misrepresentations, Regulations and Jobs
By Bruce Bartlett

Bruce Bartlett held senior policy roles in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations and served on the staffs of Representatives Jack Kemp and Ron Paul.

Republicans favor tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, but these had no stimulative effect during the George W. Bush administration and there is no reason to believe that more of them will have any today. And the Republicans’ oft-stated concern for the deficit makes tax cuts a hard sell.


These constraints have led Republicans to embrace the idea that government regulation is the principal factor holding back employment. They assert that Barack Obama has unleashed a tidal wave of new regulations, which has created uncertainty among businesses and prevents them from investing and hiring.

No hard evidence is offered for this claim; it is simply asserted as self-evident and repeated endlessly throughout the conservative echo chamber.


. As one can see, the number of layoffs nationwide caused by government regulation is minuscule and shows no evidence of getting worse during the Obama administration. Lack of demand for business products and services is vastly more important.


These results are supported by surveys. During June and July, Small Business Majority asked 1,257 small-business owners to name the two biggest problems they face. Only 13 percent listed government regulation as one of them. Almost half said their biggest problem was uncertainty about the future course of the economy — another way of saying a lack of customers and sales.

The Wall Street Journal’s July survey of business economists found, “The main reason U.S. companies are reluctant to step up hiring is scant demand, rather than uncertainty over government policies, according to a majority of economists.”

In August, McClatchy Newspapers canvassed small businesses, asking them if regulation was a big problem. It could find no evidence that this was the case.

“None of the business owners complained about regulation in their particular industries, and most seemed to welcome it,” McClatchy reported. “Some pointed to the lack of regulation in mortgage lending as a principal cause of the financial crisis that brought about the Great Recession of 2007-9 and its grim aftermath.”

The latest monthly survey of its members by the National Federation of Independent Business shows that poor sales are far and away their biggest problem. While concerns about regulation have risen during the Obama administration, they are about the same now as they were during Ronald Reagan’s administration, according to an analysis of the federation’s data by the Economic Policy Institute.

20111004_UNCERTAIN_graphic-blog480.jpg




Academic research has also failed to find evidence that regulation is a significant factor in unemployment. In a blog post on Sept. 5, Jay Livingston, a sociologist at Montclair State University, hypothesized that if regulation were a major problem it would show up in the unemployment rates of industries where regulation has been increasing: the financial sector, medical care and mining/fuel extraction. He found that unemployment rates in these sectors were actually well below the national average. Unemployment is much higher in those industries that one would expect to suffer most from a lack of aggregate demand: construction, leisure and hospitality, business services, wholesale and retail trade, and durable goods.

Gary Burtless, an economist at the Brookings Institution, asserts that if businesses were really concerned about rising regulations, they would be investing now to avoid them. But there is no indication that this is the case. “The real reason for anemic investment and hiring is that businesses are not confident there will be enough potential customers to justify expansion or even routine capital replacement right now,” he says.


In my opinion, regulatory uncertainty is a canard invented by Republicans that allows them to use current economic problems to pursue an agenda supported by the business community year in and year out. In other words, it is a simple case of political opportunism, not a serious effort to deal with high unemployment.
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/04/regulation-and-unemployment/?_r=0

As usual, your opinions don't mean shit.

MY opinions? lol

Gawwwdddam low info wingnutters sucking off the Koch's/Plutocrats. You Klowns NEVER learn and are NEVER honest. Shocking

That's right. You don't have an opinion. You are told what to believe by your monkey handlers boy the biggest monkey being your half runaway baby daddy half white trash President.

LOL. You tell 'em.
 
What are we up to now 48% of Amerika is on food stamps now? Do you see something wrong here?

47 million people are on food stamps. I don't know where this 48% is coming from.

Thanks, I got my terms confused. Still, that is a shocking number don't you think?


Yes, it's shocking that with so much wealth in our country, so many people go hungry.

It's sickening actually. How do we call ourselves a "christian" nation.

We are a sick joke.
 
Let's put it another way. 1 out of 6 people face hunger. America is not as wealthy as people would like to believe.
How could they be facing hunger we keep giving them money, what are they doing with it?
Clearly you don't understand my thread. No one on food stamps can support themselves on it. Without the benefits they would starve.
 
Let's put it another way. 1 out of 6 people face hunger. America is not as wealthy as people would like to believe.


cable tv, internet, obesity , central air, weed and booze ues are all sure signs of poverty
When I moved to the hill country, do you know how much I had to spend to get the yard full of junk cars, trucks and building debris, hell i wish i could have afforded a few rusting farming implements to hook up to a dead tractor...
 
What are we up to now 48% of Amerika is on food stamps now? Do you see something wrong here?

47 million people are on food stamps. I don't know where this 48% is coming from.

Thanks, I got my terms confused. Still, that is a shocking number don't you think?


Yes, it's shocking that with so much wealth in our country, so many people go hungry.

It's sickening actually. How do we call ourselves a "christian" nation.

