Food stamps are designed specifically so people can kibble about what the recipients should or should not eat.
The dignified thing to do is just to give them money. That’s the cause of poverty. A lack of money.
Giving money to poors, they would spend it and increase economic activity. That would create more money and therefore pay back that was given to the poors. But they would not be that poor anymore, and teenagers would cost far too expensive for the bilionaires' pleasure (and most would even just refuse). As long as the choice is let up to the richests, the poors won't be founded but by fear...
I don’t really think the notion that the workers are also the customers has really sank in.
Billionaires, and the corporations they own, cost the taxpayer exponentially more than the people who rely on SNAP for food security. The tax breaks, subsidies and government contracts that many large corporations benefit from are a HUGE cost, I wonder if anyone has ever added them all up?
Are you denying billionaires the right to buy whatever the free market allows? What are you some kind of commie? /s
I think billionaires should not exist. Make a cap at 100 million or something like that, give them a medal that they won capitalism and that's it. They can continue their enterprises but everything else they obtain is 100 % taxed. And let's say "accidentally" owning 101 million gives them a big prison sentence and 102 million or more life in prison.
Food stamps are designed specifically so people can kibble about what the recipients should or should not eat.
The dignified thing to do is just to give them money. That’s the cause of poverty. A lack of money.
Giving money to poors, they would spend it and increase economic activity. That would create more money and therefore pay back that was given to the poors. But they would not be that poor anymore, and teenagers would cost far too expensive for the bilionaires' pleasure (and most would even just refuse). As long as the choice is let up to the richests, the poors won't be founded but by fear...
I don’t really think the notion that the workers are also the customers has really sank in.