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Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (81885)10/15/2010 5:08:33 AM
From: Sully-1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
America's Food Stamp Culture

By David Paulin
American Thinker

Many Americans can remember a time when a Coca-Cola was a treat: You had one now and then. But most middle-class Americans didn't drink Coca-Cola and similar carbonated drinks all the time, as if they were water. For one thing, it was too expensive to do that for most individuals and most families.

Today, that's no longer the case.

Today, a Coca-Cola is an entitlement in America. But it's not an entitlement for everybody. Rather, it's an entitlement for people who have fallen on hard times or are permanently stuck in them -- people who are on America's growing food stamp dole.


Recently, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg called for a ban to prohibit the city's 1.7 million food stamp recipients from using their federal food allowance to buy sugary soda drinks. Ostensibly, Bloomberg is concerned about health-related problems for New Yorkers on food stamps. After all, large numbers of them are fat or suffering from diabetes, and one reason for this, say health experts, is their large consumption of all those empty calories in sugary drinks popular among low-income New Yorkers -- mainly blacks and Hispanics on the food stamp dole. They're suffering from what Bloomberg's office calls an "obesity epidemic." Indeed, in New York City's public schools, 46 percent of Hispanic children, 40 percent of African-American children, and 40 percent of all children are overweight or obese -- according to Bloomberg's office. The problem is substantially worse in low-income areas, said the mayor's office.

Bloomberg, a Democrat-turned-Republican and now an independent, is not so politically foolish as to suggest that many New Yorkers on food stamps are irresponsible people living in an "entitlement culture." But his call for a ban on using food stamps to buy sugary drinks amounts to the same thing because it would, if approved by Washington bureaucrats, force many food stamp recipients to adjust their lifestyles and make smarter supermarket purchases.

Bloomberg's proposal has gotten mostly positive reviews, with his two main critics being the nation's beverage lobby and libertarians who contend that food stamp recipients ought to be able to buy whatever they want. (Food stamp recipients, however, are prohibited from buying tobacco and alcohol -- two things that even libertarians are unlikely to say are entitlements for people suffering through hard times.)

Specifically, Bloomberg proposed a two-year ban on the use of food stamps to buy sugary drinks -- during which health experts would evaluate whether the ban was helping food stamp recipients lose some weight and reduce their high levels of diabetes.

Nationwide, 6 percent of food stamp benefits are spent on sugary beverages, according to the United States Department of Agriculture, which administers the food stamp program.

Food Stamp Culture

The mayor's tough-love approach to New Yorkers on the food stamp dole comes as a record 41.8 million Americans -- including the children of illegal immigrants -- are getting monthly food stamp benefits. The average payout: $133.36 per person.

News accounts about record levels of food stamp use invariably note that the jobless rate is at a 27-year high -- yet curiously, food-stamp use has been in an upward spiral for years, with more than a few Americans becoming permanent users of the program, a fact that underscores the dangers of dependence.


Health issues aside, what Bloomberg really is targeting is behavior -- certain types of behavior revolving around impulse-buying and poor shopping decisions. All these things are more common among people who lack self-discipline and education and are prone to instant gratification. Generally, these pathologies are not found among middle-class taxpayers. But they're more commonly associated with people caught in a long-term culture of poverty, notes the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think-tank. Among other common trappings of that culture: large numbers of single mothers, out-of-wedlock births, and children who drop out of school and drift into crime.

To be sure, millions of decent, hardworking Americans have through no fault of their own fallen on hard times. They couldn't rely on families or charities. So they got food stamps. They left the program when they got back on their feet. Unfortunately, they are unfairly stigmatized due to the millions of food stamp abusers who appear to be out there -- people not only living for years on food stamps, but, as many middle-class Americans have observed at the grocery stores, making some rather odd purchases with food stamps...or to be precise, with government-issued debit cards that long ago replaced food-stamp booklets.

Those debit cards look and work just like a bank card or credit card. For better or worse, the days are gone when food stamp recipients had to embarrass themselves by whipping out a food stamp booklet for all to see.

