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Patrick Buchanan
Pat Buchanan
25 May 2012
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Food Stamp Nation

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"The lessons of history ... show conclusively that continued dependence upon relief induces a spiritual and moral disintegration fundamentally destructive to the national fiber. To dole out relief in this way is to administer a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit."

These searing words about Depression-era welfare are from Franklin Roosevelt's 1935 State of the Union Address. FDR feared this self-reliant people might come to depend permanently upon government for the necessities of their daily lives. Like narcotics, such a dependency would destroy the fiber and spirit of the nation.

What brings his words to mind is news that 41.8 million Americans are on food stamps, and the White House estimates 43 million will soon be getting food stamps every month.

A seventh of the nation cannot even feed itself.

If you would chart America's decline, this program is a good place to begin. As a harbinger of the Great Society to come, in early 1964, a Food Stamp Act was signed into law by LBJ appropriating $75 million for 350,000 individuals in 40 counties and three U.S. cities.

Yet, no one was starving. There had been no starvation since Jamestown, with such exceptions as the Donner Party caught in the Sierra Nevada in the winter of 1846-47, who took to eating their dead.

The Food Stamp Act became law half a decade after J.K. Galbraith in his best-seller had declared 1950s America to be the world's great Affluent Society.

Yet, when Richard Nixon took office, 3 million Americans were receiving food stamps at a cost of $270 million. Then CBS ran a program featuring a premature baby near death, and told us it was an infant starving to death in rich America. The nation demanded action, and Nixon acted.

By the time he left office in 1974, the food stamp program was feeding 16 million Americans at an annual cost of $4 billion.

Fast forward to 2009. The cost to taxpayers of the U.S. food stamp program hit $56 billion. The number of recipients and cost of the program exploded again last year.

Among the reasons is family disintegration. Forty percent of all children in America are now born out of wedlock. Among Hispanics, it is 51 percent. Among African-Americans, it is 71 percent.

Food stamps are feeding children abandoned by their own fathers. Taxpayers are taking up the slack for America's deadbeat dads.

Have food stamps made America a healthier nation?

Consider New York City, where 1.7 million people, one in every five in the city, relies on food stamps for daily sustenance.

Obesity rates have soared. Forty percent of all the kids in city public schools from kindergarten through eighth grade are overweight or obese.

Among poor kids, whose families depend on food stamps, the percentages are far higher. Mothers of poor kids use food stamps to buy them sugar-heavy soda pop, candy and junk food.

Yet Mayor Michael Bloomberg's proposal to the Department of Agriculture that recipients not be allowed to use food stamps to buy sugar-rich soft drinks has run into resistance.

"The world might be better ... if people limited their purchases of sugared beverages," said George Hacker of the Center for Science in the Public Interest. "However, there are a great many ethical reasons to consider why one would not stigmatize people on food stamps."

The Department of Agriculture in 2004 denied a request by Minnesota that would have disallowed food stamp recipients from using them for junk food. To grant the request, said the department, would "perpetuate the myth" that food stamps users make poor shopping decisions.

But is that a myth or an inconvenient truth?

What a changed country we have become in our expectations of ourselves. A less affluent America survived a Depression and world war without anything like the 99 weeks of unemployment insurance, welfare payments, earned income tax credits, food stamps, rent supplements, day care, school lunches and Medicaid we have today.

Public or private charity were thought necessary, but were almost always to be temporary until a breadwinner could find work or a family could get back on its feet. The expectation was that almost everyone, with hard work and by keeping the nose to the grindstone, could make his or her own way in this free society. No more.

What we have accepted today is a vast permanent underclass of scores of millions who cannot cope and must be carried by the rest of society — fed, clothed, housed, tutored, medicated at taxpayer's expense for their entire lives. We have a new division in America: those who pay a double fare, and those who forever ride free.

We Americans are not only not the people our parents were, we are not the people we were. FDR was right about what would happen to the country if we did not get off the narcotic of welfare.

America has regrettably already undergone that "spiritual and moral disintegration, fundamentally destructive to the national fiber."

