Food stamps work well at Vegas Sprouts store.

Dead Money

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Upstairs watching sports on the big TV.
I was checking out in line behind a young nicely dressed lady with a Louis Vuitton handbag..(wife identified it).

I was admiring her huge stack of all organic fruits, organic veggies, organic milk,grass fed organic New York steaks....I jokingly asked her if she was cooking for a special occasion....

She laughed and said she was doing basic weekly shopping.

The total bill was $162.50...she whipped out a food stamp card which rang up close to $140.

She relunctantly gave up a $13.00 piece of steak, hollered at her mother sitting up front "Mom do you have $20.00?"

Mom sitting next to the door with a mountain of stuffed food bags fetched her a twenty.

I'm reasonably sure ''Mom" rang her card up to.

I'm glad that many of the downtrodden of Vegas are eating so healthy.
 

zoomer

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Saw a woman buying diapers with a WIC card in a 7-11 in Queens yesterday. Diapers had to be twice the price of buying in a supermarket or department store.
 

THE KOD

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saw a woman with four kids in a grocery store last week.

the kids looked hungry. Two didnt have coats on. Mother did not look the best.

looked like alot of ramon noodles, crackers, peanut butter, chef boyar dee stuff

soups , processed stuff.


Rang up to 120.00

whipped out the card and spent it all for the month.

I sat back and thought geeezzzz , they sure are living the high life now the damn welchers sucking that goverment tit.
 

zoomer

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Feb 20, 2000
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Massapequa Park, NY USA
saw a woman with four kids in a grocery store last week.

the kids looked hungry. Two didnt have coats on. Mother did not look the best.

looked like alot of ramon noodles, crackers, peanut butter, chef boyar dee stuff

soups , processed stuff.


Rang up to 120.00

whipped out the card and spent it all for the month.

I sat back and thought geeezzzz , they sure are living the high life now the damn welchers sucking that goverment tit.

Scott, no one can buy diapers with a WIC card. Waited for the knee jerk reaction defending it.
 

THE KOD

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Child poverty in the U.S. would be significantly worse if government assistance programs weren't in place, a new report suggests.

A study released on Wednesday by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, an advocacy group for low-income kids, found that without government support programs -- like food assistance, housing subsidies and tax credits -- the child poverty rate would swell from 18 percent to 33 percent.

According to the foundation, the study, which used the Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM) to track data, does a better job at gauging how government programs are benefiting low-income Americans than the federal government's official index -- a measure that was developed in the 1960s.


As the report explains, the government's index "falls short of accurately estimating the current need" by not considering certain factors, such as varying cost of living levels across individual states.

It also doesn't consider the impact of some of the government's biggest anti-poverty initiatives, like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Last November, SNAP enrollment stood at more than 46 million -- down slightly from the same month a year prior mainly due to an improving U.S. economy.

Because the government doesn't consider such factors, it can't monitor their success or failure, the foundation argues. If the government can't determine what investments are working, it can't accurately distinguish the needs of the most vulnerable Americans.

"Relying on [the federal government's official measure] alone prevents policymakers from gauging the effectiveness of government programs aimed at reducing child poverty," Patrick McCarthy, president and CEO of the Annie E. Casey Foundation, said in a statement on the organization's website. "Given that child poverty costs our society an estimated $500 billion a year in lost productivity and earnings as well as health- and crime-related costs, the SPM is an important tool that should be used to assess state-level progress in fighting poverty."

Although slightly lowered SNAP participation is a welcomed economic sign, overall many more American families still rely on food stamps now than before the Great Recession, The Guardian reported last month. About 15.9 million kids lived in food insecure homes in 2013, according to Feeding America, and for the first time, more than half of American public school children live in low-income households.

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sad really

so much money for politics and so little to make sure kids dont go hungry
 

THE KOD

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One Philadelphia homeless shelter used to have a major pea problem.

Bethesda Project's My Brother?s House had an abundance of smooth Alaska peas for its clients, but demand did not match supply, Drexel Now reported.

"One of the problems we struggle with is how to be creative with food that was clearly designed for quantity and not quality," Larry Russock, program coordinator at My Brother?s House, told Drexel Now, explaining that not too many diners had an appetite for the "heat and serve" canned vegetable. The facility was often forced to throw away foods, like the peas, that are less popular but affordable and available in bulk.

My Brother's House serves three meals and a snack every day with just a $600 monthly food budget, so frugality is essential.

Russock found answers to his problem at Drexel Food Lab -- a student-run group out of Drexel University?s Center for Hospitality and Sport Management. The program has used food to solve real-world problems since launching in January 2014.

Russock's pea problem, for example, was alleviated when students concocted pea soup, fritter and shepherd's pie recipes -- more palatable foods that fight waste by being more appealing to homeless clients. The simple recipes can be replicated by staff at My Brother's House, many of whom have no formal culinary training.