Everybody I know has a story about a food stamp abuser ahead of him or her in the shopping line. Recently at a convenience store, I stood behind an overweight woman buying lottery tickets. Then she used her food stamp debit card to buy a cold Starbucks coffee drink and some snacks.

Illegal immigrants from Mexico and Central America also are big food stamp users. Illegal immigrants can't get food stamps, to be sure. But as one of the Middle Eastern store clerks cheerfully told me, their American-born anchor kids do qualify. The General Accounting Office estimated in 1995 that $1.1 billion in welfare and food stamp benefits were provided to illegal immigrants with U.S.-born children -- a number that's surely much higher today.

None of this should imply that the food stamp program is catering entirely to hustlers and abusers. Yet as the food stamp rolls have increased over the years, the program clearly has become more than a temporary aid program to ensure that low-income children and adults are getting proper nutrition. Now, they're entitled as well to a Coca-Cola, junk food and candy, or even some bottled water -- the last of which I've also seen food-stamp users buy.

Presumably, people accustomed to buying bottled water would switch to tap water after falling on tough economic times. But in today's entitlement culture, many Americans regard food stamps as a way to maintain the lifestyles they had during better days -- or to use them to obtain a lifestyle they never had.


Admittedly, I have a middle-class perspective, having grown up in a well-off family in the 1960s and '70s. Back then, a Coca-Cola was considered a treat. At breakfast we had orange juice from frozen concentrate, and for lunch and dinner there was iced tea or lemonade that my mom made from scratch. Or there was ice water -- and the water came from the tap, for bottled water was not yet fashionable.

Interestingly, the mainstream media has described soaring food stamp use with a singular narrative: that it's related entirely to the soaring unemployment rate. There's hardly a mention of widespread food stamp abuse and long-term dependence over the years, something that many Americans, including New York's mayor, sense is a problem. According to the Heritage Foundation, one half of food stamp recipients have gotten aid for 8.5 years or more.

Recently, the Wall Street Journal had a sympathetic piece on food stamp recipients that portrayed them as increasingly desperate, living from one food stamp payment to the next. Yet the article, "These Families Shop When Aid Arrives," was revealing in ways that reporter Miguel Bustillo probably never intended.

The article noted that in Houston, supposedly desperate food stamp recipients rush over to the local Wal-Mart at midnight on the first of the month; that's when their debit cards are replenished by the federal government. Yet Bustillo undercut his intriguing premise about the midnight buying spree when quoting one Wal-Mart spokesperson, who he noted had "stressed that the number of shoppers involved at midnight is relatively minor compared with peak periods such as weekends." Still, Bustillo got other Wal-Mart executives to say there was a surge of customers at midnight on the first of the month. It was enough to justify the story's intriguing yet problematic premise.

Desperate Shoppers?

So who were these supposedly desperate Wal-Mart shoppers?

All were black or Hispanic. Most appeared to be overweight, according to photos of them in a slide show accompanying the Journal's online article. At least one was a single mother buying baby food. One couple was identified as Simon and Angelica Rodriguez -- ages 17 and 15, respectively -- who were buying baby formula for their 6-month-old son Jordan, who was with them.

Among the more interesting food stamp users was Tyrel Fogle, 26, a young man with a physique out of Gold's Gym whose body was covered with tattoos. He was shopping with his pregnant girlfriend. "We're not starving or anything, but we come every month at 11:55," he explained, while loading up an overweight housemate's car with groceries. One photo in the slide show was of Fogle and his girlfriend with a carton of bottled water at the checkout aisle -- an expense that many middle-class people would consider foolish if they suddenly found their finances strained.

Fogel's girlfriend, 21-year-old Brittany Cummings, said, "We have enough to survive. But not much more." In photos of the couple's groceries, one can see a big bag of potato chips, prepared frozen-food meals, and what appears to be a bag of snacks.


According to the Journal, Fogle had "just found work as a washer at a glass company after months of fruitless searching."

