Showing posts with label poor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poor. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

Chevron creates its own news outlet for a poor city that it pollutes

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Chevron creates its own news outlet for a poor city that it pollutes

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Screwing Over Poor People with Welfare Reform Part II

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Screwing Over Poor People with Welfare Reform Part II

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Who Suffers When States Decide To Cut Off Legal Abortion At 20 Weeks? The Young And Poor

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Who Suffers When States Decide To Cut Off Legal Abortion At 20 Weeks? The Young And Poor

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

University Punishing Poor Students

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University Punishing Poor Students

Monday, November 4, 2013

Raise Taxes On The Poor - Eric Cantor



House Majority Leader Eric Cantor wants to cut taxes on the rich and raise them on the poor. The Young Turks host Cenk Uygur breaks it down. http://www.theat…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Raise Taxes On The Poor - Eric Cantor

Thursday, October 17, 2013

A documentary on ultra poor, titled On a thread - SHIREE


Documentary is about a population who are the poorest of the poor in Bangladesh. They have no house, no assets or work to support families. They don’t even q…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



A documentary on ultra poor, titled On a thread - SHIREE

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Poor Students Need Homework


[IMAGE DESCRIPTION]
Skakerman/Flickr

Of all the well-intentioned but unhelpful things people have ever said about education, perhaps the least helpful was from the father of progressive education himself. “What the best and wisest parent wants for his child, that must we want for all the children of the community,” wrote John Dewey.  “Anything less is unlovely, and left unchecked, destroys our democracy.”



The Age of the Drone bug alt

How Much is Too Much?: An Atlantic Debate
Read more


Karl Taro Greenfeld, a good and wise parent, wants less homework for his daughter.  He laments that she is becoming “a sleep-deprived teen zombie.” My daughter, too.  It’s a fashionable complaint, nearly a cliché among those whose children attend top schools: Do our kids really need to work this hard?


Truth to tell, young Esmee Greenfeld’s educational opportunities and life chances would probably be undiminished if her teachers limited homework to a humane 30 to 60 minutes a night.  Her gifted and talented middle school could even ban homework altogether with little to no ill effect. I’m more concerned, however, about homework falling broadly out of favor as more and more affluent families push back against it.  Per Dewey’s maxim, education “best practices,” fads, and trends tend to roll downhill from what ostensibly works in well-funded, affluent schools to those serving low-income kids of color.  After all, if it’s what the best and wisest parent wants, it must be good for all children, right? 


Not necessarily.


Complaints about homework usually miss the mark twice. First, the pushback tends to focus on quantity, not quality.  Also, those who complain the most tend to be the education equivalent of the worried well.  With all respect to Dewey, I wish we would regard a little less what the best and wisest parents want, and consider instead the pernicious “Matthew Effect.”  Coined by the cognitive scientist Keith Stanovich, it takes its name from a passage in the New Testament: “For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath.”  In plain English it means “the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.”  In education, those who are rich in language and knowledge get richer; those who are poor fall further behind.  It’s a more useful frame than the achievement gap, which implies that low-income kids of color merely have some catching up to do.  The Matthew Effect makes it clear just how hard that is to do. 


I don’t know Greenfeld, but it’s a safe bet that he and his wife, an internationally trained architect, have filled their daughters’ lives with books, travel, engaging dinner table conversation, and the kind of enrichment that University of Pennsylvania sociologist Annette Lareau dubbed “concerted cultivation.” His kids are squarely on the rich-get-richer side of the Matthew Effect.  The nature of language acquisition ensures that children like Greenfeld’s have a much easier time learning new words and gaining new knowledge in school.  By contrast, children born into poverty tend to grow up with few enrichment opportunities.  They come to school having heard millions fewer words,  and enrichment opportunities are rare.  The dreaded Matthew Effect ensures that they fall even further behind.  Think of these children as school-dependent learners: If they don’t get it from school, they don’t get it at all.


That brings us to homework.  Affluent parents whose kids attend great schools see only the “work” part of homework.  Those of us concerned with disadvantaged children worry more about the “home.”  The cognitive benefits of “growing up Greenfeld” arguably make all that extra work redundant.  The absence of that enrichment makes it indispensable. 


For the low-income kids of color that I have worked with homework remains an essential gap-closing tool.


