tintinisahottie
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2011
- Messages
- 9,298
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We should be protecting Kurds in syria who cares about our poor
We should be protecting Kurds in syria who cares about our poor
A competent government could take care of our poor and avoid setting up our longtime allies for genocide at the same time.
We're on the same page but it really does grind my gears when I see someone buy 2 cart fulls of Cheetos and Twinkies and other delicious snacks with food stamps and then go drive away in a much nicer car than I have. I know I shared this on the boards in the past but I saw it happen a few years back at a Food Lion. The couple was clearly beating/cheating the system.
There’s so much more expensive fraud out there than a few food stamps. But people don’t care about that because we are fine with rich people getting more rich in fraudulent ways.
Just force the wealthiest 20% of families at the school to subsidize the lunch tab for all students.
Problem solved
Where do you think funding comes from for foster care?
People like that could care less about foster children.
Stop arguing against people with no heart or soul as if they have one. People like that could care less about foster children.
I’m assuming he cares about rich people’s money based on his stupid joke. This area is talking about putting kids in foster care for unpaid lunch bills. Foster care is most likely more expensive to rich people than rectangular pizza.
My mom's high school makes national news.
Parents are warned their children could be put in foster care over lunch debt
https://www.tennessean.com/story/ne...ing-families-tenncare-block-grant/4086524002/
Republican Tennessee governor sitting on $hundreds of millions designated for the under resourced for no good reason.
The state receives $190 million each year from the federal government. Last year, Tennessee spent just $71.1 million of that money, the conservative Beacon Center of Tennessee said in a report released this week.
The report, called "Poverty to Prosperity," in part criticizes Tennessee for sitting on the surplus and not putting more of the money to use to help additional families climb the economic ladder.
This work requirement rule would save the government $5.5 billion over five years, the USDA said.