It would be fascinating to know more about this couple
-- know more about their backgrounds and upbringings. Both are seemingly young and able-bodied adults. It's interesting that neither appears to have been embarrassed by talking with a reporter about being food-stamp recipients. Fogle, intriguingly, does have a MySpace page that readers will definitely find interesting.

None of this will surprise the folks at the Heritage Foundation who have studied food stamp use. "Of the aid going to families with children, some 85 percent goes to children in single parent or no parent families," reported the think-tank. "Only 15 percent goes to married couples with children."

Occasionally, I visit a local Wal-Mart late at night. I've been amazed at the people I see there. Generally, they're scruffy-looking shoppers you wouldn't find living in an orderly middle-class neighborhood -- nor would you find them at Wal-Mart during the day. More than a few are totting kids -- even though it's midnight or later, and presumably the kids need to be in school the next day. Definitely, it's not a scene you'd encounter during a more innocent time in America: the 1950s and early 1960s, an era when TV shows like "Leave it to Beaver" reflected the values and mores of middle-class suburbia -- an oasis of order and individual responsibility.

Interestingly, that charming, all-American television series revolving around the Cleaver family ended in 1963 -- one year after socialist writer Michael Harrington shamed Americans with his seminal book on poverty in America. It was aptly titled The Other America.

Why were many poor Americans sometimes overweight and even obese back then? It was, Harrington explained, because they were poor and unable to afford decent food, and so they were "fat with hunger, for that is what cheap foods do." Harrington's book was credited with spurring President Lyndon Johnson's Great Society programs aimed at abolishing poverty. One of those myriad social programs, enacted in 1964, was the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, better known as food stamps.

Yet despite food stamps and myriad other social programs created by big-spending liberals, poor Americans are more unhealthy than ever -- overweight and even obese, and suffering high levels of diabetes. Contrary to what Harrington argued, poor Americans are unhealthy because of their personal choices and lifestyles. It's likely that many are poor for the same reasons.


Mayor Bloomberg has made a good start at food stamp reform by attempting to rein in a program that, ironically, has caused more harm than good for many (though certainly not all) recipients. He has much work to do.

.



To: Sully- who wrote (81885)10/15/2010 6:59:56 AM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations  Respond to of 90947
 
Media Admission: Tea Party Not Racist

John on October 14, 2010 at 8:35 am

I suppose the Post deserves credit for publishing this story, but why did it take so long. Here’s the big, breaking news:

A new analysis of political signs displayed at a tea party rally in Washington last month reveals that the vast majority of activists expressed narrow concerns about the government’s economic and spending policies and steered clear of the racially charged anti-Obama messages that have helped define some media coverage of such events.

Emily Ekins, a graduate student at UCLA, conducted the survey at the 9/12 Taxpayer March on Washington last month by scouring the crowd, row by row and hour by hour, and taking a picture of every sign she passed…Ekins’s analysis showed that only about a quarter of all signs reflected direct anger with Obama. Only 5 percent of the total mentioned the president’s race or religion, and slightly more than 1 percent questioned his American citizenship.

Ekins’s conclusion is not that the racially charged messages are unimportant but that media coverage of tea party rallies over the past year have focused so heavily on the more controversial signs that it has contributed to the perception that such content dominates the tea party movement more than it actually does.

This isn’t the first study to find what most of already know to be true. Last October a liberal polling group run by James Carville found that racism was not a motivating factor in the Tea Party.

But by that time the smear had been well established by the left. Every paper in the country was on a first name basis with the SPLC and their research about resurgent militias. The Soros funded bloggers and their allies threw everything they had at the Tea Parties, from individual signs to studies of “ethnocentrism.” And of course it all peaked on the day ObamaCare became law with the infamous phantom N-word claims on Capitol Hill. We’re all still waiting for a media investigation of why Rep. Carson changed his story after the video appeared contradicting his first version of history.