Time is the most precious asset in addressing the Matthew Effect.  A loss of homework would be a minor inconvenience at worst for Greenfeld’s children, whose path through the American education system has largely been made straight by happy accident of birth (it’s heresy in education to say “demographics is destiny” but it remains the way to bet).  For the low-income kids of color that I have worked with, thoughtful, well-crafted homework, especially in reading, remains an essential gap-closing tool.


Parents who are concerned about too much homework would also be on firmer ground if they questioned the validity, not just the volume of homework.  The proper debate about homework – now and always – should not be “how much” but “what kind” and “what for?”  Using homework merely to cover material there was no time for in class is less helpful, for example, than “distributed practice”: reinforcing and reviewing essential skills and knowledge teachers want students to perfect or keep in long-term memory.  Independent reading is also important.  There are many more rare and unique words even in relatively simple texts than in the conversation of college graduates.  Reading widely and with stamina is an important way to build verbal proficiency and background knowledge, important keys to mature reading comprehension.  And all of this is far more important for disadvantaged kids than for Greenfeld’s children, already big winners in the Cognitive Dream House Sweepstakes.


The best and wisest parents may have a good grasp of what their children want.  But they may not be the best judges of what other people’s children need.  






    








Master Feed : The Atlantic



Poor Students Need Homework

Friday, August 30, 2013

The poor and the middle class will save America yet


A few days ago I had breakfast with a man who had been one of my mentors in college, who participated in the struggle for civil rights in the 1960s and has devoted much of the rest of his life in pursuit of equal opportunity for minorities, the poor, women, gays, immigrants — and also for average hardworking people who have been beaten down by the economy. Now in his mid-80s, he’s still active.


I asked him if he thought America would ever achieve true equality of opportunity.


“Not without a fight,” he said. “Those who have wealth and power and privilege don’t want equal opportunity. It’s too threatening to them.They’ll pretend equal opportunity already exists, and that anyone who doesn’t make it in America must be lazy or stupid or otherwise undeserving.”


“You’ve been fighting for social justice for over half a century. Are you discouraged?”


“Not at all!” he said. “Don’t confuse the difficulty of attaining a goal with the urgency of fighting for it.”


“But have we really made progress? Inequality is widening. The middle class and the poor are in many ways worse off than they were decades ago.”


“Yes, and they’re starting to understand that,” he said. “And beginning to see that the distinction between the middle class and poor is disappearing. Many who were in the middle have fallen into poverty; many more will do so.”


“And, so?”





He smiled. “For decades, those at the top have tried to convince the middle class that their economic enemies are minorities and the poor. But that old divide-and-conquer strategy is starting to fail. And as it fails, it will be possible to create a political coalition of the poor and the middle class. It will be a powerful coalition! Remember, demographics are shifting. Soon America will be a majority of minorities. And women are gaining more and more economic power.”


“But the 400 richest Americans are now wealthier than the bottom 150 million Americans put together — and have more political influence than ever.”


“Just you wait,” he laughed. “I wish I had another 50 years in me.”





Salon.com



The poor and the middle class will save America yet

Monday, July 29, 2013

80 Percent Of U.S. Adults Face Near-Poverty, Unemployment: Survey


poverty unemployment ratesHuffington Post – by Hope Yen


WASHINGTON — Four out of 5 U.S. adults struggle with joblessness, near-poverty or reliance on welfare for at least parts of their lives, a sign of deteriorating economic security and an elusive American dream.


Survey data exclusive to The Associated Press points to an increasingly globalized U.S. economy, the widening gap between rich and poor, and the loss of good-paying manufacturing jobs as reasons for the trend.  


The findings come as President Barack Obama tries to renew his administration’s emphasis on the economy, saying in recent speeches that his highest priority is to “rebuild ladders of opportunity” and reverse income inequality.


As nonwhites approach a numerical majority in the U.S., one question is how public programs to lift the disadvantaged should be best focused – on the affirmative action that historically has tried to eliminate the racial barriers seen as the major impediment to economic equality, or simply on improving socioeconomic status for all, regardless of race.


Hardship is particularly growing among whites, based on several measures. Pessimism among that racial group about their families’ economic futures has climbed to the highest point since at least 1987. In the most recent AP-GfK poll, 63 percent of whites called the economy “poor.”