Patrick Buchanan is the author of the book "Churchill, Hitler and 'The Unnecessary War." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Comments

11 Comments | Post Comment
The food stamp "problem" is in reality a subsidy for business.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Siwash
Fri Oct 8, 2010 6:42 AM
Dear Patrick,
I assume that you are not interested to list you as co-beneficiary of my living trust,since I got no answer from you to my offer yet. Ioan Dirina
Comment: #2
Posted by: Ioan Dirina
Fri Oct 8, 2010 10:50 AM
I stood in line this week behind a mom buying a full sheet cake, 30 individual cups of ice cream, plus several boxes of those little bags of juice. She held up the line by pausing to clack a number into an iPhone with her acrylic nails. The call was to veryfy that she had enough treats for her baby's entire pre-school, not just the 1-year-old's classmates. Guess what she paid with? Her food stamp debit card.
Nice.
Comment: #3
Posted by: marcia
Sat Oct 9, 2010 8:32 AM
Pat, as a whole I agree with you on your analysis of the left. But the weaknesses of the right is just as dangerous, the rich getting richer/poor getting poorer; the domination of big business, especially the multinationals, and some form of legalized slave labor. How does one balance this out. As a general rule, the strengths of ones policital view is also its greatest weakness, they tend to be flip sides of each other. When I teach government, current events, etc., I try to point this out to the students so hopefully someday they can pick up this ball and run with it. How do you recommend handling the flip sides of your political strengths?
Comment: #4
Posted by: Dr. Rick Marklund
Sat Oct 9, 2010 2:59 PM
Hey Pat, when your buddy George Bush came into office there was a budget SURPLUS. Now we have a nation struggling to feed itself and find housing. Please, just sit down and shut up. In this way you can be effective.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Bill
Sun Oct 10, 2010 10:59 PM
like a broken leg needs a crutch welfare & medicade serve a purpose in a time of need. but i dont think these blessings should be long term or permanent. if we didnt have medicade or foodstamps my daughter would not have survived her heart surgery @ 3 days old cost olmost $ 300,000.00 i missed a little over a month & a half of work to be with her @ $ 5.00 an hour how am i supposed to pay for that & that was just the doctor & anistheleologist nurses operating room & intensive care was another $ 125,000.00 that was for 28 days . after 6 weeks i went back to work didnt need medicade no more we need to find a way to bring down the cost of health care premiums so that even a part time minimum wage employee can afford it . that can only happen if the government stopped giving subsidies to hospitals for there so called losses kraft food has million dollar equipment pays competative wages & produces inexpinsive products why cant the hospitals do the same they are not even going to try as long as they get thier piece of government pie healthcare ins. companys is another company that rips off our government by keeping premiums so high that not everybody can afford it the poor have no choice but to go to the emergency room this keeps the cycle of government subsidies to hospitals rolling. so you see its not just the people who take advantige of government entitlements its also hospitals & healthcare insurance companys. i forgot to mention that @ the time of my daughters birth to cover my family with healthcare ins. would have cost $ 88.00 a week with overtime i made a little over $ 300.00 week with a $535.00rent lights car payment car insurance food clothes school supplies for the other two kids . i wonder if the company i worked for could have payed me more if the healthcare premiums werent so high .
Comment: #6
Posted by: jm
Mon Oct 11, 2010 12:11 AM
Re: marcia - so I can deduct from your little conservative tirade that poor kids do not deserve treats and extra kindness? oh I love the subtle racist undertones about her 'acrylic nails' and your judgemental comment about her IPhone, which you have no idea where it came from.
yeah, nice!
Comment: #7
Posted by: Bill
Mon Oct 11, 2010 1:41 AM
Re: Bill
Why must marcia's observation be related to racism? I too agree with her, it's not that poor kids do not deserve treats and extra kindness, what they deserve are PARENTS that can take of them. Marcia's, mine nor anyone else's tax dollars should be funding this women's child birhtday party. If she wants HER child to have a birhtday party do it with HER MONEY not mine. Are not these payments for indisvisuals that have stated and signed documents that they CAN NOT take of themselves and their children? And if you can not take provide for yourself and your children, where does the money come from for 'acrylic nails and IPhones'?
Comment: #8
Posted by: JOutlaw
Mon Oct 11, 2010 10:07 AM
Re: JOutlaw - I cannot read your mail the spelling is so bad, but I can tell you that folks like you, Marcia and Pat are making this country great! Keep up the kindness and loving attitude towards your fellow men and women and children, well done.
Comment: #9
Posted by: Bill
Tue Oct 12, 2010 10:08 AM
Let them drink diet sodas.
Comment: #10
Posted by: john lewis
Mon Oct 18, 2010 4:01 PM
----ACTUALLY, with our entire country LONG controlled and directed
by a VAST, interlinked 'shadow government' of capstone 'charitable' (i.e. EUGENICS)
foundations, NGO's and proxies ----unelected and unaccountable one and all
---we should be calling it the CAPSTONE CLUB.
It might be funny were it not for the FACT its agenda includes the now unfolding
TREASON -----and of course 'incremental extermination' (90% by 2100).
It might be funnier still if it weren't for the FACT that Buchanan's their front man.
(member of Rockefeller CNP front/helpmate during Nixon/MAO sellout/concealer
of the implications of the RED China Halocaust etc. etc.)
Comment: #11
Posted by: free bee
Thu Mar 10, 2011 12:25 AM
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