If you start banning this but not that, it opens a pandora's box of sorts. I.e. if you can buy a bottle of Sprite with food stamps, why not a Rockstar? Or Kool-Aid? Or Gatorade? Etc. etc.
I agree.
If you start banning this but not that, it opens a pandora's box of sorts. I.e. if you can buy a bottle of Sprite with food stamps, why not a Rockstar? Or Kool-Aid? Or Gatorade? Etc. etc.
Not only race, but government doing ANYTHING to help ANYONE, period. You know the drill.I can see both sides. Having worked with welfare/section 8 families, I know there are a lot of cases of parents with very little experience, support systems, or general knowledge of how to raise kids; not saying that applies to all parents in the programs. Allowing them to purchase sugary drinks and fast food only increases cases of diabetes, cavities, etc, which the state pays for, and the kids grow up with poor health that follows them to adulthood.
On the other hand, anyone who has been to an inner city or rural areas knows that grocery stores aren't as readily available as they are in other places. You can randomly drive around certain parts of Detroit and not find a grocery store within 20 miles. But you'll find dozens of fast food places and convenience stores. In a perfect world healthy food would be readily available, but that's not the situation on the ground.
At the end of the day food stamp spending is such a small portion of the budget that anyone who gets upset or outraged over seeing kids buy pop or energy drinks is an idiotic. And might have issues with race...
Guess feeding ones family shouldn't be a priority?
It is, but your previous post is dumb. Eating healthy costs more than eating cheaply; thus the idea that people should prioritize spending more to get less food is ridiculous especially given vast majority of these people work long hours and don't have time to fix meals everyday.
Also add in the fact Whole Foods and all these other places aren't readily available in the more low income parts of town. So I'd say buying cheap quick meals that serve an entire family is prioritizing versus getting a bunch of higher costing fresh food and not getting as much.
Low income people can't win either way regardless, if they did buy only fresh food from like Whole Foods you'll just simply bitch that they're eating healthier/better than you and you work.
We should take away the EBT cards and let the poor work on colossal government run farms where they and their children can live and grow their own food on. Ideally they would grow extra food that could then be sold to grocery store chains and the like. Pesticide free, all natural, organic. Maybe they could even raise some cattle. Also maybe make their own clothing by growing and picking/spinning cotton. We'd solve homelessness, unemployment, and starvation!
I can see both sides. Having worked with welfare/section 8 families, I know there are a lot of cases of parents with very little experience, support systems, or general knowledge of how to raise kids; not saying that applies to all parents in the programs. Allowing them to purchase sugary drinks and fast food only increases cases of diabetes, cavities, etc, which the state pays for, and the kids grow up with poor health that follows them to adulthood.
We should take away the EBT cards and let the poor work on colossal government run farms where they and their children can live and grow their own food on. Ideally they would grow extra food that could then be sold to grocery store chains and the like. Pesticide free, all natural, organic. Maybe they could even raise some cattle. Also maybe make their own clothing by growing and picking/spinning cotton. We'd solve homelessness, unemployment, and starvation!
Instead of trying to regulate the estimated $2 billion in junk-food purchases enabled each year by food stamps, he wrote a bill to ban the food-stamp purchase of only one product. That was energy drinks high in caffeine and higher in sugar, expensive and marketed to children despite offering little nutritional value.
A no-brainer, he explained as he introduced the bill in a committee meeting last summer.
Then he yielded the microphone and waited for rebuttals. The first critic was one he had anticipated, a lobbyist for the Texas Beverage Association, which desperately wanted all of its drinks available for sale to the fastest-growing market in America: the food-stamp market, which has quadrupled from $20 billion to $80 billion in the past 12 years. Companies such as Coca-Cola, Kraft and Mars have spent more than $10 million in the past several years lobbying Congress to keep their products available to those using food stamps. No clear standards exist for defining foods as good or bad, the lobbyist said.
But next came a litany of speakers Canales hadnt expected. They were Democrats who shared his ideals and equaled his devotion in the fight against poverty. At previous committee meetings on his other bills, many of them had lined up to speak on his behalf.
Better not to micromanage other peoples diets, said the director of an interfaith organization.
Opposed, said the representative of a Texas food bank.
Maybe I'm generalizing too much here, but I noticed a lot of "don't be jealous" and "don't hate the player, hate the game" type posts from the thread on Don Mattrick earning $57 million on the gaming side.
How come some of the people that put so much effort into justifying how much money the rich have and how they spend it suddenly get their panties in a twist when they see someone on EBT buying a drink? What happened to letting people spend the money they've gotten via the system how they want to?
This is a common thing I've noticed amongst right wing people I've friended on Facebook. One group's a bunch of moochers while the other shouldn't be judged because the signed a contract via which they got crazy amounts of money.
The iced coffee energy drinks are actually pretty good and very welcome in the summer. I like them better as opposed to making hot coffee and then cooling it. Supposedly, they also have all these supplements, some of which supposedly help with stress.I suppose I feel like the arguments for not letting people buy energy drinks with EBT cards are much better as arguments for just banning energy drinks. We're not talking about what might be considered a luxury good here. Nobody drinks energy drinks because they taste great or because they're trying to be socially responsible consumers. They're sold as being functional, as fuel for the body. As advertised, they're just about the food-iest thing imaginable. If it's not even a good idea for higher-stress poor people to buy energy drinks, I'm not sure who should be buying energy drinks.