“I think it’s going to get worse,” said Irene Salyers, 52, of Buchanan County, Va., a declining coal region in Appalachia. Married and divorced three times, Salyers now helps run a fruit and vegetable stand with her boyfriend but it doesn’t generate much income. They live mostly off government disability checks.


“If you do try to go apply for a job, they’re not hiring people, and they’re not paying that much to even go to work,” she said. Children, she said, have “nothing better to do than to get on drugs.”


While racial and ethnic minorities are more likely to live in poverty, race disparities in the poverty rate have narrowed substantially since the 1970s, census data show. Economic insecurity among whites also is more pervasive than is shown in the government’s poverty data, engulfing more than 76 percent of white adults by the time they turn 60, according to a new economic gauge being published next year by the Oxford University Press.


The gauge defines “economic insecurity” as experiencing unemployment at some point in their working lives, or a year or more of reliance on government aid such as food stamps or income below 150 percent of the poverty line. Measured across all races, the risk of economic insecurity rises to 79 percent.


Marriage rates are in decline across all races, and the number of white mother-headed households living in poverty has risen to the level of black ones.


“It’s time that America comes to understand that many of the nation’s biggest disparities, from education and life expectancy to poverty, are increasingly due to economic class position,” said William Julius Wilson, a Harvard professor who specializes in race and poverty. He noted that despite continuing economic difficulties, minorities have more optimism about the future after Obama’s election, while struggling whites do not.


“There is the real possibility that white alienation will increase if steps are not taken to highlight and address inequality on a broad front,” Wilson said.


___


Nationwide, the count of America’s poor remains stuck at a record number: 46.2 million, or 15 percent of the population, due in part to lingering high unemployment following the recession. While poverty rates for blacks and Hispanics are nearly three times higher, by absolute numbers the predominant face of the poor is white.


More than 19 million whites fall below the poverty line of $ 23,021 for a family of four, accounting for more than 41 percent of the nation’s destitute, nearly double the number of poor blacks.


Sometimes termed “the invisible poor” by demographers, lower-income whites generally are dispersed in suburbs as well as small rural towns, where more than 60 percent of the poor are white. Concentrated in Appalachia in the East, they are numerous in the industrial Midwest and spread across America’s heartland, from Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma up through the Great Plains.


Buchanan County, in southwest Virginia, is among the nation’s most destitute based on median income, with poverty hovering at 24 percent. The county is mostly white, as are 99 percent of its poor.


More than 90 percent of Buchanan County’s inhabitants are working-class whites who lack a college degree. Higher education long has been seen there as nonessential to land a job because well-paying mining and related jobs were once in plentiful supply. These days many residents get by on odd jobs and government checks.


Salyers’ daughter, Renee Adams, 28, who grew up in the region, has two children. A jobless single mother, she relies on her live-in boyfriend’s disability checks to get by. Salyers says it was tough raising her own children as it is for her daughter now, and doesn’t even try to speculate what awaits her grandchildren, ages 4 and 5.


Smoking a cigarette in front of the produce stand, Adams later expresses a wish that employers will look past her conviction a few years ago for distributing prescription painkillers, so she can get a job and have money to “buy the kids everything they need.”


“It’s pretty hard,” she said. “Once the bills are paid, we might have $ 10 to our name.”


___


Census figures provide an official measure of poverty, but they’re only a temporary snapshot that doesn’t capture the makeup of those who cycle in and out of poverty at different points in their lives. They may be suburbanites, for example, or the working poor or the laid off.


In 2011 that snapshot showed 12.6 percent of adults in their prime working-age years of 25-60 lived in poverty. But measured in terms of a person’s lifetime risk, a much higher number – 4 in 10 adults – falls into poverty for at least a year of their lives.


The risks of poverty also have been increasing in recent decades, particularly among people ages 35-55, coinciding with widening income inequality. For instance, people ages 35-45 had a 17 percent risk of encountering poverty during the 1969-1989 time period; that risk increased to 23 percent during the 1989-2009 period. For those ages 45-55, the risk of poverty jumped from 11.8 percent to 17.7 percent.


Higher recent rates of unemployment mean the lifetime risk of experiencing economic insecurity now runs even higher: 79 percent, or 4 in 5 adults, by the time they turn 60.


By race, nonwhites still have a higher risk of being economically insecure, at 90 percent. But compared with the official poverty rate, some of the biggest jumps under the newer measure are among whites, with more than 76 percent enduring periods of joblessness, life on welfare or near-poverty.


