About damn time! These twats need to live by a code of ethics……as it is now they are pretty much free top do and say whatever they feel…….change that!
Democrats To Introduce Supreme Court Ethics Bill | Mother Jones.
About damn time! These twats need to live by a code of ethics……as it is now they are pretty much free top do and say whatever they feel…….change that!
Democrats To Introduce Supreme Court Ethics Bill | Mother Jones.
we have a new farm bill……it all but eliminates SNAP or as we humans call it food stamps……but the bill did so much more..,..it benefited several members of Congress that make millions off of farm subsidies the bill provides……keep that in mind! Congress passed a bill that benefits their members but not the people of this country!
Food stamps have been made a dirty word thanx to lies spread by right wing media and the pathetic cowards were call CONGRESS……….I know….what lies?
The HufPo published 4 of the major lies…….
1. The program is rife with fraud and abuse.
In the Wall Street Journal editorial, SNAP is denounced as an “unmonitored welfare program” that hemorrhages billions in unjustifiable and fraudulent claims. This is demonstrably false.
In 2010, the Government Accountability Office found that “the national rate of food stamp trafficking [trading benefits for money or non-food goods] declined from about 3.8 cents per dollar of benefits” in 1993 to 1 cent per dollar today — a historic decline. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, which runs the program, SNAP “had the lowest error rate in history at 3.81%. Over 98% of those receiving benefits are eligible for SNAP.”
Steps can be taken to bring those numbers down even further, but to argue, as the GOP has, that sweeping cuts are needed to address minimal levels of fraud and abuse is akin to recommending a howitzer barrage as an appropriate response to a household fruit fly infestation.
A more appropriate response would be to double down on the USDA’s successful anti-fraud campaign. The Electronic Benefits Transfer, or EBT, cards that went into circulation in 2004 (replacing traditional food stamps) make it significantly easier to detect abusive users and the retailers that enable them. The USDA employs over 100 staffers to investigate these crimes. Hiring a few more to bolster the effort makes more sense than letting millions of Americans go hungry.
2. There are too many “hipsters” and college students on food stamps.
Since the start of the Great Recession, the food stamp population has almost doubled, from 26 million in 2007 to between 45 and 47 million starting in 2009. This increase has largely been the result of the cratering economy and persistent unemployment making more Americans poorer and therefore eligible for food stamps. But the government also set higher income eligibility limits in recent years (130 percent of the poverty line, or annual income of $14,157 for an individual) and eased accessibility restrictions on the unemployed and childless.
These changing criteria should be welcomed. Too frequently social programs (e.g., Medicaid and the Earned Income Tax Credit) are limited to families, while low-income people without children are left to fend for themselves. These attempts to bring policy in line with economic realities have broadened access to food assistance to demographics that stretch the stereotypical image of “poverty,” including jobless professionals, students, young people and people with middle-class backgrounds.
Presumably it is these people who the Wall Street Journal refers to as “trust fund babies driving Rolls Royces [getting] free food courtesy of Uncle Sam.” Salon’s coverage of this non-issue brought swarms of commenters (478 as of this writing), some of whom responded humanely, but many who denounced “self-imposed poverty” and called the “hipster” recipients a “burden to society.”
“There are some people who may have a hip looking haircut or a tattoo who are unemployed or underemployed and have the same legal rights and moral rights to food as anyone else,” noted Joel Berg, executive director of the New York City Coalition Against Hunger and author of All You Can Eat: How Hungry is America?. “Anyway, the vast majority of people who are using food stamps were poor, and are now poorer.”
The “hipsters on food stamps” narrative gets a spotlight that is disproportionate to actual trends. For one thing, beneficiaries aren’t “secretly middle-class.” Close to 90 percent of households that use SNAP live below the poverty line, while 40 percent of households live at half of the poverty line (less than $10,000 a year for a family of three). According to the USDA, close to half of the beneficiaries are children (48 percent), and another 8 percent are over 60. A majority of those who are of working age are working. In the 1990s, half of new food stamp beneficiaries participated in the program for eight months or less — basically, until they found a job. There is no reason to assume that the same isn’t true for today’s beneficiaries; it just takes them longer to find employment.
