blackangst1
Lifer
- Feb 23, 2005
- 22,902
- 2,360
- 126
Right here:
But, it seems, that only applies to the cost of other people's labor not his own.
Labor costs dont necessarily mean low wages...although I can see how you got there.
Right here:
But, it seems, that only applies to the cost of other people's labor not his own.
Have you guys ever tried to live only on welfare programs?
Imagine that. 18-19 year old kid has extreme views that he's never had to endure the consequences of.
News at 11.
Have you guys ever tried to live only on welfare programs?
Fail. Try eating 5000 calories worth of fruits and vegetables... that's right, YOU CAN'T, not without exploding!
Calories per unit volume of fruits and vegetables is much lower than that of processed sugars and starches. Calories from fruits and vegetables keep you full longer. People eat less when they eat real food, not cheap processed crap.
Simple sugars = digested quickly, and then you are hungry again! Which leads to more eating and too many calories.
Its called personal responsibility. Count your calories.
but guess which of the following categories the .gov subsidies most!I'd rather the government help this guy buy decent food for his children.
It is better for them to have milk, fruits, and vegetables rather than dirt cheap processed starches and sugars that have little or no nutritional value.
Which is precisely why food stamps cause more problems than they cure. They encourage government reliance, encourage obesity, supplement our shitty agriculture practices. Nobody wants anyone to starve. And nobody starves in this country.
And the OP is not correct, it makes no sense to restrict the diet to crap foods. Here's a more modest way to improve food stamps:
No reimbursement on any processed foods (cereals, frozen dinners/pizza, pastas, fruit juice, etc.). You can buy fruits, vegetables, meat, dairy (non-processed), and whole grains.
Right now, I am a student working a minimum wage job part time. It's been dam hard to find good part time jobs since they raised the minimum wage. To answer your question, labor costs should be decided by the market.
And how do you think Nestle and Kraft would feel about that? Let's not pretend that individuals are the only ones abusing the system. Ideally, I'd like to see the WIC programs and food stamps limited to locally grown/produced fresh fruits vegetables grains meats and dairy. I'm not holding my breath.
The biggest reason the government provides food stamps is to prevent food riots: hungry people are very quick to get out on the streets. $35 billion is a relative bargain when the government is spending, what, $4 trillion a year? They don't care if people are buying spinach or macaroni and cheese as long as they are pacified.
I had an interesting discussion with my brother about my father the other day; my father moved out of his parents house when he was 18 (1960) and worked a number of different jobs. He was not making much more than minimum wage, but minimum wage was probably equivalent to about $20/hour today. When he was 25 he moved to Egypt on a whim with my future mother where they taught English and art for a year. When he returned, he got a job as a carpenter, started a family, had three kids, and bought a house at the age of 30. All this without a college degree.
For me live the kind of life that he has lived today would be impossible. I don't know if you realize it, Hacp, but the middle class is on the verge of collapse in this country
![]()
http://www.costco.com/Browse/Product...se=&lang=en-US
$0.17 per meal X 2 meals per day = $0.34 per day
$0.34 per day X 365 days per year = $124.10 per year.
If you cannot make $125 per year then you can get government help. Anyone actually working and making minimum wage CAN afford to feed themselves if the (gasp) CHOOSE to afford it.
I wonder how long someone would last on nothing but carbs and salt.![]()
http://www.costco.com/Browse/Product...se=&lang=en-US
$0.17 per meal X 2 meals per day = $0.34 per day
$0.34 per day X 365 days per year = $124.10 per year.
If you cannot make $125 per year then you can get government help. Anyone actually working and making minimum wage CAN afford to feed themselves if the (gasp) CHOOSE to afford it.
![]()
http://www.costco.com/Browse/Product...se=&lang=en-US
$0.17 per meal X 2 meals per day = $0.34 per day
$0.34 per day X 365 days per year = $124.10 per year.
If you cannot make $125 per year then you can get government help. Anyone actually working and making minimum wage CAN afford to feed themselves if the (gasp) CHOOSE to afford it.
http://www.costco.com/Browse/Product...se=&lang=en-US
$0.17 per meal X 2 meals per day = $0.34 per day
$0.34 per day X 365 days per year = $124.10 per year.
If you cannot make $125 per year then you can get government help. Anyone actually working and making minimum wage CAN afford to feed themselves if the (gasp) CHOOSE to afford it.
Cute, but let's discuss this in the context of reality.
Look at the nutritional info.
One cannot survive on 2 bags of dried ramen per day.
![]()
http://www.costco.com/Browse/Product...se=&lang=en-US
$0.17 per meal X 2 meals per day = $0.34 per day
$0.34 per day X 365 days per year = $124.10 per year.
If you cannot make $125 per year then you can get government help. Anyone actually working and making minimum wage CAN afford to feed themselves if the (gasp) CHOOSE to afford it.
This explains a lot.
You guys realize you can buy other things and add them to the ramen noodles right? Like eggs, eggs are cheap, find a sale on some chicken, maybe some mixed veggies. It wouldn't be outside the realm of possibility to keep it under 500 bucks a year if you were really concerned about how the cost of food. That includes a balanced diet.
This explains a lot.
You first. Make a Documentary out of it. Dr checkup Before/After, 1 Year, Ramen mixed as you like, $500 Budget. I'll even Pay to watch it!
You first. Make a Documentary out of it. Dr checkup Before/After, 1 Year, Ramen mixed as you like, $500 Budget. I'll even Pay to watch it!
Yep, I've earned what I've gotten and think many of you(I assume you have a piece of paper since you think it explains something) with an expensive piece of paper just expect things to be handed to you. But alas, in today's America where libs have control of the edu establishment it's no wonder people expect the gov't to take care of them - they want to be given things - not earn them.