By 2030, based on the current trend of widening income inequality, close to 85 percent of all working-age adults in the U.S. will experience bouts of economic insecurity.


“Poverty is no longer an issue of `them’, it’s an issue of `us’,” says Mark Rank, a professor at Washington University in St. Louis who calculated the numbers. “Only when poverty is thought of as a mainstream event, rather than a fringe experience that just affects blacks and Hispanics, can we really begin to build broader support for programs that lift people in need.”


The numbers come from Rank’s analysis being published by the Oxford University Press. They are supplemented with interviews and figures provided to the AP by Tom Hirschl, a professor at Cornell University; John Iceland, a sociology professor at Penn State University; the University of New Hampshire’s Carsey Institute; the Census Bureau; and the Population Reference Bureau.


Among the findings:


_For the first time since 1975, the number of white single-mother households living in poverty with children surpassed or equaled black ones in the past decade, spurred by job losses and faster rates of out-of-wedlock births among whites. White single-mother families in poverty stood at nearly 1.5 million in 2011, comparable to the number for blacks. Hispanic single-mother families in poverty trailed at 1.2 million.


_Since 2000, the poverty rate among working-class whites has grown faster than among working-class nonwhites, rising 3 percentage points to 11 percent as the recession took a bigger toll among lower-wage workers. Still, poverty among working-class nonwhites remains higher, at 23 percent.


_The share of children living in high-poverty neighborhoods – those with poverty rates of 30 percent or more – has increased to 1 in 10, putting them at higher risk of teenage pregnancy or dropping out of school. Non-Hispanic whites accounted for 17 percent of the child population in such neighborhoods, compared with 13 percent in 2000, even though the overall proportion of white children in the U.S. has been declining.


The share of black children in high-poverty neighborhoods dropped from 43 percent to 37 percent, while the share of Latino children went from 38 percent to 39 percent.


_Race disparities in health and education have narrowed generally since the 1960s. While residential segregation remains high, a typical black person now lives in a nonmajority black neighborhood for the first time. Previous studies have shown that wealth is a greater predictor of standardized test scores than race; the test-score gap between rich and low-income students is now nearly double the gap between blacks and whites.


___


Going back to the 1980s, never have whites been so pessimistic about their futures, according to the General Social Survey, a biannual survey conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago. Just 45 percent say their family will have a good chance of improving their economic position based on the way things are in America.


The divide is especially evident among those whites who self-identify as working class. Forty-nine percent say they think their children will do better than them, compared with 67 percent of nonwhites who consider themselves working class, even though the economic plight of minorities tends to be worse.


Although they are a shrinking group, working-class whites – defined as those lacking a college degree – remain the biggest demographic bloc of the working-age population. In 2012, Election Day exit polls conducted for the AP and the television networks showed working-class whites made up 36 percent of the electorate, even with a notable drop in white voter turnout.


Last November, Obama won the votes of just 36 percent of those noncollege whites, the worst performance of any Democratic nominee among that group since Republican Ronald Reagan’s 1984 landslide victory over Walter Mondale.


Some Democratic analysts have urged renewed efforts to bring working-class whites into the political fold, calling them a potential “decisive swing voter group” if minority and youth turnout level off in future elections. “In 2016 GOP messaging will be far more focused on expressing concern for `the middle class’ and `average Americans,’” Andrew Levison and Ruy Teixeira wrote recently in The New Republic.


“They don’t trust big government, but it doesn’t mean they want no government,” says Republican pollster Ed Goeas, who agrees that working-class whites will remain an important electoral group. His research found that many of them would support anti-poverty programs if focused broadly on job training and infrastructure investment. This past week, Obama pledged anew to help manufacturers bring jobs back to America and to create jobs in the energy sectors of wind, solar and natural gas.


“They feel that politicians are giving attention to other people and not them,” Goeas said.


___


AP Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta, News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and AP writer Debra McCown in Buchanan County, Va., contributed to this report.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/28/poverty-unemployment-rates_n_3666594.html






80 Percent Of U.S. Adults Face Near-Poverty, Unemployment: Survey

Friday, July 12, 2013

The Koch Brothers Are Waging War Against the Poor


Charles Koch thinks he has the solution to America’s income inequality problem, and what a large problem it is.