SNAP is an entitlement program, meaning that anyone who is eligible can gain access. Just because someone graduated from college, or grew up outside of poverty, doesn’t mean she don’t need help now. This recession devastated the assets and savings accounts of many middle-class people, so relying on family isn’t an option for many individuals. Meanwhile, the job market remains exceptionally weak. More people need food assistance now, no matter their background.
3. Recipients “waste” their benefits on unhealthy food.
Many policy analysts and other influential figures argue that recipients should not be allowed to use food stamps to purchase soda or other junk food. This proposal is both demeaning and doesn’t address any actual problems. First of all, there is little evidence that, given options, low-income people eat less healthily than middle-class people. (One recent study shows that poor people tend to eat less fast food than their middle-class counterparts — and food stamps can’t be used to purchase hot food anyway.) It isn’t as though food stamp beneficiaries are buying unusual amounts of soda, candy, other junk food. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, “Almost 90 percent of the food consumed by food SNAP households goes to fruits and vegetables, grain products, meats, or dairy products.”
The reason that many low-income areas have higher obesity rates than wealthier areas is that low-quality food, like white bread, is cheaper and more easily accessible than, say, fruits and vegetables, especially in areas where supermarkets are scarce.
4. The program is too generous, and food stamps are a significant contributor to national debt.
Conservatives have made a great show of moaning about the recent explosion in SNAP’s caseload. Those who would make this an issue (ahem, Jeff Sessions and the Wall Street Journal) are being dumb-headed or malicious, or both. The food stamp program is designed to be responsive to economic downturns. The reason over 15 million people have been added to the rolls is simple: We’ve suffered the worst economic downturn since the 1930s, and the economy is still stagnant. SNAP is doing exactly what it is meant to in these circumstances: ease the plight of those who have been negatively affected by the downturn and boost their purchasing power.
The idea that benefits are too generous is absurd. Monthly benefits run to $133.80 a month for each member of the household, or about $4.50 a day — although poorer households get more generous benefits, while increased income leads to stingier assistance. And, again, food stamps can’t be used to purchase hot food, alcohol, tobacco, or other non-food items.
Also, the expanding food stamp program is not even close to being a significant driver of our national debt. As previously stated, SNAP rolls expand and contract with the health of the economy. If and when the nation gets to a better place economically, the number of enrollees will decline; it’s no miracle. The only reason food assistance is being targeted is because the constituencies that use food stamps — the poor and nearly-poor — are not particularly powerful, especially compared to the those who protect genuinely wasteful spending, like agricultural subsidies and the gluttonous military budget.
Cutting food stamps in the name of debt relief would be a PR stunt, a political ploy. And while its effect on America’s debt will be negligible, the suffering that would be inflicted on millions of Americans, almost half of them children, would be very real.
This piece was originally posted on Alternet.
Then there are some outlandish claims made by right wingers and then picked up by the parasites we pay to do our business in our name……I found these on The Naked City website…….
Right-wing claim: “The measure is necessary because welfare eligibility and spending — including for food stamps — have exploded, threatening to crowd out everything else in the state budget.”
Fact: Actually, the federal government picks up most of the tab. According to the Inquirer , “Pennsylvania receives about $2.5 billion in federal SNAP [that’s food stamps: Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program] funds annually and pays about $160 million annually in state money to maintain the program.” That’s just over one half of 1 percent of Pennsylvania’s state budget. And as I reported last week, the state of Pennsylvania taxpayers spends nearly $2 billion on prisons ―$463.8 million more than generally reported.
Right-wing claim: “Despite indisputable evidence that welfare fraud and waste are alive and well, many politicians in Harrisburg and Washington have downplayed it, while actually expanding welfare benefits to the detriment of the truly poor.”
