One out of every five children in America lives in poverty.
In the wealthiest country in the world, nearly 16 million of our children and
nearly 5 million of our elders lack food security.
Nearly half of recipients of Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP), otherwise known as food stamps are children, 16
percent are disabled adults who can’t work, and 9 percent are senior citizens. Nearly
a third of people who get food stamps have a family member who is working, many
at big box retailers like Wal-Mart or fast food establishments. Even 5,000
active-duty military families rely on public assistance because their pay is
not enough to raise a family on.
Hard-hearted politicians think that if they paint the people
who get food stamps as lazy and undeserving, it will blind us to what’s really
going on. They’re handing out more tax cuts for those who can afford caviar and
champagne and more budget cuts for those trying to put the bare essentials on
their kitchen tables. To hear some politicians tell it, America’s welfare
system is facing a grave crisis: Millions of poor people, they say, are idling
away their time eating lobster and relaxing on cruises. Kansas Governor Sam Brownback,
for example, recently signed welfare reform rules banning people receiving
public assistance from using their $100 a week in benefits to buy steak or
seafood, go to swimming pools, or take cruises. They want us to associate
“hungry” with “too lazy to work.”
While these politicians are restricting the public
assistance that many Americans use to make ends meet, they’re also busy cutting
taxes for the idle rich — who, as it happens, already have plenty of disposable
income for expensive seafood and luxury cruises.
The House, for example, just passed a bill repealing the
estate tax. That tax affects just one out of every 700 estates left by
Americans who die each year, but it’s a crucial source of revenue. Repealing it
will save the nation’s multi-millionaires and billionaires about $27 billion a
year. It means that the heirs to the Wal-Mart fortune — who’ve collectively
inherited nearly $150 billion in wealth — will pass on nearly $60 billion more
to their kids when they die.
The tax code remains stacked against working families. The
idle rich who live off investments pay a maximum rate of 20 percent on
dividends and gains. Working parents, though, can pay nearly double.
So, instead of the aristocracy lording it over the peasants,
today we have the rich lording it over the "stupid, lazy" poor
people. The attitudes and outlook is the same, the political and social status
of those holding those negative attitudes towards poor people has only been
"modernized." It’s obvious to me that the rich are creating a bunch
of false mental constructs demonizing poor people in order to equally falsely
justify their poor treatment of the poor - that is "keep them poor because
they deserve to be poor." and so their profit margin increases.
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