The big plan the new Koch Senate is due to propose this week
is cutting food stamps substantially and giving the reduced amounts
directly to states …
One of the reasons the Koch brothers invested so
heavily in the midterm elections was to put a stop to domestic spending
that a Democratic controlled Senate held in abeyance and never allowed
to reach President Obama’s desk. Now that Republicans hold majorities
in both houses of Congress, it was just a short matter of time before
they could do the real the damage they have intended since Barack Obama
was elected. It is likely they would have cut government down to size by
drastically slashing social programs when Obama took office just out of
spite, but their devastating Great Recession has proven to be the ideal
vehicle to slash domestic spending under the guise of debt and deficit
reduction. That is except where spending on tax cuts for the rich and
the military, particularly Israel’s military, are concerned; then there
are never enough spending increases. It is just how Republicans operate.
Two areas that are particularly offensive to, and
primary targets of, the Koch brothers are any kind of spending to help
Americans in poverty or barely subsisting eat and have access to
healthcare. Throughout his tenure as chairman of the House Budget
Committee, Ayn Rand acolyte Paul Ryan proposed Heritage Foundation
austerity budgets that all but eliminated spending on the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, food stamps), and changed Medicare
into a coupon.
Ryan’s plan for Medicare privatization entails
retired Americans producing their GOP-issued “coupon” for an alleged
discount when purchasing pathetically underserving and overpriced
private health insurance plans instead of using traditional Medicare;
the Medicare they paid for their entire working lives. That money they
paid into Medicare, according to conservative ideology, belongs to the
rich in the form of tax cuts. The good news is that Ryan is no longer in
charge of the Republicans’ budget process. But the bad news is the Koch
brothers own both the House and Senate, and austerity-mad Republicans
are emboldened to do more Heritage budget damage than even Ryan could
imagine and targeting food stamps and Medicare is just the first in a
long line of austerity cuts to make room for more defense spending and
tax cuts for the rich.
The big plan
the new Koch Senate is due to propose this week is cutting food stamps
substantially and giving the reduced amounts directly to states in the
form of “block grants.” Republicans say it makes more sense to let
states parse out the reduced amounts in food stamps to the working poor,
children, Veterans, the disabled, and elderly because state
organizations are “there on the ground” and know what the people really
need. What Republicans like Senator Lindsey Graham say the states do not
need, particularly Republican-controlled states, is federal bureaucracy
telling them how to spend federal money. As is always the case,
Republicans claim the federal government has no place telling states how
to issue food assistance any more than they have any business
regulating toxins poured into the air and water.
Republicans have been pushing ‘block grants’ since
2009 as part of their storied, and failed, austerity measures that not
only drastically cut the amount allotted for food assistance, it allows
Republican-controlled states to use and abuse the federal funds without
any federal oversight whatsoever. The block grants are also “set in
stone” amounts that make no provision now, or in the future, for
adjustments for inflation or another GOP recession borne of financial
deregulation, unfunded tax cuts for the rich, or the next Middle East
regime change war put on the nation’s credit card. All the things the
Koch Congress intends to enact are precisely what Bush Republicans did
to increase the number of Americans in need of nutrition assistance in
the first place. However, since the Obama economy has grown and millions
more Americans have found jobs, the number of food stamp recipients has
been on nearly a yearlong decline; but that is not the reason
Republicans are proposing major cuts to SNAP. Thy just hate the idea of
spending one red cent to help poor children, Veterans, low-wage
workers, disabled people, or senior citizens have access to adequate
food when that money could go to enrich the elite one-percent and the
military industrial complex.
There are some statistics that Republicans are
certainly aware of, but just could not care less because they and their
funding machine the Koch brothers take great delight in depriving poor
children, low-wage workers, Veterans, many active-duty military
families, disabled Americans, and the elderly of adequate nutrition when
the money can go to those least in need; the wealthiest Americans and
military industrial complex. For one thing, the people who use food
stamps today bear absolutely no responsibility for crashing the economy
in 2008. In fact, a great number of Americans of all ages and
demographics still have not recovered from that GOP-created catastrophe
that cost them their jobs, homes, or middle class incomes that keep them
struggling just to make ends meet.
Republicans are wont to claim food stamps are some
kind of luxury giveaway for the lazy, and yet the average income of
recipients, including families is only $788 per month; an amount far
below the federal poverty line. There is also a myth that food stamps go
primarily to people of color, and yet white people make up over 43% of
recipients to 25% of African Americans. There is also a Fox News
conservative myth that food stamp fraud is rampant and yet the most recent report from the Agriculture Department is that SNAP recorded historically-low
levels of fraud and error. One reason to prevent any kind of block
grants, much less drastic cuts to SNAP is a recent tactic in Republican
states to force recipients to show personal photo ID when they use
government-issued SNAP debit cards even though the benefits are issued
and distributed to households, not individuals; anything to keep poor
Americans hungry.
The number of applications for food stamps has
recently fallen drastically due to economic growth and an increase in
jobs, and the reason many recipients still qualify is their wages are
too low. In an action that makes little sense, Republicans in some
states are beginning to demand that recipients “work to receive welfare
food” even if they are children, disabled, active duty military
families, or senior citizens barely surviving on meager Social Security
retirement benefits. A great deal of recipients already work, but
Republicans will use any means, and fabricate any excuse, to deny the
neediest Americans adequate nourishment. It informs Republicans’
loathing of Americans in need and not about budget savings or debt
reduction; particularly when they can spend on the rich.
There is also an economic upside to preventing food
stamp cuts that even some, although very few, Republicans are prone to
admit. For every dollar spent on providing nutrition assistance from
SNAP, $1.70 is returned to local economies that benefit local
businesses, state revenue, and most importantly creating and sustaining
jobs. However, Republicans have not only shown no predilection to
support any measure to grow the economy and create jobs, they have used
austerity measures to kill jobs as a matter of course and say “so be
it.”
Coupled
with their devotion to failed austerity, cutting economically
beneficial and job creating food stamps is just par for the course and
part of their continued assault on poor and hungry Americans; including
children (47%), one million Veterans, disabled people, 25% of active-duty military personnel, and elderly Americans
(20%). Republican austerity measures were bad enough when they did not
have control of Congress, and based on their proposals due out this
week, the Koch-controlled congressional Republicans are going to show
Americans a level of damage the nation has not seen since before the New
Deal. Americans will finally see precisely what the Koch brothers’
vision for America looks like in real terms, and it begins by denying
hungry Americans access to adequate food by using block grants and SNAP
cuts; anything to fund more tax cuts for the rich and increased spending
for war. It is, after all, exactly what Americans voted, or failed to
vote, for just five months ago.
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