Fact: Pennsylvania has been recognized for having an extraordinarily low rate of food stamp fraud: one-tenth of 1 percent.
Right-wing claim: “It’s impossible to determine the full extent of errors because the state doesn’t actively search for mistakes.”
Fact: This assertion is incomprehensible. The state of Pennsylvania Inspector General has a welfare fraud division with a $705,000 budget. And yes, it includes a Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Trafficking Unit.
Right-wing claim: “Without any such protection, billionaires such as Bill Gates could actually be eligible for food stamps if their income was low enough for a year. Sound far-fetched? Consider the case of Leroy Fick, who won a $2 million lottery jackpot but still legally collected food stamps. This fall, Michigan enacted a $5,000 asset test to keeping exploiters such as Fick from taking advantage of the system.”
Fact: It sounds far-fetched because it’s incredibly misleading. The US Department of Agriculture told Politifact that they are aware of “only one case and one alleged case involving individuals with assets over $1 million”― one of those two cases being Leroy Fick. In Washington, congressional Republicans have claimed that barring millionaires from receiving food stamps or unemployment insurance would save big-time taxpayer dollars. It’s a ruse.
I hope that people will take articles like these and use them to counter the BS passed off as fact by the right wing……….always arm yourself with facts….remember the right wing can have their own opinion….but not their own facts!
If we do not challenge the lies of the right wing then we are allowing them to pick up their own facts……NOT ON MY WATCH!

Or is it?
We seem to have great news ever month and every quarter that the unemployment is down, jobs are created and the GDP is slow but looking good……right?
The media leaps onto the news with both feet…..they have to keep high end investors happy and optimistic….they need to help them make the decision on where to put their billions that they are holding…..all in all the macro sector is looking good….the micro sector sucks and sucks big time!
Explain to me how you can say that the economy is doing well when this is happening…..
Temp jobs made up about 10 percent of the jobs lost during the Great Recession, and because of high turnover (the average length of temp employment is 3 months before a worker moves on to a permanent job), one in 10 non-farm workers were employed by a US staffing firm at some point during the past year, according to ASA. In fact, nearly one-fifth of all jobs gained since the recession ended have been temporary.
Many workers now have to periodically revalidate their status via systems of “continuous professional development”; almost all work, no matter how menial, involves self-surveillance systems in which the worker is required to assess their own performance. Pay is increasingly correlated to output, albeit an output that is no longer easily measurable in material terms. For most workers, there is no such thing as the long term.
Part time work and low wages these are what some are calling a recovery…..to me there is NO recovery as long as Americans are being hampered from making an adequate living…..the only way for the economy to truly heal is to grow the Middle Class…..and how can we do that since corporations will not?
From the CAP Action War Room….and it is a good plan…..
- Investments in growing the middle class: Investing in education, infrastructure, energy, and innovation boosts the economy today and helps create the job creators and strong middle class that will fuel economic growth tomorrow.
- Everyone paying their fair share: Tax cuts for the wealthy and huge corporations don’t grow the economy. If the wealthy aren’t paying their fair share, we simply cannot afford to make the investments in the middle we need to in order to grow the economy.
- Minimum wage: Nobody who works full time in America should have to live in poverty. Raising the minimum wage will lift people out of poverty and create more consumers to help fuel the economy.
- Health security: Millions of Americans will soon have access to quality, affordable health care for the first time and the 85 percent of Americans who already have health insurance are seeing new benefits and better coverage as a result of Obamacare.
- Retirement security: We need to strengthen both Social Security and our private retirement system so middle-class Americans can afford to retire and live with dignity, a promise beyond the reach of too many.
- Affordable housing: The housing market is recovering, but we need to implement additional policies and reforms to help those who are still underwater and the millions who can’t get a loan to buy a home today.
The sad part is that there is not a elected official at any level, federal, state or local, that is willing to show courage and work for a plan to strengthen the Middle Class……..