It
looks a lot like what we have now
Yeah, Donald. Make America great again. |
To qualify for food aid,
federal rules say that a family of three should have an income under $27,000 a
year.
But with rents, utilities, health care, and even food prices constantly rising, millions of Americans can’t make ends meet on such a low income.
But with rents, utilities, health care, and even food prices constantly rising, millions of Americans can’t make ends meet on such a low income.
Thus, 40 states have stepped in
to loosen that restriction so families at least get the basic nutrition they
need.
Trump’s minions demean these people as welfare moochers, but overwhelmingly they’re working families, children, the elderly, and Americans with disabilities.
Trump’s minions demean these people as welfare moochers, but overwhelmingly they’re working families, children, the elderly, and Americans with disabilities.
The benefit is hardly
lavish, averaging only $127 a month. But even this modest outlay
has proven enormously successful in mitigating poverty.
Congress authorized states to make such pragmatic income adjustments in a 1996 revamp of the law.
But — look out! — here comes Trump’s reactionary ag secretary, Sonny Perdue. Perdue recently rose up on his hind legs to proclaim that state officials are using that authority as a “loophole” to circumvent Trump’s federal authority.
So Sonny and Donnie are
demanding a whole new bureaucracy of “eligibility police” to monitor the
financial assets of food stamp recipients.
They’ll spend tens of millions of your and my tax dollars to harass the poor in an autocratic hope of nabbing a couple of hungry families who have a dime more than Trump thinks they should have.
They’ll spend tens of millions of your and my tax dollars to harass the poor in an autocratic hope of nabbing a couple of hungry families who have a dime more than Trump thinks they should have.
What we have here is government
by plutocratic authoritarians who will gleefully dole out millions in tax
breaks and subsidies to wealthy families, then just as gleefully take food off
the tables of poor families.
OtherWords columnist Jim
Hightower is a radio commentator, writer, and public speaker. Distributed by
OtherWords.org.