If you want to get depressed or angry, the New York Times has an article celebrating the effort by politicians at all levels of government to lure more people into the food stamp program. New York City is running ads in foreign languagues asking people to stick their snouts in the public trough. The City is even signing up prisoners when they get out of jail. The state of New York, meanwhile, actually set up quotas for enrolling new recipients. And on the federal level, there apparently is a program that gives states “bonuses” for putting more people on the dole. No wonder one out of every eight Americans is receiving food stamps. By the way, this is not just the fault of Democrats. The ranking Republican on the Agriculture Committee is a big defender of the program, in part because of the sordid pact among urban and rural politicians to support each other’s handouts. And President George W. Bush’s food stamp administrator actually had the gall to assert “food stamps is not welfare.” No wonder the burden of federal spending skyrocketed during the reign of so-called compassionate conservatism. The correct policy, of course, is to get the federal government out of the welfare business. If Mayor Bloomberg thinks it is a “civic duty” to expand food stamps, he should see whether New York City voters agree with him – and want to foot the bill.
A decade ago, New York City officials were so reluctant to give out food stamps, they made people register one day and return the next just to get an application. The welfare commissioner said the program caused dependency and the poor were “better off” without it. Now the city urges the needy to seek aid (in languages from Albanian to Yiddish). Neighborhood groups recruit clients at churches and grocery stores, with materials that all but proclaim a civic duty to apply — to “help New York farmers, grocers, and businesses.” There is even a program on Rikers Island to enroll inmates leaving the jail. “Applying for food stamps is easier than ever,” city posters say. …These changes, combined with soaring unemployment, have pushed enrollment to record highs, with one in eight Americans now getting aid. “I’ve seen a remarkable shift,” said Senator Richard G. Lugar, an Indiana Republican and prominent food stamp supporter. “People now see that it’s necessary to have a strong food stamp program.” …The program has commercial allies, in farmers and grocery stores, and it got an unexpected boost from President George W. Bush, whose food stamp administrator, Eric Bost, proved an ardent supporter. “I assure you, food stamps is not welfare,” Mr. Bost said in a recent interview. Still, some critics see it as welfare in disguise and advocate more restraints. …The federal government now gives bonuses to states that enroll the most eligible people. …In 2008, the program got an upbeat new name: the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — SNAP. …Since Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg took office eight years ago, the rolls have doubled, to 1.6 million people… Albany made a parallel push to enroll the working poor, setting an explicit goal for caseload growth. “This is all federal money — it drives dollars to local economies,” said Russell Sykes, a senior program official. But Mr. Turner, now a consultant in Milwaukee, warns that the aid encourages the poor to work less and therefore remain in need. “It’s going to be very difficult with large swaths of the lower middle class tasting the fruits of dependency to be weaned from this,” he said.
[…] at least he’s not proposing to make the problem worse. By contrast, the Obama Administration actually bribed states to lure more people into food stamp dependency. And, if you can believe it, Obama’s […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] Mayor of New York City, replacing a politically correct Napoleonic busy-body (see here, here, here, here, and here) with a hard-left statist. I expect many productive people will be fleeing in the […]
[…] Mayor of New York City, replacing a politically correct Napoleonic busy-body (see here, here, here, here, and here) with a hard-left statist. I expect many productive people will be fleeing in the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
Of all the populations mentioned, recently-released prisoners seem to me to have a reasonable need for food stamps, at least temporarily. Finding a job is extremely difficult with a prison record. IMO, help extended to people under these circumstances is an act of community benevolence that makes sense.
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] don’t be surprised. This is the same crowd that does things such as help prisoners sign up for food stamps, ban bake sales for spreading unhealthy food, and fine you $2,000 for idling your car for more than […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] York City giving food stamps to newly released prisoners and running foreign-language ads encouraging more people to sign up for the […]
[…] actually wrote about something similar early last year, and groused that, “there apparently is a program that gives states ‘bonuses’ for […]
[…] policies that make it easier or harder for people to become dependent. There also are some states (and even colleges) that actually try to lure people into signing up for welfare, which also might […]
[…] policies that make it easier or harder for people to become dependent. There also are some states (and even colleges) that actually try to lure people into signing up for welfare, which also might […]
[…] policies that make it easier or harder for people to become dependent. There also are some states (and even colleges) that actually try to lure people into signing up for welfare, which also might […]
[…] policies that make it easier or harder for people to become dependent. There also are some states (and even colleges) that actually try to lure people into signing up for welfare, which also might […]