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Showing Original Post only (View all)On Behalf of the Kids Whose Families Depend on Food Stamps [View all]
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/phaedra-ellislamkins/on-behalf-of-the-kids-who_b_3962344.htmlPhaedra Ellis-Lamkins
CEO, Green for All
On Behalf of the Kids Whose Families Depend on Food Stamps
Posted: 09/20/2013 11:43 am
The first time I knew that being poor made me different than everyone else was when my mom sent me into the grocery store to get food with food stamps. We had just picked up our free cheese at the food bank. I was running into the store to get pickles for the cheese and pickle sandwiches that I took to school everyday. A woman behind me smirked and made a comment about food stamps being used for snacks. She had a cart full of groceries and she was judging our family based on the jar of pickles and food stamps. I did not understand what I had done wrong. I knew I was supposed to be ashamed and I was.
snip//
There should be no shame. Now, I feel pride that my family needed help because we are the American story. Our story is about struggle and perseverance. The people I admire fought to succeed and needed help along the way.
Yesterday's vote by the House of Representatives to pass the Nutrition Reform and Work Opportunity Act of 2013 (H.R. 3102), which cuts the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) by nearly $40 billion, is an attack on the best of our values. More than an attack on our shared values, it is an attempt to publicly shame those among us who need help. The same people who voted to cut food stamps for families who must survive on an average of $115 per month voted to give the most profitable oil companies hundreds of millions of dollars in tax breaks.
We cannot allow our country to turn away from our neighbors when they need help. It is those neighbors who we will turn to when we need help.
The policy implications for cutting food stamps are so enormous that everyone should be engaged in the debating the details -- including food-stamp recipients and other taxpayers, policy makers, faith leaders, civil and human rights advocates and others.
I know how hard it is to ask for help. I know how bad it feels. And I know that most families -- like mine -- use that help to make it out of tough situations and go on to do great things for others.
On behalf of those of us who need the help that food stamps provide, I am calling out the best in our leaders and all people of conscience. We cannot be a country that shames our neighbors and closes our ears to their calls for help.
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It is not our place to judge. You are right. But nevertheless a pickle and cheese sandwich
totodeinhere
Sep 2013
#8
People should be able to buy whatever they want with food stamps as long as it is covered by
totodeinhere
Sep 2013
#5
Taxing so-called junk food has been tried and it's probably not such as bad idea
totodeinhere
Sep 2013
#9