We have the most unequal distribution of wealth and income in this country since the 1920′s.


Right now, the wealthiest 400 Americans own more wealth than the entire bottom-half of the country, and the six heirs to the great Wal-Mart fortune own more wealth than the bottom 30 percent of Americans.


The top 1 percent of Americans own 40 percent of the entire nation’s wealth, while the bottom 60 percent owns less than 2 percent, and the bottom 40 percent of all Americans own just .3 percent of the nation’s wealth.


Since 1979, after-tax income for the top 1% of Americans is up 281%, while it’s only up 16% and 25% for the bottom-fifth and middle-fifth of Americans respectively.


And, according to the Economic Policy Institute, CEO pay spiked 725 percent between 1978 and 2011, while worker pay rose just 5.7 percent during the same time.


It’s clear that income inequality is a major problem in America, and that something needs to be done right now to fix it.


That’s where Koch comes in.


The conservative mogul who is worth over $ 43 billion says that eliminating the minimum wage is a solution to America’s poverty woes.


On Wednesday, the Charles Koch Foundation launched a $ 200,000 media blitz in Wichita, Kansas, Koch’s home state, saying that the minimum wage is THE major obstacle to economic growth in America.


There is no credible information or data that backs up Koch’s claims that the minimum wage impedes economic growth, and that doing away with it would solve any of our problems.


In fact, the data says otherwise.


In a letter released by the Chicago Federal Reserve, Economists Daniel Aaronson and Eric French show that raising the federal minimum wage by $ 1.75 to $ 9 an hour would increase household spending by around $ 48 billion the next year, and everybody knows that economies are driven by demand, also known as consumer spending.


The fact is that doing away with the minimum wage will do absolutely nothing to reduce the extraordinary levels of poverty and income inequality in this country. So what will?


First, contrary to what Republicans in Washington love to argue, we need to strengthen and expand social safety net programs, not do away with them.


Americans who are living on the edge need some bootstraps to pull themselves up by.


Programs like Medicaid and food stamps are essential because they provide those bootstraps and help them get back on their feet.


Next, we must invest more into education, so young people can succeed when they enter the workplace.


Right now, the United States ranks 17th in the world among developed countries when it comes to overall education, and 25th in math and science. That sucks.


We also need to take on the loopholes that make our tax system favor the rich, and roll back the Reagan tax cuts.


America’s wealthiest citizens must pay their fair share, and do their part to support the American economy, rather than just living off the backs of the working class.


We also need to take an axe to all the corporate loopholes in our tax code, put there by lobbyists and corporate shills in Congress.


To make this work, this nation’s trade policies have to change.


No more so-called free trade deals like NAFTA, CAFTA, SHAFTA and the Trans Pacific Partnership agreement. Giant transnational corporations should not have the right or the power to move our jobs overseas, and it’s insane that our tax code is encouraging them to do that.


Finally, any company whose business model depends on screwing their workers with pay that is so low that those workers qualify for food stamps and Medicaid should be put out of business.


If we just set the minimum wage to what it was in 1968, $ 10.25 in today’s dollars, we begin the process rebuilding our middle-class.


Charles Koch inherited much of his money from his daddy, Fred. He’s never known what it’s like to run a household budget on the minimum wage. Taking wage policy advice from Charles Koch is like taking advice on how to run a neighborhood watch program from George Zimmerman.


When it comes to the Koch brothers lecturing us about how the working poor should be paid, we all need to take Nancy Reagan’s advice and “just say no.”




Truthout Stories



The Koch Brothers Are Waging War Against the Poor

The Koch Brothers Are Waging War Against the Poor


Charles Koch thinks he has the solution to America’s income inequality problem, and what a large problem it is.


We have the most unequal distribution of wealth and income in this country since the 1920′s.


Right now, the wealthiest 400 Americans own more wealth than the entire bottom-half of the country, and the six heirs to the great Wal-Mart fortune own more wealth than the bottom 30 percent of Americans.


The top 1 percent of Americans own 40 percent of the entire nation’s wealth, while the bottom 60 percent owns less than 2 percent, and the bottom 40 percent of all Americans own just .3 percent of the nation’s wealth.


Since 1979, after-tax income for the top 1% of Americans is up 281%, while it’s only up 16% and 25% for the bottom-fifth and middle-fifth of Americans respectively.