We are a sick joke.
You speak only for yourself, and yes you are a sick joke.
 
Let's put it another way. 1 out of 6 people face hunger. America is not as wealthy as people would like to believe.


cable tv, internet, obesity , central air, weed and booze ues are all sure signs of poverty
When I moved to the hill country, do you know how much I had to spend to get the yard full of junk cars, trucks and building debris, hell i wish i could have afforded a few rusting farming implements to hook up to a dead tractor...
Some people take a pile of junk and turn it into gold. Other people stare at it and whine that no one will give them a free ride.
 
SNAP costs 3 times more on the retail level than we could provide more nutritional food to families though communities. Grocery lobby wrote and writes the food stamp program as it is at retail level and nothing in it ensures kids get fed a nutritious and healthy diet much less gets fed at all. SNAP is another in a long line of feel good fraud and waste of taxpayers dollars. We have real people in need in this country. What do we do? Do you go out in your communities and help those in need? Do you assist them in teaching them how to balance a budget, how to plan meals, how to shop for nutritious food, how to help kids with homework, how to find transportation and the dozens of other things our neighbors in need would need to learn? No, what you do is give them the middle finger and say 'FUCK YOU, I DO NOT HAVE TIME FOR YOU. GO WAIT IN LINE AT THE GOVERNMENT OFFICE AND SIGN UP FOR ALL YOUR FREE STUFF".Yes, the liberal is an arrogant and lazy bastard as it is easy to do so using other people's money.
 
SNAP costs 3 times more on the retail level than we could provide more nutritional food to families though communities. Grocery lobby wrote and writes the food stamp program as it is at retail level and nothing in it ensures kids get fed a nutritious and healthy diet much less gets fed at all. SNAP is another in a long line of feel good fraud and waste of taxpayers dollars. We have real people in need in this country. What do we do? Do you go out in your communities and help those in need? Do you assist them in teaching them how to balance a budget, how to plan meals, how to shop for nutritious food, how to help kids with homework, how to find transportation and the dozens of other things our neighbors in need would need to learn? No, what you do is give them the middle finger and say 'FUCK YOU, I DO NOT HAVE TIME FOR YOU. GO WAIT IN LINE AT THE GOVERNMENT OFFICE AND SIGN UP FOR ALL YOUR FREE STUFF".Yes, the liberal is an arrogant and lazy bastard as it is easy to do so using other people's money.
Lol yes a typical post from the rightwing: all fluff and no actual facts.
 
SNAP costs 3 times more on the retail level than we could provide more nutritional food to families though communities. Grocery lobby wrote and writes the food stamp program as it is at retail level and nothing in it ensures kids get fed a nutritious and healthy diet much less gets fed at all. SNAP is another in a long line of feel good fraud and waste of taxpayers dollars. We have real people in need in this country. What do we do? Do you go out in your communities and help those in need? Do you assist them in teaching them how to balance a budget, how to plan meals, how to shop for nutritious food, how to help kids with homework, how to find transportation and the dozens of other things our neighbors in need would need to learn? No, what you do is give them the middle finger and say 'FUCK YOU, I DO NOT HAVE TIME FOR YOU. GO WAIT IN LINE AT THE GOVERNMENT OFFICE AND SIGN UP FOR ALL YOUR FREE STUFF".Yes, the liberal is an arrogant and lazy bastard as it is easy to do so using other people's money.

If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.
President John F. Kennedy

How to End Child Poverty for 60 Percent of Poor Children and 72 Percent of All Poor Black Children Today Marian Wright Edelman
 
SNAP costs 3 times more on the retail level than we could provide more nutritional food to families though communities. Grocery lobby wrote and writes the food stamp program as it is at retail level and nothing in it ensures kids get fed a nutritious and healthy diet much less gets fed at all. SNAP is another in a long line of feel good fraud and waste of taxpayers dollars. We have real people in need in this country. What do we do? Do you go out in your communities and help those in need? Do you assist them in teaching them how to balance a budget, how to plan meals, how to shop for nutritious food, how to help kids with homework, how to find transportation and the dozens of other things our neighbors in need would need to learn? No, what you do is give them the middle finger and say 'FUCK YOU, I DO NOT HAVE TIME FOR YOU. GO WAIT IN LINE AT THE GOVERNMENT OFFICE AND SIGN UP FOR ALL YOUR FREE STUFF".Yes, the liberal is an arrogant and lazy bastard as it is easy to do so using other people's money.

If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.
President John F. Kennedy

How to End Child Poverty for 60 Percent of Poor Children and 72 Percent of All Poor Black Children Today Marian Wright Edelman
If you morons on the left have all the answers...why are your people still poor?
 
If you morons on the left have all the answers...why are your people still poor?



YOUR PEOPLE?? What the fuck are you talking about????

Just read an article about the three reliably Republican states that have the highest levels of poverty and take the greatest amount of Federal funds.

Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana. So rkm, why are "your people" in those three states the poorest mother fuckers in the nation? And they reliably vote Republican. Rutro. I answered my own question.
 

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