The gross over-coverage of a few bad actors is no accident. This was the left’s game plan almost from day one and they’ve never quite wanted to let the fact get in the way of something that was working for them.

verumserum.com

Democracy Corps Witch Hunt Fails to Find Witches

John on October 17, 2009 at 10:15 am

Heard about this story last night at WCPAC. Democracy Corps is an organization run by James Carville and Stan Greenberg that which does Democratic polling and research. Carville’s group headed to Georgia in the wake of Rep. Joe Wilson’s “You lie!” on the house floor, where they spoke to older, white Republicans about the President:

These base Republican voters dislike Barack Obama to be sure, which is not very surprising as base Democrats had few positive things to say about George Bush, but these voters identify themselves as part of a “mocked” minority with a set of shared beliefs and knowledge, and commitment to oppose Obama that sets them apart from the majority in the country. They believe Obama is ruthlessly advancing a “secret agenda” to bankrupt the United States and dramatically expand government control to an extent nothing short of socialism. They overwhelmingly view a successful Obama presidency as the destruction of this country’s founding principles and are committed to seeing the president fail.

Instead of focusing on these intense ideological divisions, the press and elites continue to look for a racial element that drives these voters’ beliefs but they need to get over it. Conducted on the heels of Joe Wilson’s incendiary comments at the president’s joint session address, we gave these groups of older, white Republican base voters in Georgia full opportunity to bring race into their discussion but it did not ever become a central element, and indeed, was almost beside the point.

My first question…why was this result dumped on the web on a Friday afternoon. That’s usually a sign that someone is hoping the story will die a quiet death. I really wonder if this was not the result they were hoping to find. Remember the NASCAR Islamaphobia sting? Similar premise. Similar result.

Second, will Republicans now be receiving an apology from the various Democrats and media figures on the left who have made this charge over the last few contentious months. The obvious ones:

¦Jimmy Carter, International Man of Misery
¦Joe Klein at Time (a repeat offender)
¦Maureen Dowd at the NY Times
¦Janeane Garofalo
¦Pretty much everyone at MSNBC
¦But especially Chris Matthews
¦The Washington Post which suggested that James O’Keefe had racial motives based on a quote they had invented. (They issued a correction.)
¦Don Lemon of CNN
¦And many, many more.
And this doesn’t include all the media outlets (CNN, Huff Post, etc.) who aired the bogus Rush Limbaugh quotes in a transparent attempt to smear an enemy of the party. Are they going to put the race card away for a while now?

Then again, why would any of these folks listen to James Carville. He’s a white guy from the south so, ya know, probably a racist.

verumserum.com



To: Sully- who wrote (81885)10/19/2010 12:52:38 PM
From: Peter Dierks2 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90947
 
How new GOP Congress can repeal, replace Obamacare
Examiner Editorial
October 17, 2010
(J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

If voters return Republicans to majorities in one or both Houses of Congress, their Job One will be to start the process of repealing Obamacare and replacing it with realistic health care reforms that make universal access possible at a reasonable cost without putting federal bureaucrats in charge of U.S. medicine. President Obama will surely veto even a simple repeal measure, but Republicans still should put an end to Obamacare's most damaging and least popular provisions by defunding them. The process will also force Obamacrats in Congress to cast multiple votes they would probably prefer to avoid, thus setting the stage for a titanic 2012 presidential election contest.

To that end, here are The Examiner's recommendations to GOP congressional leaders for how to approach this most vital issue. This page will feature our recommendations to the new Congress on other major issues throughout this week:

> Bureaucracy: Every year, Congress passes appropriations provisions that forbid the use of funds for certain purposes. Next year's spending bills should bar the Department of Health and Human Services and other agencies from establishing the 159 boards, panels and programs in Obamacare. The Treasury appropriations bill should likewise remove all authority from the Internal Revenue Service for enforcing Obamacare's tax provisions.

> Stop medical lawsuit abuse: Trial lawyers kept medical tort reform out of Obamacare despite the fact such provisions could save at least $200 billion ...

Message 26898790