21st century sharecropping, sounds like a winner.
You also get slavery brought back too boot!
You don't understand, the government would be paying THEM in free land and housing. Plus free gardening/farming tools, and animals, seeds, etc...
Actually I was being entirely facetious but now I'm kind of curious. Ignoring that it would basically be a form of slavery, would modern sharecropping actually be economically feasible?
You have to have receive an income under a certain amount of money.How do I get ebt?
How do I get ebt?
lmao that is absurdYou have to bring in a month or twos worth of pay stubs, bank account statements, info on cars you own and then hope you make the cut off. We've been trying to get EBT for awhile now, last time we applied we made $8 too much, and they wanted statements from bank accounts that had been closed for 2 years and a car we sold a year ago.
lmao that is absurd
No shit, and the kicker is we really did make under the amount, but they added in money we "Could have earned" or some shit.
Are you white?
Why the fuck does that matter?
He's asking due to the subtle racism that exists in America.
This thread reminded me that I need to apply for an EBT.
I'm about as white as they come. Still don't think it matters.
By taking away EBT and saying "if you want to eat, you have to become a farmer" you are basically making them salves if they want to live.
Also for the EBT users out there, please have your card and pin ready at time of checkout. When i'm just trying to grab a hoogie and tea from WaWa I really don't wanna wait while you fight with the EBT machine.
Surprised it took 3 pages for the word "lobby" to appear.Here is an excellent piece of writing about this very subject. It doesn't appear to have been posted yet.
Ever notice how it is socially acceptable to pick on poor people, but you are being a hater if you do it to the rich?
I can see both sides. Having worked with welfare/section 8 families, I know there are a lot of cases of parents with very little experience, support systems, or general knowledge of how to raise kids; not saying that applies to all parents in the programs. Allowing them to purchase sugary drinks and fast food only increases cases of diabetes, cavities, etc, which the state pays for, and the kids grow up with poor health that follows them to adulthood.
On the other hand, anyone who has been to an inner city or rural areas knows that grocery stores aren't as readily available as they are in other places. You can randomly drive around certain parts of Detroit and not find a grocery store within 20 miles. But you'll find dozens of fast food places and convenience stores. In a perfect world healthy food would be readily available, but that's not the situation on the ground.
At the end of the day food stamp spending is such a small portion of the budget that anyone who gets upset or outraged over seeing kids buy pop or energy drinks is an idiotic. And might have issues with race...
EBTs work just like debit cards. You must hate it when the same thing happens with debit users.Also for the EBT users out there, please have your card and pin ready at time of checkout. When i'm just trying to grab a hoogie and tea from WaWa I really don't wanna wait while you fight with the EBT machine.
I think the proper term is SNAP benefits. Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program.Don't know if it's been mentioned but I see a lot of confusion in the first few pages: EBT is NOT food stamps. EBT is just the card they are used to deliever them to the clients.
I wish they would ban all sodas and sugary drinks. I don't know if people do it everywhere, but around here, people will go to stores and buy dozens of cartons of soda with their food stamps and then sell them for almost nothing to convenience stores to get money for drugs.
I suppose I feel like the arguments for not letting people buy energy drinks with EBT cards are much better as arguments for just banning energy drinks. We're not talking about what might be considered a luxury good here. Nobody drinks energy drinks because they taste great or because they're trying to be socially responsible consumers. They're sold as being functional, as fuel for the body. As advertised, they're just about the food-iest thing imaginable. If it's not even a good idea for higher-stress poor people to buy energy drinks, I'm not sure who should be buying energy drinks.
Have any evidence of this, or are these just Tales from your ass?I wish they would ban all sodas and sugary drinks. I don't know if people do it everywhere, but around here, people will go to stores and buy dozens of cartons of soda with their food stamps and then sell them for almost nothing to convenience stores to get money for drugs.
Every dollar of SNAP benefits generates $1.84 in the economy in terms of economic activity. If people are able to buy a little more in the grocery store, someone has to stock it, package it, shelve it, process it, ship it. All of those are jobs. It's the most direct stimulus you can get in the economy during these tough times."
I wish they would ban all sodas and sugary drinks. I don't know if people do it everywhere, but around here, people will go to stores and buy dozens of cartons of soda with their food stamps and then sell them for almost nothing to convenience stores to get money for drugs.
I wish they would ban all sodas and sugary drinks. I don't know if people do it everywhere, but around here, people will go to stores and buy dozens of cartons of soda with their food stamps and then sell them for almost nothing to convenience stores to get money for drugs.
Much easier to just sell the card off to people to use rather then go that route, say you sell me 300 dollars worth of stamp money for 200 cash, much more efficient.
This is such bull. Its so convoluted. Easier ways of getting around it man.
I've seen people do that too.
It's not bull. I know for a fact people do it. I know of several convenience stores that have been busted doing it.