"Just because you?re someone who?s been struggling for a while doesn?t mean you shouldn?t get good food," Russock said in a statement provided to The Huffington Post.

drexel food lab student two


drexel food program student

Despite being just more than a year old, Drexel Food Lab has gained national attention for its positive impact. Last November, the EPA recognized the program's partnership with a Philadelphia grocery store that allows students to visit and collect usable produce from the store -- items that otherwise would be thrown out because they're bruised or visually less appealing, according to the EPA. Students use the vegetables and fruits to test new recipes, like jams and stir-fry greens, for those who could use the meal.

EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy, who had visited Philadelphia to honor the program, praised the partnership as "a great example of an innovative solution to encourage food recovery, while providing nourishing meals for the hungry."

Food industry partners, grants and monetary gifts support the food lab, whose participants can get involved as paid student-workers or through specialized coursework, among other ways.

Students of the lab are helping fight an enormous and costly problem. A report by the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate released last week found that if consumers around the world cut back on food waste by 20 to 50 percent, the global economy could save between $120 billion and $300 billion annually by 2030, Reuters reported.

Saving more would benefit those in need, too, according to the commission.

"Less food waste means greater efficiency, more productivity and direct savings for consumers," Helen Mountford, a program director for one of the commission's projects, said in a statement, according to Reuters. "It also means more food available to feed the estimated 805 million that go to bed hungry each day."

As Reuters reported, one third of all food produced worldwide ends up discarded.

But students who participate in the Drexel Food Lab are salvaging as much of the soon-to-be waste as they can through their culinary creativity. And they don't let the fact that they're students keep them from making a true difference.

"In many culinary programs, students learn to cook set recipes," Director for the Center for Hospitality and Sport Management Jonathan Deutsch, who started the food lab, told Drexel Now. "But at Drexel they have the opportunity to solve real world problems, collaborate with the industry and learn by doing.?
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America needs to think more like this and help people instead of trying to take away their food stamps.
 

THE KOD

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Brittney Kagee, 23, is a recent college graduate working two hourly wage jobs, which has left her feeling jaded.

I left a small, isolated town in Alaska for California Polytechnic University with dreams of all the money I was going to make doing what I enjoyed. I wasn't going to be one of those people who tried to make ends meet. I was going to be the first in my family to graduate from college. I was going to be able to take care of my family when they could no longer take care of themselves. I was going to be able to afford things that I enjoyed -- or at least that?s what I thought.

I don?t know what necessarily made me believe that. I guess I was still full of life and enthusiasm: If I was able to accomplish something this prestigious, such as being a first-generation college grad, life would work itself out.

I am now holding down two jobs and still struggling to make ends meet.

After college, I took a full-time job as a medical billing specialist for a physical therapy company where I?m paid $13 an hour for what I thought was a career position. Recently, I?ve taken up a second job doing janitorial work at a credit union three hours a day, five days a week.

Commuting to work costs between $150 and $170 a month. I haven?t received a paycheck from the second job yet but, for the past six months, I?ve been taking home around $1,600 from my primary job. I rent a room in a mobile home at a virtually unheard of rate of $400 a month, and utilities are around $75. A friend got me this deal by taking me under her wing when I was, essentially, without a home.

But, at this point, the struggles are more mental than financial.

I think about money all the time. I?m between $120,000 and $130,000 in student loan debt and my monthly payments fall between $400 to $500 a month. When they first became due, I was paying $942 every month.

I?m constantly reworking numbers in my head to figure out how to put a few extra dollars in savings or toward a student loan payment. If I?m living very frugally, meaning I go home and sit down, I?m managing to save about a $100 a month.

I spend between $150 and $200 on groceries each month. That being said, I will buy food and say: "I could've put this toward a bill. I don?t really need to eat all that much because this money I?m using to feed myself could go toward a bill." It?s a pretty tough internal battle between what I need to survive daily and the other things I could be using my minuscule funds for instead.

Real life just kinda slapped me in the face and knocked me down. If I think about money too much, I usually end up having a small panic attack. I?ll try to calm myself by saying, "Get yourself through the next 12 hours." There was a solid two months where I would sit at my desk and cry because it?s like I?m not doing enough. What else can I be doing?

The best my degree was able to get me was $13 an hour and I just -- how am I going to pay the bills? How am I going to get ahead? How am I going to help my mother when she retires? How am I going to help my sister? How am I going to help myself?

I would cry myself to sleep every night. I?ve been seeing a therapist for a couple of months who?s helping me try to keep myself from getting overwhelmed by the amount of debt I?m in and how I will not see the fruits of my labor for decades.

I still remember being 18 and thinking, "I?m an adult and the whole world is ahead of me. I can become anything. I can have the American Dream. I can have a successful life. All I have to do is go to college and that will help make everything better."

None of that really happened, or at least it didn?t happen in the way I?d hoped it would. I graduated college in four years. I had an OK GPA and I?m supposed to be grateful for $13 an hour when I have to take out a second job to help make ends meet. I still cry about money at least once a week because it never seems to be enough.

I didn't know it was possible to feel this defeated.

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I was relating this story to a Neo Con I met who is voting for Teddy Cruz the Canadian.


He said .... Tell that bitch to get another job.
 

THE KOD

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