And, according to the Economic Policy Institute, CEO pay spiked 725 percent between 1978 and 2011, while worker pay rose just 5.7 percent during the same time.


It’s clear that income inequality is a major problem in America, and that something needs to be done right now to fix it.


That’s where Koch comes in.


The conservative mogul who is worth over $ 43 billion says that eliminating the minimum wage is a solution to America’s poverty woes.


On Wednesday, the Charles Koch Foundation launched a $ 200,000 media blitz in Wichita, Kansas, Koch’s home state, saying that the minimum wage is THE major obstacle to economic growth in America.


There is no credible information or data that backs up Koch’s claims that the minimum wage impedes economic growth, and that doing away with it would solve any of our problems.


In fact, the data says otherwise.


In a letter released by the Chicago Federal Reserve, Economists Daniel Aaronson and Eric French show that raising the federal minimum wage by $ 1.75 to $ 9 an hour would increase household spending by around $ 48 billion the next year, and everybody knows that economies are driven by demand, also known as consumer spending.


The fact is that doing away with the minimum wage will do absolutely nothing to reduce the extraordinary levels of poverty and income inequality in this country. So what will?


First, contrary to what Republicans in Washington love to argue, we need to strengthen and expand social safety net programs, not do away with them.


Americans who are living on the edge need some bootstraps to pull themselves up by.


Programs like Medicaid and food stamps are essential because they provide those bootstraps and help them get back on their feet.


Next, we must invest more into education, so young people can succeed when they enter the workplace.


Right now, the United States ranks 17th in the world among developed countries when it comes to overall education, and 25th in math and science. That sucks.


We also need to take on the loopholes that make our tax system favor the rich, and roll back the Reagan tax cuts.


America’s wealthiest citizens must pay their fair share, and do their part to support the American economy, rather than just living off the backs of the working class.


We also need to take an axe to all the corporate loopholes in our tax code, put there by lobbyists and corporate shills in Congress.


To make this work, this nation’s trade policies have to change.


No more so-called free trade deals like NAFTA, CAFTA, SHAFTA and the Trans Pacific Partnership agreement. Giant transnational corporations should not have the right or the power to move our jobs overseas, and it’s insane that our tax code is encouraging them to do that.


Finally, any company whose business model depends on screwing their workers with pay that is so low that those workers qualify for food stamps and Medicaid should be put out of business.


If we just set the minimum wage to what it was in 1968, $ 10.25 in today’s dollars, we begin the process rebuilding our middle-class.


Charles Koch inherited much of his money from his daddy, Fred. He’s never known what it’s like to run a household budget on the minimum wage. Taking wage policy advice from Charles Koch is like taking advice on how to run a neighborhood watch program from George Zimmerman.


When it comes to the Koch brothers lecturing us about how the working poor should be paid, we all need to take Nancy Reagan’s advice and “just say no.”




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The Koch Brothers Are Waging War Against the Poor

Friday, June 21, 2013

Gohmert: Not "Evil" To Cut Food Stamps Because Poor People Buy King Crab Legs


REP. LOUIE GOHMERT (R-TX): “When I look into the eyes of constituents, who want to provide for their children … and they talk about standing in line, I’ve heard this story so many times … standing in line at a grocery store behind people with a food-stamp car—one individual said, I love crab legs. You know, the big king crab legs. I love those. But we haven’t been able to have those in who knows when. But I’m standing behind a guy who has those in his basket, and I’m looking longingly like, when can I ever make enough again where our family can have something like that, and sees the food-stamp card pulled out, and provided, he looks at the king crab legs and looks at the ground meat, and realizes because he does pay income tax, he doesn’t get more back than he pays in, he is actually helping pay for the king crab legs when he can’t pay for them for himself.”




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Gohmert: Not "Evil" To Cut Food Stamps Because Poor People Buy King Crab Legs

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

RT News: Corporate America - The Wealthy live, while the Poor Suffer




ORIGINALY Uploaded by TZMBigsteelguy on Dec 21, 2010 ‘US a Banana Republic with no middle class’ Originally uploaded on RussiaToday | December 18, 2010 | htt…




Christopher Dorner is a 33-year-old former US Navy Lieutenant who served in Iraq before joining the LAPD. Now, however, he is wanted for murder. At a press c…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



RT News: Corporate America - The Wealthy live, while the Poor Suffer