• agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Sure, no worries, unless you’re too old to cook, or too disabled, or literally can’t because you don’t have a house. You know, like everyone who qualifies.

    The entirety of SNAP costs the average taxpayer something like $34. Between the states that don’t participate, and the individuals who don’t qualify, how much is going to buy McDonald’s? Definitely less than a dollar per person, I’ll bet it’s probably under a dime.

    This time and effort is better spent chasing the hundreds of dollars we each pay to corporate welfare, or bloated defense spending, or any of the major expenses I don’t want my tax dollars financing, than scrounging for pennies at the expense of people who don’t have the means to cook for themselves.

    So yeah, stupid and performative.

    • Aether Mechanic@lemmy.libertarianfellowship.orgOP
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      18 hours ago

      Between the states that don’t participate, and the individuals who don’t qualify, how much is going to buy McDonald’s?

      I don’t know. I guess enough that the majority of states don’t allow it. Are they all stupid and performative?

      States that don’s allow:

      Here are the ones that don’t allow it:

      Alabama Kay Ivey Republican

      Alaska Mike Dunleavy Republican

      Arkansas Sarah Huckabee Sanders Republican

      Colorado Jared Polis Democrat

      Connecticut Ned Lamont Democrat

      Delaware Matt Meyer Democrat

      Florida Ron DeSantis Republican

      Georgia Brian Kemp Republican

      Hawaii Josh Green Democrat

      Idaho Brad Little Republican

      Indiana Mike Braun / Eric Holcomb* Republican

      Iowa Kim Reynolds Republican

      Kansas Laura Kelly Democrat

      Kentucky Andy Beshear Democrat

      Louisiana Jeff Landry Republican

      Maine Janet Mills Democrat

      Minnesota Tim Walz Democrat

      Mississippi Tate Reeves Republican

      Missouri Mike Parson Republican

      Montana Greg Gianforte Republican

      Nebraska Jim Pillen Republican

      Nevada Joe Lombardo Republican

      New Hampshire Kelly Ayotte Republican

      New Jersey Phil Murphy Democrat

      New Mexico Michelle Lujan Grisham Democrat

      North Carolina Josh Stein Democrat

      North Dakota Kelly Armstrong Republican

      Ohio Mike DeWine Republican

      Oklahoma Kevin Stitt Republican

      Oregon Tina Kotek Democrat

      Pennsylvania Josh Shapiro Democrat

      South Carolina Henry McMaster Republican

      South Dakota Larry Rhoden Republican

      Tennessee Bill Lee Republican

      Texas Greg Abbott Republican

      Utah Spencer Cox Republican

      Vermont Phil Scott Republican

      Washington Bob Ferguson Democrat

      West Virginia Patrick Morrisey Republican

      Wisconsin Tony Evers Democrat

      Wyoming Mark Gordon Republican

      • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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        16 hours ago

        Can you read? I answered this already. The states that allow it explicitly chose to allow it. The states you listed didn’t actively decide to disallow it, they just didn’t choose to opt in. Have you considered that the ones who opted in did do the research, and decided it was a worthwhile program to employ? This argument is very stupid.

        This isn’t even a case of Iowa opting out, this is a representative from Iowa trying to eliminate the program entirely. A program that directly helps people who don’t have the means to cook at home, for pennies per taxpayer. The qualifications are very explicitly spelled out: the elderly, the permanently disabled, and the homeless.

        This program does real good for the vulnerable people who need it. You want to end that program to save a couple pennies. Actually, not even to save a couple pennies, to police how those pennies are spent. You won’t save any money, the only change is that the hungry and helpless will suffer. That’s performative.

        Yes, stupid and performative.

        • Aether Mechanic@lemmy.libertarianfellowship.orgOP
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          16 hours ago

          Have you considered that the ones who opted in did do the research, and decided it was a worthwhile program to employ? Your argument is very stupid.

          Have you considered that the ones who opted OUT did do the research, and decided it was a worthwhile program to discontinue? Your argument is very stupid.

          Stay mad. But no one is listening to you on this subject. So be sure to donate your paycheck to people so they can buy mcdonalds. Nothing is stopping you from donating.

          • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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            16 hours ago

            Once again, not how it works. They did not “choose” to discontinue. You don’t have to opt out, it’s not an active decision. Opting in is the active decision.

            Stay mad.

            Typical conservative projection. The rest of us don’t make decisions based on anger. I don’t think this is stupid because I’m mad, I’m not mad. I think it’s stupid because it is stupid.

            Why do you want to prevent people who can’t cook from having food? Why is this the issue you’re pushing? It sounds like you’re mad over sometime totally insignificant. It’s kinda pathetic, really. Unless your time is literally worthless, the time you’ve spent defending this would be with significantly more than your share of funding the RMP.

            That’s why I keep saying it’s performative. You don’t actually benefit at all. You’re just attacking poor people for the optics. Very pathetic.